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Need a React.JS developer to build a Shopify website.

At least 2 years of development experience.

Experience building E-commerce websites is required.

European and US developers(we important time zone.)

$40/hr

Payment negotiable based on previous experience and level of experience.

The final candidate will begin work on March 15th. If the candidate applies, the post will be revised.

This is not a short-term assignment, as we will be able to address any issues that arise during the site's use.

Please attach a portfolio and a brief description of the most challenging aspect of your previous website development.

Proposals without this information will not be accepted.

submitted by /u/Zestyclose-Repair490 to r/reactjs
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Which hosting company has the best email/calendar/contacts app for mobile?

I'll be shopping around for web hosting in the near future. The website will show what services my business offers and will need to have a way for potential customers to contact me. I know many of the hosting companies offer email accounts and should I choose to use an email account tied to my domain, I'd want to be able to check emails on my iPhone. Who has the best email app for mobile?

submitted by /u/JackFlipKingston to r/webhosting
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Clunky CRM experience given the AI advancement, is it just me?

We are using HubSpot, in the past we've also used Salesforce, and several other ones. But all of these CRM seems to be built on the same structure with different color. It feels quite clunky to me.

Mainly I found myself switching between tabs, tables, and pages to trace down some information. It seems that CRM like HubSpot are built based on their underlying table schema, not for user experience. So I have to follow their tables, clicking, find the next link, click, etc. I have a technical background in the past and are reasonably savvy with a lot of tools. But this experience just feels 2020 to me. Can AI do something with it?

There are some custom workflows I do all the time, such as checking notes of a company/lead in the past before taking a call or writing a custom follow up email, or updating status of a lead after follow-up, etc. Although these are minor things, but given the fact that I pretty much live in CRM every day, I really wish there is something that is closer to Claude/ChatGPT experience.

Note that the workflow I'm referring to is different from the workflow feature in HubSpot. It's essentially an integration hub that plumbing things together, which is needed, but doesn't solve my experience and productivity issue.

Yes, they do have a AI chatbot on the right side, but it's nothing more than wall of text plus search and links. I didn't find myself gaining productivity leveraging it.

I have a technical background in the past, and I'm quite good at using all kinds of tools. I mean, the way CRM currently is, I can definitely do my work with it. But what makes me wonder is, am I alone feeling these kind of clunkiness? anyone else also has workflow that CRM doesn't build for you?

submitted by /u/thisismattsun to r/CRM
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3640 animated icons for Reactjs

Hi guys,

Over the weekend, I generated animated, two-tone icon libraries with CSS-only hover animations. Currently supports Lucide (1,933 icons), Heroicons (324 icons), and Iconoir (1,383 icons). They have zero JavaScript animation dependencies.

https://animated-icons.vercel.app/

You can use them in your projects.

PRs welcome: https://github.com/gorkem-bwl/animated-icons

submitted by /u/gorkemcetin to r/reactjs
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How are you handling an influx of code from non-engineering teams?

Obligatory not trying to sell you something. 😂

I’ve been around long enough to make it through a wave or two of low code/no code tools including things like UiPath back when it was a desktop app and had no AI smarts.

Now, not only do engineers have access to Claude Code et al, but accounting, finance, and Human Resources all have access to the same toolbox. And some are vibing away!

Our engineers understand there is more than just building a shiny UI in a container and that there are considerations for where it’s hosted, how it’s secured, where the code is hosted, and who is going to own the thing not to mention who’s going to vibe in a browning code base. The vibe coding population has told their LLM of choice that they’re not engineers and it’s happily barreling them forward to get things deployed all of that be damned.

How are you handling all that? I’m finding the idea of documentation (how to build and how to deploy) welcome, but also encountering folks who are way out over their skis but pressing on with personal GitHub accounts, free plans on various AI first hosting platforms, and deploying to cloud hosting providers they found the keys for and were previously unknown to ops. 😬

I’ve worked in orgs with strict governance but my understanding even of those orgs is that the AI bug has infected many. Trying to balance ‘hey, let’s slow down just a bit and get this managed properly’ with ‘oh, very important people saw you demo that flashy solution and want to know why it’s not immediately available’.

What’s working or not working for you in this area?

submitted by /u/rayray5884 to r/devops
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TrueNAS build system going closed source

Readme updated today:

This repository is no longer actively maintained.

The TrueNAS build system previously hosted here has been moved to an internal infrastructure. This transition was necessary to meet new security requirements, including support for Secure Boot and related platform integrity features that require tighter control over the build and signing pipeline.

No further updates, pull requests, or issues will be accepted. Existing content is preserved here for historical reference only.

https://github.com/truenas/scale-build

Wondering if this is just the first step towards doing a minio in the future.

submitted by /u/ende124 to r/selfhosted
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I built React Trace: a development-time inspector that lets you find, preview, edit, and navigate to your component source

Hey r/reactjs,

I've been working on React Trace, a devtool to run together with your app during development and lets you visually inspect any rendered component.

What it does:

  • Hover any element to see the component that rendered it and then choose what to do:
  • Copy the file:line reference to clipboard.
  • Open the file in your favorite editor (VS Code, Cursor, Windsurf, WebStorm, or IntelliJ)
  • Preview the source code with Monaco and edit it directly in the browser.
  • Add multiple inline comments to specific components, then copy them all to send to your AI agent (or send them directly to OpenCode with its native integration)

Setup is minimal:

Install:

pnpm add -D @react-trace/kit 

Then update your package.json to expose the project root to the tool:

"dev": "VITE_ROOT=$(cwd) pnpm dev" 

Then render the component side-by-side with your app:

<Trace root={import.meta.env.VITE_ROOT} /> 

It ships with conditional exports that resolve to no-ops in production, so there's zero runtime cost in production builds.

