Render
Fly.io
Railway
Vercel
Heroku
Coolify
Cloudflare Pages
Netlify
pkgx
Claude Code
Vite
Warp Terminal
warp by spolu
Sindre Sorhus
Tuist
Bun.sh
RenderNo features have been listed yet.
We moved our services to Render and can't be happier!
Based on our record, Render seems to be a lot more popular than pkgx. While we know about 502 links to Render, we've tracked only 2 mentions of pkgx. 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 host: A host is really just a computer that stays powered on and connected to the internet with a public address of its own. When a visitor types in the app's address, their browser sends a request across the internet to that machine, the machine runs the code, and it sends the finished page back. A laptop was quietly doing both jobs during the build, the server and the only visitor allowed in; a host is that... - Source: dev.to / 9 days ago
The free-tier options for a first deployment are genuinely generous. Vercel, Netlify, Cloudflare Pages, and Render all host small personal projects at no cost. GitHub Pages will publish a static site for free directly from a GitHub repository, which means the last two sections of this essay can neatly become the same action: push the code to GitHub, and it is live. - Source: dev.to / 2 months ago
Deployment: Render for streamlined CI/CD and hosting. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
The first problem was the cost, I was using render.com and it cost $7 per service. Given that I had a front end, a back end and a database it cost around $21 per month. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
TL;DR: Most developers stick to Vercel and Netlify, but there are 9 lesser-known free deployment platforms that offer better features, pricing, or performance. Railway gives you $5/month free forever, Fly.io has the best global edge network, and Render beats Heroku on every metric that matters. - Source: dev.to / 4 months ago
FWIW the author of Homebrew is also working on a next generation package manager: https://pkgx.dev/. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
The "invert a binary tree" thing is a reference to a tweet by Max Howell [1]. Howell, who describes himself as a "dick" [2], hadn't been involved with the Homebrew project for years. He's since gone on to write the NFT-based package manager Tea [3] and pkgx [4], which is an "everything app"-style CLI tool with lots of fever-dream AI art and RCE as a feature. It's possible that Google just didn't hire him because... - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
Fly.io - Edge computing is the new frontier.
Claude Code - Transform hours of debugging into seconds with a single command. Experience coding at thought-speed with Claude's AI that understands your entire codebaseโno more context switching, just breakthrough results.
Railway - Made for any language, for projects big and small.
Vite - Next Generation Frontend Tooling
Vercel - Vercel is the platform for frontend developers, providing the speed and reliability innovators need to create at the moment of inspiration.
Warp Terminal - The terminal for the 21st century. Warp is a blazingly fast, rust-based terminal reimagined from the ground up to work like a modern app.