18 pointsby dcabal25mh6 days ago4 comments
  • perfmode6 days ago
    Cool! Who is this for? Can you share some potential use cases? Do you have a clear understanding of your target audience? Or is this more of a “build it and they will come” approach?
    • dcabal25mh5 days ago
      Great questions. It's targeted at dev teams wanting to build their own custom experiences on the frontend without having to deal with the complications of a scheduling backend. This could be anything from calendar functionality in their application to a platform that handles bookings for an office, etc. While assisting several startups get their product built, we ran into a need for something like this which drove us to build this as a standalone service. Figured others might find it useful as well!
  • 1x005 days ago
    Why didn't you use something like Acuity? Serious questions because I'm building on their API right now (https://developers.acuityscheduling.com/).
    • dcabal25mh5 days ago
      Acuity is certainly a good option. We ultimately built our own because we knew it would be an on going feature we would need in the businesses that we were helping and we wanted to be able to own the stack ourselves. For long term cost savings as well as control over features that could be added in the future.
  • toobulkeh5 days ago
    What’s the value prop of this over cal.com scheduling backend with higher primitives?
    • dcabal25mh5 days ago
      Good question. Currently the value here is cost vs api usage compared to something like cal.com. Similar usage there would be significantly higher. That said, they also have some additional features that we don't have yet. We are actively working towards new features to close the gap! Thanks for checking it out.
  • massimoto6 days ago
    Date math as a service!