Start from a prompt and build production-ready apps on your data—with security, permissions, and compliance built in.
Vibe coding tools create cool demos, but Retool helps you build software your company can actually use. Generate internal apps that connect directly to your data—deployed in your cloud with enterprise security from day one. Build dashboards, admin panels, and workflows with granular permissions already in place. Stop prototyping and ship on a platform that actually passes security review.
Build apps that ship
Atera all-in-one platform IT management software with AI agents
Ideal for internal IT departments or managed service providers (MSPs)
Atera’s AI agents don’t just assist, they act. From detection to resolution, they handle incidents and requests instantly, taking your IT management from automated to autonomous.
qsv is a fast, command-line CSV data toolkit written in Rust that extends the capabilities of xsv. It’s designed to make working with CSV files at scale easy and efficient, offering over 40 powerful subcommands for tasks like querying, sampling, splitting, deduplicating, and more. qsv is ideal for data engineers, analysts, and developers who need high-performance CSV manipulation on the command line.
...If you are using the file rotation in your configuration there is a known substantial performance issue so listen up! By default the gzip feature is enabled and when rolling files it will zip log archives automatically. This is a problem when the log archives are large as the zip happens in the main thread and will halt the process while the zip is completed. Be advised that the gzip feature will be removed from default features as of 1.0.
jless is a command-line JSON viewer designed for reading
jless is a command-line JSON viewer. Use it as a replacement for whatever combination of less, jq, cat and your editor you currently use for viewing JSON files. It is written in Rust and can be installed as a single standalone binary. Clean syntax highlighted display of JSON data, omitting quotes around object keys, closing object and array delimiters, and trailing commas. Expand and collapse objects and arrays so you can see both the high- and low-level structure of the data.