The Geometry field would hopefully match up to a postGIS database which handles spatial data. That is quite a technical integration and I'd be super excited to find that this platform can handle spatial databases effectively. I think the problem with this application is that it markets itself as an airtable alternative when really it needs to be presented as a plain old database front end, which has such high value in and of itself, but it is not a workflow management system nor really an end user interface like airtable is. It's in the name - No-code DB! Likewise Airtable is not a replacement for a formal and scalable relational database. I am very likely to implement this for clients where I think they need a full and local relational database solution but do not have in-house database management capability. I also believe that the nocoDB is open source, unlikely that it will be privatized so always rooting for that!
This was a little confusing when you kept mentioning AI Table. I suspect you mean AIR Table. When I searched for AITable thinking it was a product I'd not heard of, I only really got results for AIRTable. I have used AirTable since it was in preview, and NocoDB (as well as BaseRow) make great replacements. This will of course depend on your project requirements. I have found NocoDB great to build a custom Inventory system.
Hey Jason - look i might be wrong here.. but as a 'complete' package i would say Airtable is still among my favourites.. Smartsuite is in there.. and maybe I like the 'interior design' of Teable.io hehehe.. Joking aside: Airtable / SmartSuite provide you with almost everything you would ever need. They integrate nicely with front-end builders like stacker / noloco / softr / glide.. they have their own automation 'mini-platforms' baked-in so you don't have to get zapier/make involved every 3 min.. they have huge communities / slack channels.. they've been around for years.. they have thousands of paying clients.. they are endorsed heavily by low-code devs.. i mean the list goes on. They are 'safe bets'. But its facinating to see how contemporaries (Stackby) and some new kids (Aitable / Teable) are doing. It's a difficult, lengthy road for them.. some do a great job.. some need to go back to the drawing board :)
@@sonorusconsulting I've been using airtable for 8 years but I keep on hitting their paywall. There are a few updates with their dashboards or interfaces (I forget what it's called) that may fix the challenges. That's for your response it's great to have you channel that reviews databases like these.
I'm just discovering this no-code stuff, and I completely agree about Teable - I find the design very compelling. Relying properly on db features feels right to me. It's early days for them, but if they can tidy up the rough edges and find a way to fund development without alienating the open source community, it could become a real gem.
In my opinion, it's not good to use such title that wins over the algorithm because then people who are trying to look for airtable alternatives and watch your video and see nothing substantial for their research because you're just "trying out" and playing around that doesn't really show how powerful nocodb is, or any software for that matters.
Point taken. The video is an honest opinion of an Airtable expert user who spent 24hrs with Nocodb.. There's loads of value in first impressions especially coming from experts. Maybe the fact Nocodb falls short in some aspects when compared to Airtable, which I point out, will help someone make a somewhat informed decision.
They will lure users from Airtable and then introduce payment again: "Please note : Pricing Plans are subjected to change as we shape it with the help of your valuable feedback and usage."
Free.. for now.. :) .. i wouldn't charge for this either since the product is basically in open beta. Its got awesome potential and i'm really rooting for these guys. EDIT: Another major thing that differentiates them (and other no code db builders) is the fact that Airtable has had an enormous amount of exposure. The only way to seriously disrupt them, is to offer waay more.. (more fields, more view types, more record limits, more marketing materials, more paid YT reviews, more formulas.. more everything..) for less. Then you become a real disruptor.
its super free @@sonorusconsulting since its open source and you can host it locally and on the cloud, all of the features are also included on the docker version. another thing is you would only pay for their hosted version
Look you are correct to a degree. But I only spent a day with the system. It's not a long term review. People who are shopping around for a no-code DB builder want to know if the system is good at the basics.. and that's my angle here. It's my first impression. I'm judging the book by it's cover... And maybe the first few chapters 😜 You can't expect everyone to RTFM with every service from day one. In fact, I can argue that some of the best systems out there have a UX so intuitive and helpful, that you rarely need to read the manual. Maybe I'm slightly biased.. but, at the end of the day.. first impressions matter. And I have praised a ton of systems based on first impressions that do a better job than Airtable, SmartSuite, Baserow..
