In fact, we haven't seriously discussed commercialization yet; our main focus is on perfecting the basic functionalities. But I believe the price will definitely be very reasonable.
This is a non-trivial issue for any db product. I am not going to integrate this into my business, unless I feel very certain about what I can expect.
A couple of month ago, for example, Budibase introduced a fundamental license restructure, that (for our specific commercial use case and user structure) moved it from interesting to out of the question.
The product itself is useful and thoughtfully designed (as Teable is shaping up to be), I am sure there is a good reason for why they did it, and I am not even putting it past them that something could have been "worked out" — but this to me is completely unacceptable level of stress, when I have maybe already deeply integrated your tool into my business.
- run open source LLM models as an API, sell access at a steep discount
- run video comprehension service, sell at a discount
- run a remote build Service at a discount
If you actually want to use the credits as leverage to enter an actual SaaS market. Pick a commodity SaaS service, add a small twist on it and sell at steep discount to gain market share
A bookmark manager is pretty generic tool, that can be tailored for a variety of use-cases. You must first state your use-case, before asking for a recommendation
Even for blogs it might matter if they are talking about breaking news. A timezone can roll a date forward/backwards one day.
I am talking about having a UX date/time standard for all of UX, not just blogs.
There is UX where knowing timezone is critical, ex: when analyzing logs, breaking news etc.
To keep things simple it would be great if everyone agreed to always attach TZ info to any date or time shown.
Furthermore, any blog/article that might not appear important at the time it's posted, might become important DUE to breaking news. So just put timezones everywhere an be done with it :)
Hey, this looks pretty cool. I play with a couple of teams that are pretty competitive in local indoor leagues. We would like to try this out. I applied for the beta, but wonder if there is a way to contact you directly.
Some questions:
- Approximately how much does it cost ?
- Can it use videos of the same game, shot from different angles ?
> Do you verify that all the parts you suggest are compatible ?
Generating a part list compatible with pcpartpicker.com could fix that easily if not.
> Are you able to complement with actual build instructions ?
It's almost easier to build a PC today than a 100 piece LEGO kit. Otherwise, most components come with manuals for how to assemble them together with the other pieces too, like the motherboard comes with instructions on where things go.
I think CPU cooling mounts are probably the only thing that's really difficult, and even then, the types of mistakes you're likely to make (namely uneven tension or not enough thermal compound) take some hands on experience to get right.
I've walked 3 different under 21 kids through a build since start of the pandemic... only because my hand/eye coordination for some bits (panel headers, etc) isn't so great combined with low light visibility.
I dunno, there is a bunch of motherboard/RAM/CPU combinations that don't work properly together. Just because the socket is right, doesn't mean the component supports it.
Slightly recent example is newly launched CPU architectures using contemporary sockets, where you have to insert a supported CPU first, update BIOS and only then could the motherboard support newly launched CPU. But if you just have the one, new CPU, it might not be able to boot.
That's fair as well.. matching launch chipset and CPU is a pain. Also, even in Phoenix, I had trouble getting access to an older CPU to update a MB chipset for a new build last year... wound up spending $100 more on a newer chipset MB. It had bios flashback, but that didn't work.