Show HN: Open-source platform for customer-facing Salesforce integrations We spent the past few weeks building Supaglue ( https://ift.tt/ThGFyRs ) and would like to share an early public alpha version with you. Supaglue is an open source platform to help developers build customer-facing Salesforce integrations into their applications. Use code to define syncs for pulling objects from Salesforce into your application. Embed functional and customizable React components for your customers to configure these syncs. Why? - We built user-facing HubSpot and Salesforce integrations in a previous product we worked on and did not find an existing solution that let us build it quickly, using code, and that supported custom business logic, so we built in-house. - There were some unified API products we evaluated, but they lacked depth, e.g. support for custom fields and objects. - There were UI-based workflow builders, but we did not want to click around in a UI tool to author business logic. - None of the options we evaluated came with ready-to-use React components, nor were they customizable. With our public alpha you can: - On a schedule, sync Accounts, Contacts, Leads, and Opportunities from Salesforce into your application - Customize where syncs write to (Postgres or an API endpoint), as well as its retry behavior - Author syncs using Typescript - Offload the full OAuth flow and token management to our backend and frontend components - Embed React components for OAuth, field mappings, on/off toggles, and manual syncs into your Next.js application - Deploy sync code and monitor sync status using a CLI - Open source MIT license so anyone can self-host We’re very early: we started working on this after the new year and are releasing a public alpha to get early feedback. You can run Supaglue locally using docker compose today. Try it out and send us a note! Website: https://supaglue.com . Github: https://ift.tt/ThGFyRs . https://ift.tt/ThGFyRs February 6, 2023 at 08:11PM
Women Pioneers at Muni: Adeline Svendsen and Muni’s First Newsletter By Jeremy Menzies To close out Women’s History Month, here’s a look back at one woman whose work to bring Muni staff together in the late 1940s created a legacy that lives on to this day. Adeline “Addy” Svendsen was founding editor of Muni’s first internal newsletter, “ Trolley Topics .” Adeline Svendsen sits at her desk in the Geneva Carhouse office building in this 1949 shot. Trolley Topics was a new venture when it started in February 1946. As Svendsen wrote in the first issue it was created, “to bring a little fun, a little news, and a lot of good will to all our fellow employees in the Railway.” Just two years prior in 1944, Muni merged with the Market Street Railway Company, expanding the small municipal operation into the largest transit provider in the city with hundreds of employees, vehicles of every shape and size, and dozens of facilities scattered across town. The newsletter was meant to help unite ...
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