JitBlox is an online visual environment for designing and prototyping component-based web applications without writing a single line of code. Seamlessly use popular UI libraries such as Bootstrap and Material Design, see your app come to life thanks to the real-time preview, and download your app's source code with a single click. Currently, JitBlox exclusively generates Angular apps.
Integrated visual designer JitBlox accelerates the design process compared to a code editor thanks to the intuitive drag-and-drop designer: quickly add basic widgets and layouts or configure complex components from proven UI libraries using an interactive toolbox. Our property editors eliminate the need to dig through documentation or memorize cryptic CSS classes.
Design with realistic data Test your designs with realistic data thanks to built-in modeling capabilities and a mock data editor. Connect your data to your user interface and create loops and other logic - all without coding.
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JitBlox's answer
JitBlox is a developer-friendly low-code tool: it integrates battle-tested UI components from popular libraries. Our toolbox lets you add components, layouts, and design fragments with just a few clicks and allows you to configure widgets interactively using a real-time preview. The source code that JitBlox generates follows best practices, making the design handoff a no-brainer.
JitBlox's answer
By embracing thoroughly tested UI libraries such as Bootstrap and Material Design, JitBlox avoids vendor lock-in while saving a lot of testing and bug fixing further down the line in your project. Starting a web project with JitBlox is super fast: creating a working app (new or from a template) requires no downloads and takes less than a second (depending on how quickly you can come up with a name for your project 😉). Compared to most code-based prototyping solutions, you also get a working app and a real-time preview, but without the hassle of setting up a development environment, installing frameworks, and copying and pasting snippets of code from the web.
JitBlox's answer
The primary users of JitBlox are developers with design skills, but our audience also certainly includes tech-savvy (interaction) designers who want to build an interactive prototype.
JitBlox's answer
JitBlox is a spin-off of an open-source code generation and modeling platform named Yellicode: after successfully using Yellicode to generate code for several Angular apps, the developer (Maurice de Laat) decided to build a small UI around it, resulting in JitBlox's first MVP in 2020... As a matter of fact, JitBlox's code generation and modeling capabilities are still powered by Yellicode.
JitBlox's answer
The JitBlox designer is built primarily with TypeScript, Rollup and Angular. Its backend is built with ASP.NET Core and the real-time preview is powered by Webpack and WebRTC.
JitBlox's answer
Based on our record, Website Carbon Calculator seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 5 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.
The first step toward sustainability is understanding the environmental cost of a website. Tools like Website Carbon Calculator provide insights into the amount of CO2 generated per page view, offering a concrete metric to gauge and subsequently reduce a website's carbon output. - Source: dev.to / about 1 month ago
To stay on par with Website Carbon Calculator without spamming their API, the same functions happen locally This includes their calculations as well as their way of getting the amount transferred data (lighthouse). - Source: dev.to / over 2 years ago
Best of luck getting the word out there! PS: have you considered partnering with websitecarbon.com, since you link them? Source: over 2 years ago
Thanks for the link, exactly the sort of thing I was looking for. It's interesting they link to websitecarbon.com. Source: about 3 years ago
The internet consumes a lot of electricity. 416.2TWh per year to be precise. To give you some perspective, that’s more than the entire United Kingdom. From data centers to transmission networks to the devices that we hold in our hands, it is all consuming electricity, and in turn producing carbon emissions. - Source: dev.to / about 3 years ago
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