Abandoned at a gas station, the person that found him couldn't keep him due to a cat allergy in the house. Miss KoKo and I took him in to keep him from going to our terrible local shelter. Never have we seen a kitten and the existing animals adapt to each other so quickly. He won our hearts, so his foster home is now his forever home.
The kittens are gone for adoption and Peanut is being extra needy today because they had finally started to get along. Hopefully we’ll get more foster babies for her to groom.
I’ve been looking for an ngrok alternative for a while now that’s (a) affordable (b) easy to use and (c) works with Kitten¹. Today, after testing a bunch of them again and getting fed up, I found LocalXpose that checks all the boxes.
I signed Small Technology Foundation up as an affiliate so if you use this link to check it out, we’ll get 40% of your $6/mo pro account fee should you subscribe:
Coming soon: it’s going to be trivial to deploy a different app on your Small Web server. Useful if you’re a dev and you’re playing around with different apps.
(Also, notice the speed at which deployment happens. I’m one step away from implementing this in Domain using pre-warmed Kitten instances – called toasty kittens – thereby bringing the time it takes to deploy your own Small Web place down to a handful of seconds.)
… and why I’ve had to build so much infrastructure in the past few years. It wasn’t just to reinvent the wheel but to have control over every aspect of the experience.
Well, it’s getting closer to being a reality and I’m really excited to hopefully finally be able to share what will be the culmination of the last decade of my work with more of you starting this year.
(If you want to play with it locally and add more colours, just add them to the colours array and you can click through as many colours as you like. I wanted to keep it simple and hence it’s black and white.)