Hey there! I built an open-source tool called Snapify, which is designed to make screen recording sharing a breeze, just like Loom, but with the added benefit of being completely open-source.
Let’s say you quickly want to get a message across, there are three main ways:
- Get into a meeting
- Write a wall of text
- Share a quick recording
Recordings will look like this (new link): https://snapify.it/share/clk3mpgnu0003mj0f042964wg
I’d love to hear your feedback and ideas on how I may be able to improve the app. Is anyone here using Loom?
Here is the link: https://github.com/MarconLP/snapify Here is my Twitter: https://twitter.com/Marcon565
Hey, looks neat.
Hope you’re open to constructive criticism - I’d take a look at adding some production value to your how it works video.
I work with a lot of martech folks that do product videos (I’m not selling you something) and I’d recommend a super straight forward marketing video that shows how easy the product is to use and share videos with.
Get literally any budget microphone and record your audio voiceover VERY clearly in a closet and lay that over a simple workflow for capturing a video with snapify then sharing it. Add some royalty free background music at low volume and it’ll help sell this for you significantly more than your current video is doing.
This is not the Loom I was hoping for.
Haha, I got this comment several times, including in my HackerNews launch: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36793767
Maaan, I haven’t seen this in years, such a great game. You can even play it online now, although you’d probably have to do it in one session :D
https://playclassic.games/games/point-n-click-adventure-dos-games-online/play-loom-online/play
Thx for sharing, looks awesome
Looks cool! I went to docker hub to see if you already have an image…there’s at least 1 other “snapify” that’s not you, I think. :( i’ve used Loom a few times - it would be nice to self-host this service.
I am providing docker containers, although they are hosted on Github: https://github.com/MarconLP/snapify/pkgs/container/snapify
You can deploy snapify as a docker container using this command:
docker run -d --name snapify-web -e DATABASE_URL="" -e NEXTAUTH_SECRET="REPLACESTRING" -e NEXTAUTH_URL="http://localhost:3000/" -e GITHUB_ID="" -e GITHUB_SECRET="" -e AWS_ENDPOINT="" -e AWS_REGION="" -e AWS_KEY_ID="" -e AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="" -e AWS_BUCKET_NAME="" -p 3000:3000 ghcr.io/marconlp/snapify:latest
Do you support local storage for self hosting using docker?
Snapify works with any S3 compatible api. You could self-host min.io and use that.
That is awesome work. Congratulations on releasing it.
Nice job! But Prisma… Prisma… Why do people still use prisma?
What do you recommend?
I prefer query builders like slonik, or just raw. Prisma does crazy stuff with joins which turns what should be a simple query into 300 queries. Its a well documented problem in their issue tracker. I’ve not worked on a single repo that didn’t eventually move away from it with growth, including in a professional capacity. On top of that, you put in an ORM and everyone ends up using the same DB anyway, so you lose out on potential optimizations.
I think you mention a great point “eventually move away from it with growth”.
I lose out on potential optimizations, but benefit in speed and simplicity
The same argument goes for rust vs typescript explained in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Z4fZtSKlcE
What speed do you get from prisma?
Your project looks interesting. Do you have plans to give snapify the ability to federate and share with others?
Do you have plans to give snapify the ability to federate and share with others?
Could you explain what you mean by “federate and share with others”?
Well, to use the ActivityPub protocol and operate like Lemmy and Mastodon for example. Also see Pixelfed and PeerTube as examples.
That is not something I have planned yet. But feel free to create a feature request: https://github.com/MarconLP/snapify/issues/new
I have not used Loom, and I’m not sure what your video is trying to show. It’s not clear what this tool does, or what problem it’s trying to solve, and how it solves it.