by dan_voronov on 3/21/25, 11:22 AM with 30 comments
I'm still on the fence about including txt2sql projects, as their functionality seems too basic to me.
And I'm personally maintaining this, so your feedback is wellcome.
by thih9 on 3/21/25, 11:57 AM
- Origin country listed for all tools, especially closed source.
- Information whether a tool can work offline and with a local model or does it rely on an external server.
by dan_voronov on 3/21/25, 7:05 PM
I'm not interested in searching for the Origin country (I'm sure that in 90% of cases it will be the USA, then China) and Funding model, as I'm more into programming and I'm interested in the usefulness and stability of the tools. If someone does such OSINT and sends me the information, then of course I will add it.
by bredren on 3/21/25, 1:07 PM
https://github.com/banagale/FileKitty
Despite all the hoopla of “project knowledge” and supposed codebase-wide context, I still find reasoning models do their best when directly provided with files relevant to a problem and nothing more.
I plan to add a tree feature and restore some other features I had in prior versions.
There are probably other tools that don’t require completion API requested but assist in AI enhanced dev workflows.
by csantini on 3/21/25, 1:14 PM
For example:
by bufferoverflow on 3/21/25, 12:01 PM
Why not have a column for which LLMs they give for free, with limits. A column for unique features. A column for pricing.
Right now it's just a wall of text I have to read.
by ai-christianson on 3/21/25, 4:18 PM
Cool to see we're on your list!
Curious to hear feedback on it!
by dan_voronov on 3/21/25, 7:41 PM
If projects have code on GitHub, it's easy to follow their updates, but if they are closed projects that post changelogs on their website, it's difficult for me to find an RSS feed. Usually, in the site code (like with Cursor), the feed leads only to blog updates.
by johnjungles on 3/21/25, 11:41 AM
Have you also looked at mcp?
https://modelcontextprotocol.io/introduction
https://github.com/appcypher/awesome-mcp-servers
mcp.run glams.ai smithery.ai skeet.build (disclaimer: I built this one)
by paradite on 3/21/25, 12:29 PM
https://paradite.github.io/ai-coding/
Also there are a lot of cli tools in this space:
by ColinEberhardt on 3/21/25, 12:52 PM
https://github.com/ColinEberhardt/awesome-ai-developer-tools
Categorising these tools is quite challenging!
by soco on 3/21/25, 11:40 AM
by fosterfriends on 3/21/25, 1:11 PM
I'll (biasedly) throw in "Diamond" - https://diamond.graphite.dev/, and in general, AI code review tools as a whole category :)
by scosman on 3/21/25, 12:55 PM
It includes synthetic data generation, fine-tuning and evals to help build your own models.
by jdiff on 3/21/25, 12:35 PM
by password4321 on 3/21/25, 1:28 PM
by bsaul on 3/21/25, 12:45 PM
by bovermyer on 3/21/25, 11:57 AM
by vednig on 3/21/25, 11:37 AM
by MichaelMoser123 on 3/21/25, 12:14 PM
(couldn't resist the urge to post slashdot-like silliness)