Sorry about what happened. For me the download link always worked. I'll look into it immediately.
Anyways this is an app to discuss anything with your neighbors without sharing your identity. Whether you want to find out about rent hikes, parking problems or anything you wonder regarding your community, you can use Neighbors app.
Thanks for taking time to try it.
- Do you think importing data from csv can make the process faster?
- Also do you think adding country on the fly would be useful in case user wants to add a country?
> Do you think importing data from CSV can make the process faster?
Yes, I would like to see import from CSV as an option. Lots of people will have data already in the file, so asking them to enter one by one can be pretty unattractive option for them.
For example, I created https://techevents.co/ - tech events aggregator and have a huge DB of tech events. So I was thinking to add a map of "Tech Communities per Country" (or Tech Events Per country) based on avg monthly attendees count that I can get from DB report. And in that case CSV option will be great for me, I will just export DB report to CSV and import to http://www.mapjot.com/
> Also do you think adding country on the fly would be useful in case user wants to add a country?
Being an Azure user for a while, I felt the pain with diagnostics. It is obvious from StackOverflow questions too. Diagnostics is a mess and you don't have a really easy, hands-on way to log something and read it right away. Plus, I really wanted to make something useful for developers, give it back basically.
First, I wrote a nuget library and pushed it out. What I found is, there are barely people who care about such library/service and its possible value to their services/applications. I thought an npm module could make a difference, but still no luck. I started to worry about the size of my target people and market. Is Azure market that small or the community still hasn't evolved that much?
The Field of Dreams line is not "if you build it, they will come." It's "he will come." If you're lucky, there is one customer who loves your product. Go have a catch with that one. Eventually, there might be a full nine.
I have been working with Microsoft technologies, especially with Azure for a while. I discovered that there is a gap in diagnostics space. Logs of your Azure services are not easily accessible, let alone searching and filtering. It is a real headache to get a quick view of your service (any problems, exceptions etc). Surprisingly, the existing solutions require you to depend on a long list of binaries and go through many steps of configurations.
Pour is a platform for simple and secure Azure log management. It solves this fundamental issue of developers with a simple, secure and fast solution. Please take a look and let me know.