On the long-term, none. In the short-term, FOSS no-code tools are finally allowing grassroot organizations to have self-hosted, customizable internal tooling without having to rely on devs or sysadmins. This has a lot of potential to overcome the failures of the last decades of hackerist unadoptable software.
Baserow and n8n are good enough for me to use in a professional production setting. Nocodb could be good, but it has some very basic bugs and shortcomings that make it hard to use.
Appflowy is getting there, but I would give it some more time.
Appsmith is good, but complex. Worth investing some time into, but it cannot be picked up casually to play around.
On the long-term, none. In the short-term, FOSS no-code tools are finally allowing grassroot organizations to have self-hosted, customizable internal tooling without having to rely on devs or sysadmins. This has a lot of potential to overcome the failures of the last decades of hackerist unadoptable software.
Any Foss no-code tools you’d recommend?
Baserow and n8n are good enough for me to use in a professional production setting. Nocodb could be good, but it has some very basic bugs and shortcomings that make it hard to use.
Appflowy is getting there, but I would give it some more time.
Appsmith is good, but complex. Worth investing some time into, but it cannot be picked up casually to play around.
Now I don’t understand this stuff very well. But I know I like everything FOSS. And I know I like self hosting. So this certainly sounds good