Plugin system:

If you want to extend it, you can build plugins that hook into the toolbar, action panel, or settings. There's a scaffolding CLI (pnpm create react-trace-plugin) and full docs.

Site: https://react-trace.js.org

GitHub: https://github.com/buzinas/react-trace

Happy to answer any questions. Feedback welcome!

submitted by /u/vbuzinas to r/reactjs
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They ruin their websites then blame it on AI *tomsguide dot com

They ruin their websites then blame it on AI *tomsguide dot com

This is one of the "big" tech websites, you literally can't find the text or information you are coming to read. Its a puzzle of ads, promotions, and popups from the first second and after scroll.
Are these sites getting this much money from ads that they start not to care about having "regulars" but just the clicks from google looking for "best macro camera on a phone" or something.

submitted by /u/mdaname to r/web_design
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CRM Data: System Restrictions Vs Ease of Use

How do you find balance between system restrictions and CRM's ease of use ? To avoid garbage-in garbage-out, adding validation and rules does make sense, but user demotivation follows soon, resulting is lower adoption of system.

what is your experience, care to share.

--BeforeYouCRM

submitted by /u/nube_rt to r/CRM
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Had an amazing talk about React Server Components and the future of React with Aurora Scharff (DX Engineer at Vercel) on my podcast

Hey r/reactjs! I just released an interview with Aurora Scharff (DX Engineer at Vercel, React Certification Lead at certificates.dev) and thought folks here might find it interesting.

We talked about:

Her path into React

- Started in robotics and intelligent systems, found her way into web dev

- Went deep on React and Next.js, became a Microsoft MVP

- Recently joined Vercel to work on developer experience

React Server Components

- Why RSCs require a real mental model shift, not just learning new syntax

- Experienced React devs often struggle more than newcomers because they keep reaching for client-side patterns

- How to think about the server/client boundary when designing components

Next.js App Router vs Page Router

- The shift isn't just an API change, it's a fundamentally different way to structure apps

- Practical lessons from rebuilding a legacy government system on the App Router

- Deploying on Vercel vs Azure and what surprised her

React certifications in the AI era

- She's building the React certification at certificates.dev

- Her take: when AI can generate code, proving you understand the fundamentals becomes more important

- Certifications aren't about gatekeeping, they're about depth of understanding

Speaking and community

- How she went from zero talks to 30+ conference appearances

- Why putting yourself out there early matters even when you feel like you're not ready

Full episode here:

- YouTube: https://youtu.be/4Llhem0M1Og

- Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/6UW8rszpV4eOAYwxK4trH4

Would love to hear your thoughts or answer any questions!

Also suggest me some guests you want to see!

submitted by /u/creasta29 to r/reactjs
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Llamadas SPAM de Banco General

Llamadas SPAM de Banco General

Buenas tardes gente de 5k,

Hay una manera de que esa gente de Banco General dejen de llamar, me hacen hasta 5 llamadas al dia, me mandan correos ofreciendo préstamos y muy amablemente les he respondido que no estoy interesado y la gente sigue y sigue.

Qué me recomiendan

submitted by /u/UpsetChip2779 to r/Panama
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Localias — stop memorizing port numbers

I built a CLI tool that replaces localhost:4231 with myapp.localhost:7777. It auto-detects your project name, proxies traffic (including WebSockets), and has a built-in dashboard.

curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/thirukguru/localias/main/install.sh | bash

Written in Go, single binary, open source.

https://github.com/thirukguru/localias

submitted by /u/tguructa to r/reactjs
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Advice For Surviving Current Job Market 6 Months After Layoff [3+ YOE]

I've gotten laid off about 6 months ago, back in September. After being made redundant, I took some time off from anything work related, and got back to applying for DevOps/Platform engineering roles. Despite having gotten a dozen or so recruiters contacting me, as well as getting past a few final interviews, I feel as though my confidence is waning at this point.

My emergency funds are fairly solid, and should last a fairly long time (roughly 12 more months). I'm Interested in getting feedback mainly with my CV, as I fear I may be missing something here. I'm applying for mainly mid-level DevOps/Platform engineer roles.

My CV is here

submitted by /u/Yibro99 to r/devops
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UBER aeropuerto es rentable 2026?

Tengo 6 meses manejando Uber como segundo ingreso mensual, ya tengo un sistema que me funciona, pero quiero evaluar probar al menos un o dos días aeropuerto, pero veo muchos comentarios sobre el tiempo de espera y que si es rentable si alguna carrera te lleva haya, pero la realidad es que un escenario ideal no existe, pocas veces se tiene la suerte de que todos estos requisitos del “Escenario ideal” se cumplen, aqui es donde surgen mi duda sobre si es algo rentable para incluir en mi sistema.

submitted by /u/Extension_Sentence39 to r/Panama
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Made a quick game to test how well you actually know HubSpot

Spent a weekend going deep on HubSpot features and realized I knew maybe 50% of what it can do.

Turned it into a short interactive quiz.

15 challenges, 6 rounds. Takes about 3 minutes. No sign up.

You get a score out of 100 and a spider-web skill chart.

submitted by /u/Alarming_Glass_4454 to r/CRM
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❌