More than 28,000 organizations use SafetyCulture flagship products, iAuditor and EdApp, to perform checks, train staff, report issues, automate tasks and communicate fluidly. SafetyCulture powers over 600 million checks per year, approximately 50,000 lessons per day and millions of corrective actions, giving leaders visibility and workers a voice in driving safety, quality and efficiency improvements.
Recent analysis by Forrester found that SafetyCulture’s flagship products provide a 214% return on investment for customers, and USD $3.6M in cost savings from operational improvements.
Customers of SafetyCulture’s award winning products include the likes of Shell, United Nations, Virgin Active, Cathay Pacific, Mars and BP Chargemaster.
Our mission is to help companies achieve safer and higher quality workplaces all around the world through innovative, low-cost mobile first products.
Based on our record, Radarr seems to be a lot more popular than Safety Culture. While we know about 77 links to Radarr, we've tracked only 2 mentions of Safety Culture. 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.
I've used iAuditor from https://safetyculture.com/ in the past for site inspections/walkthrus pre-install. You could set up a form for maintenance visits. I'm not sure about integrating with your ticketing platform though. Might be worth a look. Source: over 1 year ago
Being a Chief Technology Officer (CTO) is one of the most important and challenging jobs in any company. But what’s it really like to be in this role? In this article, we’ll take a look at the life of the SafetyCulture CTO, James Simpson, his day-to-day responsibilities and plans to expand his service. We’ll also explore his framework for managing technical debt and what people can expect to see in his... - Source: dev.to / about 2 years ago
I use Nginx for Sonarr/Radarr would I see any general performance benefit when loading their webpages in general? If so, what level of compression would be ideal for this case? Source: 12 months ago
There may be better places, since I've just stuck to the same one for years now (and don't need them often enough to look into alternatives), but I usually use either subscene or opensubtitles. There are also programs that can automate it like bazarr, but it requires you to also use Sonarr/Radarr. Source: 12 months ago
- Sonarr & Radarr for sailing the sea / keeping those media libraries growing ( https://sonarr.tv/, https://radarr.video/ ). Source: about 1 year ago
Two instances of Radarr (one for 4K and one for everything else) running on one of my Linux servers. Source: about 1 year ago
Jellyfin doesn’t download movies. I think you want Radarr for that. Unless you mean that your Jellyfin server is somewhere else other than the cabin and you’re connecting to Jellyfin remotely from your cabin, in which case yeah you’d probably have to wait for it to download/buffer which could take a while. Source: about 1 year ago
EHS Insight - The Best Value in EHS Software Available Today
NZBGet.com - Fast, reliable, and feature-packed NZB downloader.
EtQ Reliance - QMS integrates data to reduce risk and ensure compliance.
NZBGet - The most efficient usenet downloader.
Forms On Fire - Forms On Fire provides a complete, customizable mobile forms and workflow system that is reliable and secure, works offline or online.
SABnzbd - SABnzbd is a free/open-source cross-platform binary newsreader written in Python.