A curated collection of SaaS and self-hosted tools for developers and businesses, sourced from Hacker News discussions.
Tools of the Trade is a comprehensive, community-driven directory of software tools and services for developers, startups, and businesses. It aggregates and categorizes recommendations from tech communities like Hacker News, AngelList, and Quora to provide an up-to-date resource for finding both hosted (SaaS) and self-hosted solutions across business and technical domains.
Developers, startup founders, and business teams seeking to discover and evaluate software tools for project management, development, operations, marketing, and other business functions. It is particularly useful for those who value community-vetted recommendations and need a centralized reference to compare options.
Developers choose this over generic search because it offers a curated, categorized collection based on real-world recommendations from trusted tech communities. Its unique selling point is being a living, open-source directory on GitHub that encourages community contributions to stay current, and it explicitly includes both SaaS and self-hosted options.
Tools of The Trade, from Hacker News.
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Aggregates tools recommended by tech communities like Hacker News, AngelList, and Quora, ensuring they are vetted by real users in relevant discussions, as highlighted in the README's background.
Organizes tools into comprehensive business and tech sections, covering areas from project management to server monitoring, with each entry including pricing, description, and Twitter handles for quick evaluation.
Explicitly lists both SaaS (hosted) and self-hosted options across categories, making it easy to find alternatives based on deployment preferences, as stated in the philosophy.
Hosted on GitHub to encourage contributions via pull requests, allowing the directory to stay current and expandable through community effort, per the README's call for submissions.
Updates depend on manual pull requests, leading to potential staleness; the README's last significant update mention is from 2015, and some listings may have outdated pricing or features.
Provides only basic listings with descriptions and pricing, but no user reviews, ratings, or hands-on comparisons, limiting its usefulness for in-depth tool assessment.
Primarily aggregates from Hacker News, AngelList, and Quora, which may over-represent tools popular in specific tech circles and under-represent niche or emerging solutions outside these communities.