This is a weekend project I created to make e-cards out of the fantastic US Patent Office valentine's day cards from Steve Hoefer (with permission of course)
While building it, I also got a chance to play with some of the newest tech that we all read about here on HackerNews - NodeJS, Express, Mongo, iced coffeescript (with await and defer), and heroku custom buildpacks (to support node 0.6.1)
Feedback on the UX, functionality, and overall experience are appreciated.
This project was also another chance to test a larger thesis of mine. When building a startup (as my wife and I are doing with Postkin.com), it's often helpful to create free, fun "viral side-along" projects. Although seemingly a diversion from your core business, fun sideprojects like this can introduce new people to your idea and help build your audience.
We've create viral side-alongs for several of our projects here at Qlabs, and so far they seem to be some of the most effective ways to expose people to our products while adding a bit more awesome to the internet.
I'm happy to answer any tech questions anyone has about the project, as well as talk more about the viral side-along concept if anyone is interested.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 17.5 ms ] threadWhile building it, I also got a chance to play with some of the newest tech that we all read about here on HackerNews - NodeJS, Express, Mongo, iced coffeescript (with await and defer), and heroku custom buildpacks (to support node 0.6.1)
Feedback on the UX, functionality, and overall experience are appreciated.
This project was also another chance to test a larger thesis of mine. When building a startup (as my wife and I are doing with Postkin.com), it's often helpful to create free, fun "viral side-along" projects. Although seemingly a diversion from your core business, fun sideprojects like this can introduce new people to your idea and help build your audience.
We've create viral side-alongs for several of our projects here at Qlabs, and so far they seem to be some of the most effective ways to expose people to our products while adding a bit more awesome to the internet.
I'm happy to answer any tech questions anyone has about the project, as well as talk more about the viral side-along concept if anyone is interested.