Rarchy offers a suite of website planning tools, including visual sitemaps and user flows, designed for agencies and teams.
The core product is our free visual sitemap editor, which allows you to create a sitemap from scratch or import your existing website pages via our visual sitemap generator. You're then able to view your website in five different visual formats, use the drag-and-drop interface to make changes, and auto-capture screenshots of your current page designs. Your sitemap can be exported to XML (ready to upload to search engines), CSV, or PDF format.
Rarchy is ideal for teams, allowing you to collaborate, revise, and communicate changes to your website in one place.
No Rarchy videos yet. You could help us improve this page by suggesting one.
Based on our record, Hackster seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 26 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
You'll find on our website a lot of info regarding this laptop + we are working on a Hackster.io page to share our journey through devlogs :). Source: 10 months ago
Note that I could not find much documentation on references written on these components and that I am pretty new to electronics but it's something I'm interested in and I love to experiment (I have already went through hackster.io and instructables.com tutorials). Source: about 1 year ago
Something like the Gemma M0 or one of the Feather boards would work pretty well depending on what kind of connectivity you want. They both have JST connectors to connect a rechargable battery and the Gemma already has a single NeoPixel onboard. The Learn section on Adafruit or hackster.io both have excellent guides on running projects with either board. Source: over 1 year ago
I say this because learning Python and R are cool, but learning them in a traditional academic framework might not be as fulfilling or as productive as looking up some of the wild projects on hackaday.com, hackster.io, and instructables.com. If you start looking at these, they can really broaden your lens of what is possible, while at the same time offering projects that are more fun than rote coding exercises. Source: over 1 year ago
The website https://randomnerdtutorials.com has a lot of good stuff to get you going. A lot of the more advanced projects are on https://hackster.io. Source: over 1 year ago
HackADay - Hackaday.io is a platform for people who like to build things.
FlowMapp - FlowMapp is a UX planning tool for creating visual sitemaps and user flow.
Instructables - DIY How To Make Instructions
Octopus.do - Build your website structure in real-time and rapidly share it to collaborate with your team or clients. Start prototyping websites or apps instantly.
Teach by Mozilla - The Mozilla Learning Network
VisualSitemaps - Autogenerate visual sitemaps in seconds.