A few questions and comments:
| Kvile |
- Awesome, really happy to see a reasonable take on this (open source, offline-first, no telemetry, no acount, etc). Do you think at some point you'll try to monetize it in some way?
- Looks like build assets didn't get attached for the latest release (v0.2.1) in Github: https://github.com/tskulbru/kvile/releases/tag/kvile-v0.2.1
| Mockingjay |
- Awesome, definitely a valuable project. I'll be sharing this with some friends who could really use this.
| Stao |
- The website says it's open source, but I couldn't find a link to the source repo. I looked at your github repos and didn't see it in there either.
- Great idea! I'm so bad about forgetting to stand so something like this could be super useful.
Stao: Hm yea this is a mistake on my LLM when it generated the website for me (i couldnt be bothered). It probably got confused since i released it for Linux. Its not open-source. Yes! Exactly, thats why i made it, i ALWAYS forgot. I still do, but far less frequently than before, using Stao helped me a lot.
The app is beautiful - much better than I could build - what tech is it using if you don't mind me asking? Is it flutter, react native, something else? Just want to get better at mobile dev.
> All apps i found were either shit, real shit, or didnt solve my personal need.
Wow, what an amazing coincidence. I made something that looks pretty similar from the looks of it just a few weeks ago because I found the same thing. If I knew your app existed I probably wouldn't have made it. I wasn't even thinking of selling it, just made it for my kid because it makes following various daily routines easier.
It's a mostly vibe coded (well, I made tons of visual and technical decisions but didn't look at the code much except some spot checks) PWA that can run offline on an iPod Touch.
It has some quirks and hidden features for day schedules, timers, etc.
There's plenty of yank in there (yours is almost certainly built better) but it works pretty well for most daily routines.
You can check it out here: https://girls-routine-planner.huppie.nl/
Some of the hidden features:
- If you add a task to a routine and end it with a question mark it becomes a conditional where you can add specific tasks or subroutines on the yes or no condition.
- Make it 'weekday?' and it becomes a switch case for the week.
- 'is it 7:30 yet?' becomes a conditional that automatically detects if it's before that time. I use it for e.g. 'before breakfast' (at 7:30) -> go play (with a timer until 7:30)
N.b. 'fun' fact, my daughter wanted an avatar with clothes that you can earn. The idea was pretty easy to implement but getting nano banana (using a great Claude nano banana skill) to generate the correct images took... some practice. I think I spent more time on the images for the avatars than all the other features combined. It took way too long to realize simple stuff like "nano banana won't generate transparency, only a fake white/grey checker pattern"
Also learned the last iPod touch (great device by the way) has a really low screen resolution which can be quite challenging at times.
That's going to be used for recording women in public.
I can appreciate that it's useful for journalism while also warning you that not every user is going to be a journalist. It's possible to have a conversation without being in a fight all the time.