Develop.Cheap

Part of a developer community

Hamilton, Bermuda

Despite our slightly misanthropic nature, most developers thrive on learning and sharing, and having a community of similarly minded developers to tap is a good way to do that. Below is an example of one such community and some of the various products and services I’ve learned about through it. I hope everyone is keeping well.

Hashnode logo or screenshot

Hashnode

Hashnode is a free developer blogging platform that allows you to publish articles on your own domain and helps you stay connected with a global developer community. If you read many tech articles, it is possible that you’ve come across Hashnode before. Similar to dev.to it is a community of developers allowing you to host free blogs. They also run month-long hackathons requiring the use of particular libraries or platforms. It is through these that I have come across the other links in this issue. I’m guessing it is via these competitions that they make their money in sponsorship. Because otherwise I don’t see an obvious business model. But free is free.

https://hashnode.com/

Clerk logo or screenshot

Clerk

Authentication and user management for developers that’s simple, secure, and scalable with any platform or language. Try it free! For this month (July), there is a hackathon happening at Hashnode to build an open source app using Clerk for your auth and user management. Given that is usually a tedious and non-core part of most apps, using a service like this makes sense, particularly in the beginning. Free for up to 10,000 active users.

https://clerk.dev/

HarperDB logo or screenshot

HarperDB

HarperDB is a SQL/NoSQL data management platform. It is fully indexed, doesn’t duplicate data, and runs on any device- from the edge to the cloud. This was the focus of the previous Hashnode hackathon. A database which allows for schema-less use, but also provides the familiarity of SQL for those who want that. You can get 1GB for free as part of the HarperDB Cloud offering.

https://harperdb.io/

Written by Colin Bate