Blog post and app co-author here. We'll publish the app to the stores ASAP. In the meantime, if you want to try it as a beta tester (android at least, iOS I do not remember if that works with buddybuild), then you can email us: [email protected]. Thanks!
> One thing I haven't been able to figure out is after syncing to Crick, how can I delete a project from there?
We are aware of it, and we do not have a solution yet. We built Crick in a week so we had to cut corners... We focused on the happy path. Things will get better in the future (as we use these tools).
Hi! I am Will, co-author of the blog post and tool(s).
A long time ago, we asked our intern to develop a time tracker as a CLI, given that we spend most of our time in the terminal and also to give him something fun to do. He designed a great time tracker that we now use daily: Watson (https://github.com/TailorDev/Watson).
Our business involves billing clients per days (7h a day). Watson was our source of truth but sometimes we needed to aggregate reports of different developers. Crick (https://github.com/TailorDev/crick) to the rescue!
These open source tools were part of a much bigger project that never took off. Watson was open source per se but we thought we could maybe create Crick as a paying-product. We conducted interviews and decided not to do that: nobody really needed such a tool. Well. We needed it so we developed it and decided to open source it.
Surprisingly pretty good. Simple API load tests show response time < 80ms. The C programs themselves are very fast (because there is not a lot of computation involved).
Thanks. I did not know about it to be honest. Very interesting!
There is no comparison since the idea was not to port the programs to JS or in the browser but rather being able to compile them (with a common setup) and create an API on top of them :)