The one thing that separates “Reetro” from any other retrospective tool is tiny interactions. Whether you plan, manage or participate in a retrospective meeting, you will find there’s an elegant system in place.
It’s a system that follows a path of removing friction and improving tiny interactions, instead of creating yet another fat, boring and clunky retrospective tool that goes nowhere, we have obsessively focused on improving the tiny interactions during retrospective meetings.
Everything in Reetro is deconstructed into itty-bitty steps that are easy to follow and understand. It allows the scrum masters, project managers and team members to interact with each other in a fun, simple and easy way. Use Reetro today and discover the magic of tiny interactions by yourself.
Based on our record, Pywal seems to be a lot more popular than Reetro.io. While we know about 38 links to Pywal, we've tracked only 1 mention of Reetro.io. 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.
Pywal is used to get the colorscheme from my wallpaper for my browser and terminal. left: neovim, top right: qutebrowser, bottom right: cava. - Source: dev.to / 7 months ago
I am on Arch Linux and I am using pywal to generate a colour palette from my wallpaper, which I then use throughout my system. In particular, I have a bash script which grabs these colours and uses them for polybar. The problem is that sometimes these colours do not have enough contrast, and the bar is hard to read. Is there any tool that would allow me to check the readability of my colours, and modify them... Source: 10 months ago
Have you tested https://github.com/dylanaraps/pywal on its own? Source: about 1 year ago
There’s a program called pywal that has pretty decent instructions on getting the themes it generates to be used by various programs. Pywal GitHub repo. Check out the wiki on that page. Source: about 1 year ago
I'd definitely look into pywal for that, it's like a colorscheme manager that fills in templates (some already implemented but it also supports user templates) from either a color scheme you define or by color picking an image. Source: about 1 year ago
Check out https://reetro.io. They have a free version that should be good enough for most. Source: 12 months ago
Polybar - Status bar for Unix-like systems.
Retrium - Sprint retrospectives made easy and effective for distributed scrum teams.
Bashtop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor
FunRetro - Our fun, simple, and intuitive tool will revolutionize your teams collaboration process. Try it today for free and discover how fun retrospectives can help you.
Material Palette - Generate and export your Material Design color palette
Metro Retro - For productive, engaging and fun retrospectives