Stop waiting on engineering. Build production-ready internal tools with AI—on your company data, in your cloud.
Retool lets you generate dashboards, admin panels, and workflows directly on your data. Type something like “Build me a revenue dashboard on my Stripe data” and get a working app with security, permissions, and compliance built in from day one. Whether on our cloud or self-hosted, create the internal software your team needs without compromising enterprise standards or control.
Try Retool free
Gemini 3 and 200+ AI Models on One Platform
Access Google's best plus Claude, Llama, and Gemma. Fine-tune and deploy from one console.
Build generative AI apps with Vertex AI. Switch between models without switching platforms.
You've heard it before, git is powerful, but what good is that power when everything is so damn hard to do? Interactive rebasing requires you to edit a goddamn TODO file in your editor? Are you kidding me? To stage part of a file you need to use a command-line program to step through each hunk and if a hunk can't be split down any further but contains code you don't want to stage, you have to edit an arcane patch file by hand? Are you KIDDING me?! Sometimes you get asked to stash your changes when switching branches only to realize that after you switch and unstash that there weren't even any conflicts and it would have been fine to just check out the branch directly? ...
Simple, seamless, lightweight time tracking for Git
Seamless time tracking for all your Git projects. GTM is automatic, seamless and lightweight. There is no need to remember to start and stop timers. It runs on occasion to capture activity triggered by your editor. The time metrics are stored locally with the git repository as Git notes and can be pushed to the remote repository. Simply install a plugin for your favorite editor and the GTM commandline utility to start tracking your time now. When you are ready, commit your work like you usually do. GTM will automatically save the time spent associated with your commit. ...
Wiko, the wiki compiler, compiles wiki like files into html and LaTeX, combining easy wiki syntax, your preferred non-web text editor and svn/cvs control to write static webs, cientific articles or even blogs.