A first look at the Marketplace.
There's a preview of it up now. You can browse the shelves and play with the filters to get a feel for it. Nothing actually downloads yet, but you can see exactly where this is going.
Updates on Chintu. New features, what I'm working on, and what just shipped.
He started here. On solid ground.
There's a preview of it up now. You can browse the shelves and play with the filters to get a feel for it. Nothing actually downloads yet, but you can see exactly where this is going.
It started as a way around the terminal, and it still does that well. But the site says the real thing out loud now: Chintu's version control for anything you make — code, writing, designs, whatever lives in files — and a place to put it in front of people.
Then he looked up.
We're taking over ecosystems.
And kept climbing.
Browse, find something you want, download it. You don't need to know how it was built, same as you don't read an app's code before you install it.
There's a preview up now if you want to see where this is going. The actual downloads come online during the beta.
Themes, password managers, note-taking apps, PDF editors, file converters, budget trackers, schedulers, invoice generators — the kind of stuff you use every day that someone else charges you $5 or $10 a month for. Chintu builds them as extensions. 10 to 50 cents each, some free. Buy once, use forever.
No account to create. No "your free trial has ended." No upsell pop-ups. You open the extension store, grab what you need, and it just works.
A dollar gets you more from Chintu than a monthly plan gets you anywhere else.
The wax held.
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