A common problem with a familiar shape: a process can dial outbound to the internet, but nothing on the internet can dial it back. Your dev server on a laptop. A service in a private VPC. A homelab app behind your router. A container in a pod with no ingress. Same shape every time — outbound works, inbound doesn't. rift is a small Go binary I built to solve that. Run it as a server on a VPS you ow
The most popular HTML, CSS, and JavaScript framework for developing responsive, mobile first projects on the web.
Posted by the RagLeap team — building RagLeap, a private-server AI business platform When we started building RagLeap, the easiest path was obvious: spin up an API, connect to OpenAI, store everything in a managed cloud database, and ship fast. The Problem Nobody Talks About You upload your documents, customer data, order history It works. But ask yourself: where is your data right now? What Our U
I recently built a dynamic testimonials component for my project at Coloring Maker and wanted to give it a little extra "magic." This is how I did it. The structure is quite simple. We need a main wrapper that acts as our "sky" and a series of div elements that will become our hearts. It is crucial that the main container has the position: relative; and overflow: hidden; properties. This ensures
I like servers. Not in a "let me spend Saturday hand-tuning nginx" way. More in a "this $6 VPS is sitting right here and could probably run half my side projects" way. The weird part is that deploying to one still feels more complicated than it should. For a lot of small and medium web apps, the app itself is not the hard part. The annoying part is everything around it: building the app getting it