I mean, isn't that a good thing?
At least there won't be any security concerns during the outage. (:
People are just used ot it. Even with all the bloat. I'm helping up the http://voiden.md folks in an attempt to build an actual API devtool, not a tab+click API SaaS platform.
Is that the only thing you can do - test or debug APIs? If so, finally you can do things you couldn't before - perhaps improve productivity by writing some scripts or researching alternatives if your job is really mission critical on postman.
I believe one of the selling points are the shared collections. So you have all the secrets and endpoints and whatever in collections that you share amongst a team. Now, noone has access to any of this and the hassle to set this up locally is way worse than you would think. Specially in large organisations.
So yeah, there are probably several companies looking for alternatives right now :)
What we really need is a community-driven alternative without lock-in.
Many other use cases are covered by great FOSS products, but somehow API clients are abused as a sync cash cow:
(minor correction, Obsidian broke the 3rd party sync, not insomnia)
Point still stands.
I agree it's an annoying problem, but it's hard to see a way around it. The developers was that they need some way to fund development. Sync tends to be the up sell target since it's more for power users willing to pay.
There are quite a few open source Insomnia and Postman clones. Since most of them operate on config and workspaces, I think syncthing is good enough for this use case at least.
Yeah, it's ridiculous. Specially when there are good or even better alternatives out there.
Postman was awesome back in the days, but now it's just slow, bloated and too complicated for 99.9% of use cases. It has become the Microsoft Word of API development platforms.
I mean, isn't that a good thing? At least there won't be any security concerns during the outage. (:
People are just used ot it. Even with all the bloat. I'm helping up the http://voiden.md folks in an attempt to build an actual API devtool, not a tab+click API SaaS platform.
Imagine all the major companies now unable to debug or test API's. We are probably talking about millions of dollars in lost productivity.
What are some good alternatives? Postman is kind of bloated anyways.
Is that the only thing you can do - test or debug APIs? If so, finally you can do things you couldn't before - perhaps improve productivity by writing some scripts or researching alternatives if your job is really mission critical on postman.
I believe one of the selling points are the shared collections. So you have all the secrets and endpoints and whatever in collections that you share amongst a team. Now, noone has access to any of this and the hassle to set this up locally is way worse than you would think. Specially in large organisations.
So yeah, there are probably several companies looking for alternatives right now :)
What we really need is a community-driven alternative without lock-in. Many other use cases are covered by great FOSS products, but somehow API clients are abused as a sync cash cow:
- insomnia deliberately broke a 3rd party sync: https://github.com/acheong08/obi-sync
- I could go on
(minor correction, Obsidian broke the 3rd party sync, not insomnia) Point still stands.
I agree it's an annoying problem, but it's hard to see a way around it. The developers was that they need some way to fund development. Sync tends to be the up sell target since it's more for power users willing to pay.
There are quite a few open source Insomnia and Postman clones. Since most of them operate on config and workspaces, I think syncthing is good enough for this use case at least.
I've been using Bruno lately. It can use any directory as a collection, and I use git repos with my team to sync collections.
https://www.usebruno.com/
The most absurd limitation in Postman is a limit on how many times your team can run a collection. Locally, on their machine.
Let that sink in: on YOUR LOCAL machine.
https://learning.postman.com/docs/collections/running-collec...
Yeah, it's ridiculous. Specially when there are good or even better alternatives out there.
Postman was awesome back in the days, but now it's just slow, bloated and too complicated for 99.9% of use cases. It has become the Microsoft Word of API development platforms.