Generate secure, production-grade apps that connect to your business data. Not just prototypes, but tools your team can actually deploy.
Build internal software that meets enterprise security standards without waiting on engineering resources. Retool connects to your databases, APIs, and data sources while maintaining the permissions and controls you need. Create custom dashboards, admin tools, and workflows from natural language prompts—all deployed in your cloud with security baked in. Stop duct-taping operations together, start building in Retool.
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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.
An easy to use tool to change the behaviour of your input devices
An easy-to-use tool to change the behavior of your input devices. Supports X11, Wayland, combinations, programmable macros, joysticks, wheels, triggers, keys, mouse movements and more. Maps any input to any other input.
DeskHop is an open-source hardware/software KVM device that seamlessly switches keyboard/mouse between two computers by dragging the cursor or via hotkeys. It’s plug‑and‑play, requiring no drivers, and provides galvanic isolation for secure multi-OS setups.
Keyboard layout switcher for X Widow System and Wayland
Тapper — keyboard layout switcher for X Window System and Wayland. Tapper runs in background, when an assigned key is tapped, Tapper activates the corresponding keyboard layout.
"Tap" means that a single key is pressed and quickly released, so (1) no other keys are pressed at this time, and (2) period between pressing and releasing is shorter than keyboard repeat delay (usually it is 0.5 s, but it depends on desktop settings).
Tapper key feature is using modifier keys for switching...
Keyboard layouts that provide a Linux-style compose key on OS X
The compose key is a common way of entering special characters in Linux. For OS X, there are two ways of getting a compose key:
1. With a dedicated keyboard layout such as the ones provided by this project. This has the advantage that it works in all applications and that there is visual feedback while entering the compose sequence.
2. By customizing the Cocoa text system, that is, by editing the file Library/KeyBindings/DefaultKeyBinding.dict.