Interesting! Triblespace seems similar to TerminusDB and the solution presented here - would you mind stating the differences ?
I'm posting me reply here, as the original comment just stating "Holy cow, and 80% of them are Israeli companies" was for no obvious reason within minutes downvoted and now even flagged (at the bottom of the page).…
I must say looking at the other blog posts and their clickbaity titles, it sounds very much like a click-harvesting operation. Especially considering that the blog just started a few months ago, there's a good chance…
Maybe duckdb-wasm is the answer (also check sqlRooms github)
Orama is definitely a hidden gem, and it's a clever usage for complementary indexing! Also agreed Triplit's DX is excellent. I'd recommend giving it another look, Triplit's recent 1.0 release has up to 10x performance…
I find InstantDB's page confusing: How far is it open-source and self-hostable ? I don't mind you having a sustainable cash flow, but it all seems a bit unclear which parts are fully open-source and self-hostable.
Not sure there is a formal definition, but here's my current understanding: In a local-first approach, changes are initially stored locally, but there's an expectation to eventually connect to a server backend to merge…
I really like Zero’s approach: it feels very much like Triplit, including many of its features like query-based smart caching. However, what holds me back from using it is that, unlike Triplit, Zero currently lacks…
Interesting! Triblespace seems similar to TerminusDB and the solution presented here - would you mind stating the differences ?
I'm posting me reply here, as the original comment just stating "Holy cow, and 80% of them are Israeli companies" was for no obvious reason within minutes downvoted and now even flagged (at the bottom of the page).…
I must say looking at the other blog posts and their clickbaity titles, it sounds very much like a click-harvesting operation. Especially considering that the blog just started a few months ago, there's a good chance…
Maybe duckdb-wasm is the answer (also check sqlRooms github)
Orama is definitely a hidden gem, and it's a clever usage for complementary indexing! Also agreed Triplit's DX is excellent. I'd recommend giving it another look, Triplit's recent 1.0 release has up to 10x performance…
I find InstantDB's page confusing: How far is it open-source and self-hostable ? I don't mind you having a sustainable cash flow, but it all seems a bit unclear which parts are fully open-source and self-hostable.
Not sure there is a formal definition, but here's my current understanding: In a local-first approach, changes are initially stored locally, but there's an expectation to eventually connect to a server backend to merge…
I really like Zero’s approach: it feels very much like Triplit, including many of its features like query-based smart caching. However, what holds me back from using it is that, unlike Triplit, Zero currently lacks…