Hello all 
The ac.gt team (which, in all fairness, is just 2 people at the moment...) are starting to release some of the software we've made over the last two years, starting with the program "log". Such SEO. Much Googlable. wow.
In a sentence, you prepend "log" to any command and it gets logged in a graph database.
Of course it can do a lot of other stuff, such as send you e-mail/phone call notifications when a command has finished running, create a pseudoterminal that acts almost exactly like a regular terminal (except everything gets logged), and ultimately was designed to create a community-owned database of Bioinformatic commands that will hopefully make ambiguous workflows in publications a thing of the past, but you'll have to check out the video below to see all that stuff
This is version 0.1, so still very much in alpha phase. We would really benefit from the experience of a *nix C programmer (although Python/JS/CSS programmers also very welcome!) but more than that, we would massively benefit from Alpha testers. We know it works well on our systems/servers/laptops, but knowing it works for others would really settle our nerves
Video of the tool in action:
Website where you can get the client/server/web code, and read a bit more about how to use the tool:
Thank you for your time!

The ac.gt team (which, in all fairness, is just 2 people at the moment...) are starting to release some of the software we've made over the last two years, starting with the program "log". Such SEO. Much Googlable. wow.
In a sentence, you prepend "log" to any command and it gets logged in a graph database.
Of course it can do a lot of other stuff, such as send you e-mail/phone call notifications when a command has finished running, create a pseudoterminal that acts almost exactly like a regular terminal (except everything gets logged), and ultimately was designed to create a community-owned database of Bioinformatic commands that will hopefully make ambiguous workflows in publications a thing of the past, but you'll have to check out the video below to see all that stuff

This is version 0.1, so still very much in alpha phase. We would really benefit from the experience of a *nix C programmer (although Python/JS/CSS programmers also very welcome!) but more than that, we would massively benefit from Alpha testers. We know it works well on our systems/servers/laptops, but knowing it works for others would really settle our nerves

Video of the tool in action:
Website where you can get the client/server/web code, and read a bit more about how to use the tool:
Thank you for your time!
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