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- #Boostnote centering for android#
- #Boostnote centering Offline#
Colonizers – “Catan” inspired board game. MarkRight – GitHub flavored Markdown editor with live preview. Sia-UI – Decentralized file storage system based on cryptocurrency technology. Pomodoro – Timer based on the Pomodoro Technique. google-music-electron – Unofficial Google music app. Trendy – Trending GitHub repos in your menubar. DevDogs – DevDocs.io API documentation. Yays – YouTube music player in your menubar. Shiba – Live Markdown preview with linting. Yeoman – Scaffold projects using Yeoman. Fireball – Hackable game editor for creating mobile and HTML5 games. Loop Drop – MIDI looper and synth for live electronic music performances.
Yoda – Browse and download YouTube videos. Piglet – Run Grunt tasks from your menubar. We Build SG – Upcoming events & recently updated repos from webuild.sg. #Boostnote centering for android#
Snapper – Screen capturing & recording for Android devices. #Boostnote centering Offline#
GReader – Collect and read offline readme files of GitHub repos. Gulp – Run Gulp tasks from your menubar. ScreenCat – Screen sharing & remote collaboration. FatFileFinder – Find large files on your machine. Kitematic – Docker container management. Cumulus – SoundCloud player in your menubar. Gitify – GitHub notifications in your menubar. Soundcast – Cast OS X audio to Chromecast from your menubar. SmartMirror – Voice controlled smart mirror. Kakapo – Ambient sound mixer for relaxation or productivity. Abricotine – Markdown editor with inline preview. Caprine – Unofficial Facebook Messenger app. Here are more apps that are powered by Electron, thanks to this compiled list from this Github page. If you are interested in exploring more what Electron enabled the developer to do, head over to to check out more apps built on Electron. This is truly the next generation of desktop apps. It’s a framework powered by Chromium and Node.js that lets you write apps in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. The magic behind those apps with cross-platform support is that they are all built with Electron. Not anymore with this new evolving way of development.
Traditionally, writing a cross-platform application means writing the same app multiple times using the same or different languages that work on different platforms. All of those apps share one thing in common, which is the ability to run on multiple platforms, Windows, Mac, and Linux. A while ago I covered this new editor, Visual Studio Code, by Microsoft and how great it is to finally have a native Twitter client running on Windows 7.