* Created http://jspkg.com for hosting javascript packages. A sort of plugins.jquery alternative, except for all JS projects. This is still a very active work in progress that I've been working on for about 7 months now.
* Rewrote the entire remotipart gem for ajax file uploads in rails (https://rubygems.org/gems/remotipart) (again, I'm assuming the rewrite counts, since it essentially became an entirely new project that happened to have the same goals as the original).
I also contributed to a lot of other open-source projects like the ruby carrierwave gem, citizenry, ruby sunspot (solr gem), ruby-git gem, and some others.
I consider these contributions to be pretty much on-par with things created, because whenever I want to create something, my first step is seeing if there may be some existing project that even comes close, to which I could contribute instead of starting something new for people to keep up with. So really the only difference between creating and contributing is whether or not I can find something of similar quality and purpose that already exists.
I created http://onepix.me in about 3 months of 2011
I did the bulk of the coding on http://localbeer.me (find great beer, brewed locally) in 2011
I created http://imgonly.info - only the images from the Reddit home page in 2011
I also created several smaller failures, which were quite fun as well.
My plan for 2012 is to create revenue from one, or all of the above sites.
I made http://www.newsfeedy.com to provide context for trending topics at a glance. Born of my desire to know what breaking news/trends were, while being too lazy to google the Twitter trending topics.
Started writing (semi) regularly on my blog, http://tgriff3.tumblr.com - a big step after many stops and starts.
An email list! I interview startups which are hiring and email the interview to my list. Thinking about podcasting the interviews in the near future. http://startupfrontier.com
I created http://dudmail.com - a disposable email site that allows you to automatically forward emails, and permits attachments.
It's not been as much of a success as I was hoping (currently 1200 registered users, with quite a large number more of unregistered users), but it was a project that I started and finished =)
yeah, don't get me wrong - I'm (sorta) happy with that, but I don't think they're 1200 real users.
You don't need to register to use 90% of the sites functionality, so most people probably never register.
But it's free to register, so of those that do, probably only 10% come back and use the site regularly. Certainly it only seems to translate to about 100-200 uniques a day.
I'm still getting about 2-10 registrations a day, so hopefully (given a long enough period of time) that number will go up.
The big problem at the moment though is that I've submitted to all the app directories that I could find. This made a huge difference in google page rank for "disposable email" (made it up to page two at one point). Now though, with no new links I'm slowly sinking (now down to page four).
Still a work in progress, and none outside of my fulltime job:
FitBolt (fitbolt.com) - workday health & wellness platform. Gives you alerts/actions/notifications with posture corrections, exercises, stretching, health & nutrition tips. Currently have a web version, firefox & chrome plugin, and pokki (desktop) version
http://www.gemfury.com for hosting private Ruby Gems. I wanted a unified way to deploy software for another project and decided to use gems. First built it for myself, then figured it would benefit others.
Wow, I live in a small town in Canada and it had a news feed. Nice. You might want to think about geolocating the user by IP address, and displaying their local news without having to select a city.
Thanks. We're still hard at work stabilising/optimising the back-end to handle the constantly growing (organic) load/traffic efficiently. With almost 65 million headlines archived so far, and about 250k fresh ones getting added daily, all this continues to be a bit of a battle here. :) We've planned to work on polishing the front-end etc. once the back-end is sorted out satisfactorily.
http://jekyllbootstrap.com - The quickest and most hassle-free way to get your new Jekyll powered website up and running. 100% compatible with GitHub pages.
I created BugMuncher - a feedback widget that allows users to create marked-up screenshots of website errors (like on Google +) - http://bugmuncher.com
Thanks! Hope you like it, and please let me know if you have any suggestions as I'm putting a lot more time into it this year.
You wouldn't believe how many sites I've seen using that theme, unfortunately it's arguably the best SaaS theme on themeforest, one of my goals this year is to get a new site deign.
Oh I created Am I Beautiful too. Another iphone app just to help those women/girls who think they are not good at all and perform bad in their lives just because they think no one love them.
We created a context aware to-do/task list application. We make recommendations for each of user's tasks to help them get done quickly. Check us out at: http://diglig.com