
Hunter.io
Apollo.io
Snov.io
Lusha
ZoomInfo
Clearbit
AnyMailFinder.com
ZeroBounce
pkgsrc
Conda
Homebrew
Yay
Portage
Nix
Docker
BBEdit
Hunter.io
pkgsrcI often use the Hunter Google Chrome extension to assist me in discovering the contact details of new outreach targets. The only drawback is that I quite often exceed my free monthly allowance of lead requests.
Based on our record, Hunter.io seems to be a lot more popular than pkgsrc. While we know about 155 links to Hunter.io, we've tracked only 11 mentions of pkgsrc. 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.
A few things worth flagging: PDL beats Clearbit's historical rates for US and Western European companies, but drops to ~52% match rate for Japan and South Korea specifically. Apollo underperforms on raw company matching but returns significantly more contacts per domain in Prospector-style queries than Clearbit's Prospector ever did โ the tradeoff is more stale titles in the result set. Hunter.io is fast and cheap... - Source: dev.to / about 2 months ago
The real conclusion I'd push back on from every vendor comparison I've read: there is no single tool that solves reverse lookup at 80%+ accuracy with clean data. The waterfall is the answer. The question is whether you build it yourself with PDL + Hunter.io + Prospeo, or use a platform like Clay to abstract the plumbing โ and whether you're willing to pay FullEnrich's premium for that abstraction. - Source: dev.to / about 2 months ago
Last year I ran the same LinkedIn Sales Navigator export through three enrichment APIs. Apollo matched 61% of the emails. Hunter.io matched 54%. An OSINT-first pipeline I'd built in n8n โ pulling from public sources before hitting any paid API โ matched 79% and cost roughly $0.003 per contact. The delta wasn't magic. It was sequence. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
Start with diligent email list hygiene. Remove invalid, dormant, or unengaged addresses regularly. Use free verification tools like NeverBounce or Hunter.io โ many of which offer limited free API calls โ or build your own heuristics. - Source: dev.to / 5 months ago
By putting a mailto link out there, you also share your contact details with any legitimate outreach specialists that wish to reach you. Finding all your company emails hidden in the html code is as easy as a single tap on a hunter.io widget (many similar tools are also available). - Source: dev.to / almost 2 years ago
> Most open source software packages are also compiled for BSD variants, they switched to 64 bit time_t a long time ago and reported back upstream any problems. * NetBSD in 2012: https://www.netbsd.org/releases/formal-6/NetBSD-6.0.html * OpenBSD in 2014: http://www.openbsd.org/55.html For packaging, NetBSD uses their (multi-platform) Pkgsrc, which has 29,000 packages, which probably covers a large swath of... - Source: Hacker News / 11 months ago
> https://pkgsrc.smartos.org/install-on-macos/ Note that Pkgsrc is a NetBSD-derived project. * https://pkgsrc.org The Joyent folks leveraged it to allow their customers, who were perhaps not as familiar with Solaris/SmartOS, a larger pool of packages. Pkgsrc was running on Solaris before Joyent, Joyent built on top of it. - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
Https://pkgsrc.org/ from netbsd runs on many systems. - Source: Hacker News / about 2 years ago
It seems according to pkgsrc.org that pkgin might follow the PKG_PATH environment variable. You're supposed to set PKG_PATH="http://cdn.NetBSD.org/pub/pkgsrc/packages/NetBSD/$(uname -p)/$(uname -r|cut -f '1 2' -d.)/All/", and according to uname(1), -p gives the processor architecture and -r gives the operating system [kernel] release. Source: over 3 years ago
It seems like pkgsrc.org hasnโt got the news yet. Source: over 3 years ago
Apollo.io - Apolloโs predictive prospecting, sales engagement, and actionable analytics help the teams to reach its full revenue potential.
Conda - Binary package manager with support for environments.
Snov.io - Snov.io is a multichannel lead generation and outreach automation platform that helps B2B teams find qualified leads, automate email and LinkedIn campaigns, and manage deals in one built-in CRM.
Homebrew - The missing package manager for macOS
Lusha - Search less. Sell more.
Yay - Yay is an AUR helper written in go, based on the design of yaourt, apacman and pacaur.