Developers Tools

Developers Tools

Are you a developer or a power user? I bet you will find a useful tool here.

I have been working on some applications in my free time for over 10 years. Some are only 2 years old. I use them all, but they are not mature enough to be shared yet, e.g. due to mystical or hard-coded configuration. Or due to some quirks. Or due to an ancient, Windows-2000-like, interface.

I am working hard on making the first applications production beta-ready by the end of the year. Sign up to get early access.


Tools that will be available soon:

Time reporting

A unique approach to avoid forgetting to report time to the correct project. Every developer forgets to stop the timer when they change the context. I used to too, so I made a reminder every 15 minutes to select the project you have just been working on. Reports. Configurable timers for breaks, e.g. Pomodoro, eye break, stretching. Reminders. Countdowns. Extensive theme and appearance configuration. Widgets (e.g. CPU usage, battery level). App launcher. This is my control center.

App launcher and project workspaces

This is my second control center. Make dashboards with buttons to launch applications or scripts with parameters. Schedule launching applications or opening websites (e.g. weather every morning, project statistics at noon, backlog on every Monday). Embed launched applications inside the application to avoid clutter on the desktop. Easily switch to another project by opening all related applications, documentation and websites. Also, run git status in all projects or execute REST APIs for testing.

Git merge

A unique tool to understand what is happening when you get conflicts in git merge, especially if you merge others’ branches. It aids you in selecting the correct code. Also helps managing a git repository, especially previewing changes and history. Not to mention the most common use cases: rebase, undo, amend a commit.

Angular & .NET

I have a consulting for both technologies and I support dev teams. Also, you can sign up for a newsletter there.

.NET Utils

An extensive library useful for creating library / WinForms / WPF / ASP.NET Core applications.

File management

A big suite for file management. Create catalogs of external drives or SD cards, find files and compare folders (with a special case for source codes). Find duplicates with configurable rules and see the results in a tree. Record disk activity (e.g. files cleanup, folder renames) to repeat on different disk or computer.

Personal knowledge base

Another suite for your personal knowledge base. Create a “second brain”. Back up web pages, Tweets, GitHub projects in case they are removed in the future. Search inside your knowledge base alongside Google. Run a diary of actions, whether professional (tasks worked on, courses completed, clients met) or personal (where you’ve been, who you met, how much you paid), and see statistics after you provide every action. All stored on your computer and easy to share or backup.

Managing tasks with dependencies

You start working on a task, when you discover you have first to add some other feature – or create a tool. When working on that feature you find something else blocks you and you have to switch to yet another task. How to manage dependencies in tasks, pause working on some tasks to do intermediate tasks, or split tasks into subtasks?

Adding notes and categories to web pages

There are still website catalogs that do not allow personalization. Or saving items. Or adding notes or categories. Are you lost about which movies you saw, which books you bought, or want to add tags and notes to people you communicate with?

Not a snippets manager

Because they never worked for me. I prefer to Google that and select the best solution (on StackOverflow, of course). However, what I, and most developers need, is reusing code we or our team already wrote. In our codebase.

Database tools

Browse data like you would navigate an online encyclopedia. Database diff. Quick database backup and restore to test different scenarios.

Vim

Vim is crazy. I first learned how to add commits to git in vim – enter text, save and quit. Then how to paste the clipboard. Later I got excited enough to use it as IDE for notes and developing Angular and .NET projects. Do you want to learn too?

And many many more…


Do you want to be the first to access this software? Sign up to be notified about early access and get a lifetime discount. The most up-voted tool should be available by the end of this year!

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