Why this list is different The "best" email API depends entirely on what you're building. A side project optimizing for the free tier needs different things than a Series B SaaS sending two million transactional emails a month. This post grades eight providers against the criteria that actually move the needle in production, and tells you which one to pick for which use case. Most roundups in th
If you want to Automate GitHub PRs, the real goal is not just adding another bot comment to a pull request. The goal is to give reviewers the context they usually have to gather manually: who owns the service, whether it is deployed, whether basic repository standards are in place, and whether the change looks safe to merge. A useful AI pull request workflow can do exactly that. When a PR opens, i
Most TypeScript teams shopping for an agent framework don't need one. A single generateObject call covers classification, extraction, summarization, tagging — the 80% case for production LLM work in TS right now. But once the model starts deciding what to do next, surviving deploys, or coordinating with other agents, you start shopping. And the moment you do, you discover the TS agent ecosystem is
All frameworks are eventually replaced. React is probably the first that won’t be. It's not the best language out there, it's not the language developers love the most, it's the language the robots just won't quit. Request ChatGPT to develop a todo app for you. You'll receive React. Request Copilot to generate the basic structure of a component. React. Request Claude to design a prototype for a da
Well, I have been on GitHub since 2019, even before the lockdown. Back then, I did not properly use GitHub. I used to just make projects, upload the code, and share it with friends. But I never really understood the point of GitHub. I think I missed my tutorials on GitHub. But now, I’ll share some key ways to actually make the best out of it. Your GitHub profile is not just a bio page. It is your
A collective list of free APIs