The Geometry field would hopefully match up to a postGIS database which handles spatial data. That is quite a technical integration and I'd be super excited to find that this platform can handle spatial databases effectively. I think the problem with this application is that it markets itself as an airtable alternative when really it needs to be presented as a plain old database front end, which has such high value in and of itself, but it is not a workflow management system nor really an end user interface like airtable is. It's in the name - No-code DB! Likewise Airtable is not a replacement for a formal and scalable relational database. I am very likely to implement this for clients where I think they need a full and local relational database solution but do not have in-house database management capability. I also believe that the nocoDB is open source, unlikely that it will be privatized so always rooting for that!
This was a little confusing when you kept mentioning AI Table. I suspect you mean AIR Table. When I searched for AITable thinking it was a product I'd not heard of, I only really got results for AIRTable.
I have used AirTable since it was in preview, and NocoDB (as well as BaseRow) make great replacements. This will of course depend on your project requirements. I have found NocoDB great to build a custom Inventory system.
It's highly likely that I was actually meaning AITable.. not Airtable.. Google them 😜
Of all the Database workspaces you have used what has been your favorite?
Hey Jason - look i might be wrong here.. but as a 'complete' package i would say Airtable is still among my favourites.. Smartsuite is in there.. and maybe I like the 'interior design' of Teable.io hehehe..
Joking aside: Airtable / SmartSuite provide you with almost everything you would ever need. They integrate nicely with front-end builders like stacker / noloco / softr / glide.. they have their own automation 'mini-platforms' baked-in so you don't have to get zapier/make involved every 3 min.. they have huge communities / slack channels.. they've been around for years.. they have thousands of paying clients.. they are endorsed heavily by low-code devs.. i mean the list goes on. They are 'safe bets'.
But its facinating to see how contemporaries (Stackby) and some new kids (Aitable / Teable) are doing. It's a difficult, lengthy road for them.. some do a great job.. some need to go back to the drawing board :)
@@sonorusconsulting I've been using airtable for 8 years but I keep on hitting their paywall. There are a few updates with their dashboards or interfaces (I forget what it's called) that may fix the challenges. That's for your response it's great to have you channel that reviews databases like these.
I'm just discovering this no-code stuff, and I completely agree about Teable - I find the design very compelling. Relying properly on db features feels right to me. It's early days for them, but if they can tidy up the rough edges and find a way to fund development without alienating the open source community, it could become a real gem.
In my opinion, it's not good to use such title that wins over the algorithm because then people who are trying to look for airtable alternatives and watch your video and see nothing substantial for their research because you're just "trying out" and playing around that doesn't really show how powerful nocodb is, or any software for that matters.
Point taken. The video is an honest opinion of an Airtable expert user who spent 24hrs with Nocodb.. There's loads of value in first impressions especially coming from experts. Maybe the fact Nocodb falls short in some aspects when compared to Airtable, which I point out, will help someone make a somewhat informed decision.
They will lure users from Airtable and then introduce payment again: "Please note : Pricing Plans are subjected to change as we shape it with the help of your valuable feedback and usage."
but it is a super free alternative to airtable i guess
Free.. for now.. :) .. i wouldn't charge for this either since the product is basically in open beta. Its got awesome potential and i'm really rooting for these guys.
EDIT: Another major thing that differentiates them (and other no code db builders) is the fact that Airtable has had an enormous amount of exposure. The only way to seriously disrupt them, is to offer waay more.. (more fields, more view types, more record limits, more marketing materials, more paid YT reviews, more formulas.. more everything..) for less. Then you become a real disruptor.
thanks fir posting the video. perfect timing 🎉
its super free @@sonorusconsulting since its open source and you can host it locally and on the cloud, all of the features are also included on the docker version. another thing is you would only pay for their hosted version
And you can self host :)
Perhaps next time RTFM before jumping in. Not exactly objectively reviewed
Look you are correct to a degree.
But I only spent a day with the system. It's not a long term review. People who are shopping around for a no-code DB builder want to know if the system is good at the basics.. and that's my angle here.
It's my first impression. I'm judging the book by it's cover... And maybe the first few chapters 😜
You can't expect everyone to RTFM with every service from day one. In fact, I can argue that some of the best systems out there have a UX so intuitive and helpful, that you rarely need to read the manual. Maybe I'm slightly biased.. but, at the end of the day.. first impressions matter. And I have praised a ton of systems based on first impressions that do a better job than Airtable, SmartSuite, Baserow..
how about baserow?
Oh yes Baserow is wicked! Checkout my initial impressions here: ua-cam.com/video/anJu-4InVUI/v-deo.html