The divWidget visual design tool makes creating studio level HTML5 animated banners a breeze. Perfect for web developers that require 'next level' interactive and responsive effects.
divWidget uses HTML5 to extend the browsers CSS animation capabilites... Animate gradient backgrounds, borders, and text. Split and animte text by character, word, and line. Transform split text (translate, scale, rotate, skew). Distribute split text (intensity, spread, focal point, ease, etc...). Morph clip path polygons (points are added automatically if necessary). Transform clip path points (translate, scale, rotate, skew). Shift clip path points (this creates unique and diverse animation effects) Distribute and animate elements in the design using all the above features. Combine any number of animations, in any way, on multiple or single elements (including transform) Customize easing on individual keys. Event control animations at any point ('pause', 'play', 'reverse', etc...). Change any animation property while its running ('duration', 'interations', etc...). Make animations synchronous (run one at a time).
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Based on our record, Felt seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 26 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
How does this compare to Felt [1]? It would be nice to have some plans with listed prices in between "Free" and "Enterprise" ("book a demo"). For comparison, Felt has $30/mo and $90/mo plans. Calling yourselves "the new standard for GIS software" seems like overly strong branding. [1]: https://felt.com/. - Source: Hacker News / 3 months ago
Felt | Engineering Manager, App and Data | Oakland, CA or REMOTE (US timezones) | Full Time | https://felt.com Felt is the best way to make maps on the internet. It's surprisingly hard to make a map today, and people in 15+ industries rely on them to do their jobs. Climate change and the resulting natural disasters are forcing even more people to become map-makers, and Felt is here to meet that need. It's the... - Source: Hacker News / 5 months ago
For anyone else who follows along in this domain, there's an interesting competitor in the space I stumbled across recently: https://felt.com/ Pretty nice looking product and robust feature set. Love to see GIS tooling becoming more accessible. - Source: Hacker News / 6 months ago
There are pockets of truly open geodata though, like OpenStreetMap (even though it only services a very specific kind of geodata). People also put a lot of spatial data on Zenodo. There are even platforms out there built for almost exactly what you describe, like Koordinates and Felt, as well as means of managing your data in a way similar to managing source files, like Kart. Source: 6 months ago
I don't know if there's a readymade tool for this, but maybe you could plot it as a collaborative map so that it's clear which drivers/passengers are close to each other? Something like https://felt.com/ might help Or there's this that I've used before, but I think it's really just a signup list and not something that automatically tries to geo-optimize your routes or anything:... - Source: Hacker News / 7 months ago
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