Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | natashabaker's commentslogin

SnapEDA (www.snapeda.com) YC S15 | Redwood City, CA | Full Time

Electronics design tools. We help 1.5 million engineers to design faster. We are a team of 25, mostly all engineers of some sort (mechanical, electrical, software, industrial).

Hiring:

- AI Engineering Lead (Onsite)

- Backend Engineer (Onsite)

- Account Executive (Onsite)

- Fullstack Engineer (Onsite)

- Platform Engineering Lead (Onsite or Remote)

- QA Engineer (Asia)

- Product Growth Lead (Onsite or Remote)

Email us at info@snapeda.com if interested.


Looks awesome but how do you handle version control? Also, can permissions be set on who is able to modify vs. view/run a job?


Since we focused on developers we had to do both those things early as users didn't want to adopt without it. In terms of version control, we have a native version control that allows you to mark a deploy comment rollback to any prior version of an app, workflow or job.

https://docs.superblocks.com/software-development-lifecycle/...

We got some feedback recently that customers wanted to manage this all using their own CI/CD pipeline so we're working toward enabling this very soon. A GitOps feature would allow you to manage everything via your typical process in Github/Gitlab etc including code reviews and team hierarchies on who can deploy code.

In terms of role based access control, we have a set of permissions you can set at the job, workflow and app level for access to Own, Edit, or Use. Also Permissions groups can be accessed via code to do business logic around the groups for more fine-grained controls. There are also permissions at the integration level because you may want developer A to access postgres, but not developer B from another team.

https://docs.superblocks.com/account-management/permissions-...

Still both pretty deep areas we are learning more as our customer base scales so open to feedback!


If you’re curious to learn more about how Bluetooth was named, there’s an interview with Jim Kardach on the topic: https://blog.snapeda.com/2019/10/07/how-bluetooth-got-its-na...


Hi this is Natasha, the founder and CEO of SnapEDA. Sorry to hear you had a bad experience. Search is a hard problem for components because there are so many interpretations of terms, and the need to have such a large database of parameters.

We created SnapEDA to be a free service for users like yourself, so this kind of feedback is helpful. We’re definitely making progress on that front, but we know there’s a long way to go and will continue to improve that!


This is referring to WIT's funding. As per the post:

In the short term, I will continue working on KiCad while pursuing as many avenues as possible to generate enough revenue to allow me to continue to work full time on KiCad.


Who are WIT, anyway? Their site is a placeholder: https://www.wit.com/


Archive.org can help in cases like this, e.g.: https://web.archive.org/web/20190517010832/https://www.wit.c...


This is what I love about the C256 project (https://c256foenix.com/). From an interview with her:

By limiting its resources, future developers will have to be clever to find new ways to create amazing things that early on we thought we could never do. Memory is cheap, so I could easily spend the same amount of money on a single chip that could have given me the chance to fill the memory space with RAM. But instead, I am choosing to use many chips with much lower capacity. It’s more limiting, but that’s the point."


If you haven't, order a Rev C board and contribute!

https://c256foenix.com/product/c256-foenix-rev-c-bare-board-...


SnapEDA | Director of Software Engineering | Full-Time | San Francisco

Help us build great data products for electronics designers and the global electronics component industry.

About Us

We are a small product-focused team that has built engineering tools relied upon by over 110,000 registered engineers to build their products more quickly. Whether it’s drones, airplanes, medical devices, and lots more, we break down the barriers in bringing new products to life.

We are currently looking for an experienced software engineer who can also help manage and mentor junior developers and bring greater maturity to our product and processes.

You can see more details and apply here: https://snapeda.workable.com/j/9CF0237921


Hi HN,

When designing circuit boards, engineers waste days making digital models (like symbols & footprints) for each component in their circuit board designs.

Some components such as connectors, are particularly challenging to create models for due to their non-standard shapes, pitches, pads and cutouts. Just one of these components could take hours to create, and requires deciphering complex computer-aided design (CAD) drawings, which can be very tedious and error-prone.

Today we’re excited to announce that we are making over 25,000 new free electromechanical models available to electronics designers, including connectors, switches, relays, and sensors, through a collaboration with TE Connectivity.

They can be downloaded for nearly every PCB design format, including Eagle, KiCad, Altium, Cadence OrCAD & Allegro, Mentor PADS, DXDesigner, PCB123, and more.

Unlike other models you might find scattered across the web, or even within your PCB design tool, we do things a bit differently: 1. We show which standards the model was made with (IPC or datasheet recommendations) 2. We run each model through our automated verification technology to catch common manufacturing issues before they cause costly prototype iterations 3. We allow engineers to discuss potential issues on each part publicly for the entire community to see.

For any hardware designers out there, we’d love to know what formats, features, or part categories you'd like to see next!


Hi HN,

When designing circuit boards, engineers waste days making digital models (like symbols & footprints) for each component in their circuit board designs.

Some components such as connectors, are particularly challenging to create models for due to their non-standard shapes, pitches, pads and cutouts. Just one of these components could take hours to create, and requires deciphering complex computer-aided design (CAD) drawings, which is a very tedious and error-prone process.

Today we’re excited to announce a new partnership that is making over 25,000 new free models available to electronics designers. By partnering with TE Connectivity, we've been able to bring thousands of elecromechanical models to designers for free, including connectors, switches, relays, and sensors.

Best of all, we've made them available in nearly every PCB design format, including Eagle, KiCad, Altium, Cadence OrCAD & Allegro, Mentor PADS, DXDesigner, PCB123, and more.

Unlike other models you might find scattered across the web, or even within your PCB design tool, we do things a bit differently: 1. We show which standards the model was made with (IPC or datasheet recommendations) 2. We run each model through our automated verification technology to catch common manufacturing issues before they cause costly prototype iterations 3. We allow engineers to flag potential issues on each part publicly for the entire community to see.

For any hardware designers out there, we’d love to know what you’d like to see next!


Signed up for Loom last week and it's pretty awesome! I like the fact that it's one click to record/upload/host. The embedded video of the speaker is cool too. My team is currently working on a set of internal training videos using it.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: