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jasondc commented on We built an air-gapped Jira alternative for regulated industries   plane.so/blog/everything-... · Posted by u/viharkurama
pc86 · a month ago
Air-gapped probably adds a zero or two to the highest tier Enterprise price. You wouldn't buy an Enterprise license for a personal project, why would you buy an Enterprise++ license (which is essentially what AG is)?
jasondc · a month ago
It's part of the Business tier on the pricing page here: https://plane.so/pricing
jasondc commented on We built an air-gapped Jira alternative for regulated industries   plane.so/blog/everything-... · Posted by u/viharkurama
vosper · a month ago
> cloud-only tools like Jira.

But Jira is not cloud-only?

https://www.atlassian.com/enterprise/data-center

jasondc · a month ago
$$$$ Very expensive
jasondc commented on We built an air-gapped Jira alternative for regulated industries   plane.so/blog/everything-... · Posted by u/viharkurama
zppln · a month ago
Ehm, fairly sure you can use Jira in an air-gapped environment.
jasondc · a month ago
from Google: "Atlassian has sunsetted its Server product line, including Jira Server, meaning they are no longer supported and users need to migrate to Cloud or Data Center versions. Specifically, support for Atlassian Server products ended on February 15, 2024. This includes the end of new license sales, renewals, and security updates for Jira Server. "
jasondc commented on We built an air-gapped Jira alternative for regulated industries   plane.so/blog/everything-... · Posted by u/viharkurama
jasondc · a month ago
Big fan of Plane since it's open-core.

Doesn't seem to be a lot of options for self-hosted/open-core project management software. The existing ones looks pretty bad, and don't come anywhere close to Jira level functionality.

jasondc commented on Ask HN: What Are You Working On? (June 2025)    · Posted by u/david927
cjflog · 2 months ago
Currently a one-man side project:

https://laboratory.love

Last year PlasticList discovered that 86% of food products they tested contain plastic chemicals—including 100% of baby food tested. The EU just lowered their "safe" BPA limit by 20,000x. Meanwhile, the FDA allows levels 100x higher than what Europe considers safe.

This seemed like a solvable problem.

Laboratory.love lets you crowdfund independent testing of specific products you actually buy. Think Consumer Reports meets Kickstarter, but focused on detecting endocrine disruptors in your yogurt, your kid's snacks, whatever you're curious about.

Here's how it works: Find a product (or suggest one), contribute to its testing fund, get detailed lab results when testing completes. If a product doesn't reach its funding goal within 365 days, automatic refund. All results are published openly. Laboratory.love uses the same methodology as PlasticList.org, which found plastic chemicals in everything from prenatal vitamins to ice cream. But instead of researchers choosing what to test, you do.

The bigger picture: Companies respond to market pressure. Transparency creates that pressure. When consumers have data, supply chains get cleaner.

Technical details: Laboratory.love works with ISO 17025-accredited labs, test three samples from different production lots, detect chemicals down to parts per billion. The testing protocol is public.

You can browse products, add your own, or just follow specific items you're curious about: https://laboratory.love

jasondc · 2 months ago
Really cool, definitely donating to a few products!
jasondc commented on The Most Disturbing Places We've Found Microplastics So Far   gizmodo.com/microplastics... · Posted by u/nehagup
jasondc · a year ago
Try buying food that isn't stored in plastics, worse yet, the supply chain before you get the food probably uses plastics between the various components. Seems like such a hard problem to solve.
jasondc commented on Fine-tune an open source LLM from Postgres data in 5 minutes   databaseengineering.subst... · Posted by u/jasondc
jasondc · a year ago
The process of fine-tuning open source LLMs has become incredibly easy, we'll walk you through it

u/jasondc

KarmaCake day2052March 12, 2011View Original