🛠️ All DevTools

Showing 1–20 of 5402 tools

Last Updated
June 22, 2026 at 04:46 PM

I built Ponytrail, a local audit trail for AI coding-agent edits

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5394

Claude Code's "extended thinking" is a summary- not authentic thinking

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5392

Show HN: I rebuilt the only parts of my IDE I use, in Rust, over a weekend I don&#x27;t know Rust.<p>Friday after work I realised that 90% of my IDE time now is just the commit&#x2F;diff view — and even good IDEs feel heavy for that.<p>So over the weekend I built a dedicated native tool for just that. Kyde is a macOS git commit + diff editor with one goal: be fast, do Git well.<p>I&#x27;m curious whether anyone else mostly opens their IDE for git operations these days.<p>It&#x27;s open source, and there&#x27;s a signed app in Releases.

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5395

Show HN: Socket to Me, a static file server that runs in the browser The service lets you share an entire folder - not just a single file - with anyone on the Internet in a single click.<p>Under the hood, GET responses are hydrated with file fragments streamed over a duplex WebSocket connection. Close the browser tab, and the server disappears. Files can also be password-protected.<p>I built it because I needed a way to share a static website with a client without first uploading the work to a cloud service.

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5398

Show HN: I rebuilt Jobs To Be Done on scientific foundations and open-sourced it

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5399

Show HN: Got sick of ads, so I made my own logic puzzle site

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5393

Clone any website with one command using AI coding agents

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5390

heygen-com/hyperframes

GitHub Trending

Write HTML. Render video. Built for agents.

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5389

#1 PDF Application on GitHub that lets you edit PDFs on any device anywhere

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5388

Show HN: Bowora – A launchpad for build-in-public founders

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5400

Show HN: Ze.sh – a z.sh-derived directory jumper that uses an event clock z.sh and zoxide (and other frecency-based directory jumpers) couple score decay to wall-clock time. After any extended period of inactivity (e.g. holidays) the first directories visited on return dominate the ranking regardless of prior history, and the tool effectively has to relearn ranking from subsequent navigation.<p>The underlying issue is that wall-clock time during shell inactivity carries no information about directory relevance. ze.sh replaces wall-clock time with an event clock that advances one tick per cd action. Scores decay only while navigation is occurring. Inactive periods leave scores unchanged.<p>ze.sh also replaces the traditional frecency heuristic ([visit count] * recency) with an exponential moving sum over the event series (mathematically closely related to the exponential smoothing used for Unix load averages). This avoids a separate ranking artifact where a long-dormant directory with a large historical visit count jumps to the top on first revisit.<p>The implementation is a single shell file, compatible with bash, zsh, ksh93, and mksh. The database format extends z.sh&#x27;s format with one additional field, the timestamp field is repurposed to hold the event clock counter.<p>A related project of mine, SD, also uses the event clock and exponential moving sum paradigms but stores the full event history rather than aggregate state. ze.sh explores how far the same ideas can be pushed while remaining close to the original z.sh design.<p>I would be interested in hearing whether others have run into the &quot;inactivity-cliff&quot; behaviour, and whether there are solutions to the problem that I have not considered.

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5401

Show HN: KeyGhost – Keyboard app launcher for macOS I got tired of MacOS failing to index applications (it consistently seems to prefer apps installed on my phone instead of the computer) so I&#x27;ve bound them to keys and have started building muscle memory for opening and switching apps. Reduces mental fatigue from constantly cmd + tabbing between apps all day

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5397

Show HN: Prismag – Per-block model routing for the terminal and any IDE

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5396

Codex logging bug may write TBs to local SSDs

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5384

Show HN: MemoryOps – governed memory infrastructure for AI assistants I built a governed memory layer for AI assistants with deletion compaction, vector purge verification, tenant isolation, and audit evidence.

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5402

Danish privacy activist Lars Andersen raided by police <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;xcancel.com&#x2F;LarsAnders1620&#x2F;status&#x2F;2068208864747540516#m" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;xcancel.com&#x2F;LarsAnders1620&#x2F;status&#x2F;206820886474754051...</a>

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5385

Show HN: Crespo – Tree-sitter AST blueprints instead of raw code for LLMs

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5391

The Flat Curve Society

Hacker News (score: 10)

The Flat Curve Society

Found: June 22, 2026 ID: 5380

I Gave an AI a Civilization to Run. It Built a Nuke – Launching CivBench

Found: June 21, 2026 ID: 5373

Energy Security, Not Climate Goals, Is Now Driving the Clean Power Boom

Found: June 21, 2026 ID: 5375
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