Ask HN: What the project you're most proud of?(Feel free to share a GitHub link)
5 FerkiHN 11 7/11/2025, 11:10:58 AM
I’ve always been inspired by the projects people quietly build and share on Hacker News — some small, some huge, but all meaningful.
So I wanted to ask: what’s the project you’ve created that you’re most proud of?
It can be something you built recently or years ago. A side project, open-source tool, app, or even an unfinished prototype — anything that makes you think, “yeah, I made that.”
Feel free to share a short description and a GitHub link if you want to show it off. Would love to browse what folks here have made!
I've been in the process of rewriting/refactoring the codebase these past few months to use Rust instead of Python and Vite instead of create-react-app. OSINTBuddy is a web based version of something like Maltego (https://maltego.com/). I started the project years ago and its currently my main side project although I have a few other ideas I plan to start building starting next year.
And OSINTBuddy looks seriously cool — I imagine building something like a web-based Maltego must’ve been a huge technical challenge.
If you don’t mind me asking — how’s it going now? Are you working full-time as a developer? I’d love to hear more about your journey. Respect!
It was still just a 1-2 hour project as I recall, part of a larger project when we were re-doing the Dominos web site. And one of the other guys in the office helped me on it, so it was not even a solo effort.
But what made it cool was for a decade or so, I was able to tell people that if they had ever ordered pizza online, odds are they have seen and used my work.
One is a webapp I wrote almost 20 years ago for my dad and it's still being used today. It runs on IIS and built with asp classic and vanilla html/css/js (no frameworks back then). They use it to track orders and invoices to suppliers/vendors and ensure what they receive is what they ordered.
The other, an electron-type app that saves people hundreds of hours per month by letting them bypass some bad UIs and interact with external services directly. It's been running for 6 years, only had to make very few updates, and it's the one thing I don't need monitoring for - not only it's been quite stable, I get called immediately if it breaks (eg when external services change their endpoints).
Your first project really touched me. A 20-year-old app still in use today? That’s not just code, that’s legacy. And the second one sounds like exactly the kind of practical tool that developers dream of building — something that just works and stays out of the way.
Thanks for sharing this, it’s inspiring!
So we have launched Boringlaunch, a submission service that helps grow your online presence by submitting your product to 100+ platforms. It's perfect for new products that need more visibility and backlinks to improve their SEO and search rankings.
Our customers love it because it saves them from doing boring tasks and they can focus on real marketing.
Here is the website link: https://www.boringlaunch.com/
Did you build Boringlaunch entirely solo, or with a team? Curious how you keep up with the ever-changing list of platforms.
We keep updating our database every month where we add new/trending platforms in our internal list. We have analysed more than 800 platforms in the period of last 2 years.