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We installed the software and started to populate it. After a while we experienced login problems. For some mysterious reason, some users can only login to it from one computer but when they try it from a different computer using the same credentials then it fails. Documentation is poor - when we go to the Wiki, the FAQ pages are not available? The discussion page is also empty. We could not find a user manual. We are looking for other options.
Running on Ubuntu 16.04LTS server. It works very well. We wrote some aditional php web-page functions to directly access the MYSQL database to implement a few additional functions. Because it is open source it is relatively easy to modify for specific extra functions. Fast FREE and not encumbered by proprietary stuff, adverts or forcing you to divulge company data to an online service. Easy to do backups and clone to other machines. A really useful tool. It is a good idea if the administrator has a basic competance in Linux and web/php admin. Overall very good.
Based on our record, PartKeepr should be more popular than Moment Timezone. It has been mentiond 10 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.
Moment-timezone is pretty great. However the moment library is no longer maintained, and there's some complications to its use due to it being mutable. Still works great though. Source: over 1 year ago
It was actually much easier to make than I thought it would be, thanks to Moment. - Source: dev.to / almost 2 years ago
The clock is in Javascript. Time zones in JavaScript historically are non-trivial since everything is based on the client clocktime. Fortunately, there is moment.js and moment-timezone-with-data.js that vastly simplify getting the current time at the NYSE. The clock keeps ticking correctly irregardless of which tab is active. I find the clock to be also functional since the WSBoy is worn over where I would... Source: over 2 years ago
I used the Moment-Timezone library, which returns, well, all the timezones! Super easy to get started with, just add using npm or yarn to add it, and then add import moment from 'moment-timezone'; to the top of your file. - Source: dev.to / over 2 years ago
Thanks for the links. I am now looking at PartKeepr, which doesn't seem too daunting. Source: over 1 year ago
You should look at any open source apps that do something like this already. There are many. https://partkeepr.org/ is one I found after 2 minutes of googling. Source: over 1 year ago
Partkeepr may solve some of that problem for you - https://partkeepr.org/. Source: about 2 years ago
For your use case it sounds that snipe-it might be the perfect fit. It can be self hosted, open source, has a login system, has a user system incase you let people borrow items, supports barcodes, supports putting an item out of service incase its broken, supports keeping track of serial numbers and much more. Another one ive tried is partkeepr which is mainly focused on individual electronic components but can... Source: over 2 years ago
Regarding other softwares for manual entry you might want to take a look at: https://partkeepr.org/. Source: over 2 years ago
OCS inventory NG - OCS inventory NG is a free software that enables users to inventory IT assets.
BOMIST - Parts Inventory and BOM Management for Electronics
Celery Project - Celery is an asynchronous task queue/job queue based on distributed message passing.
Snipe-IT - Managing assets with a Google doc or a shared Excel spreadsheet is more common than you think.
StackPile - StackPile is a web-based app that helps you easily integrate third-party software into your existing or new website.
Stockpile - Stockpile is a free online inventory system for small business and at home uses.