I'll write up a short guide on how to add a new module as well as requested modules like Google Calendar, Twitter, Facebook, etc.
I'm very encouraged to take SublimeDash to the next level with all the positive feedback from you guys! Thanks!
I also have a Raspberry Pi powering our dashboards but it really struggles to render some javascript, especially if we switch between tabs every 30 seconds. Any ideas for the cheapest possible way to power the TVs other than a Raspberry Pi?
Edit: Also https://ducksboard.com/ exists as well as a paid option
As for a dash for an external screen full of cruft I don't see how it can help productivity. It is a lot of info there just on the off chance one might need it. If I really need to know what the weather is going to be like I can find it. As for the latest nonsense on Twitter I can live without it. Plus I have my phone for notifying me of anything I need to act on.
Remember search portals? A whole screen of cruft. Then Google came along with just the one search box. The Google approach was much better. This extra dash full of extra cruft goes against the minimal UI way of doing things. You might as well open up the standard Yahoo homepage in a browser window and put that on the external monitor, it makes about the same amount of sense.
Usually the code editor or IDE takes up a full screen, with it's file tree view or whatever even a full screen can be cramped.
The document inspector/developer tools almost dominate the other screen. If you're used to development in that tiny framed view below the browser, do yourself a favor and pull that sucker out; Get a real look at your rendered document and network profile while you're at it.
Any left over space trades between the terminal, gui file transfer, irc, music player (wait let's keep this work related ;), spec documents, email, code references, credentials manager, file management...
I really could load up three more screens just for a normal workflow. I can screenshot if there's interest.
http://www.niteoweb.com/blog/raspberry-pi-boot-to-browser
It's pretty nifty.
Chrome 30.0.1599.66 on 64bit (Arch) Linux.
I've been using http://www.geckoboard.com/ for a while. Their integration with AWS is what's kept me with them.
SublimeDash is currently using JavaScript, jQuery, and PHP to access the weather, stocks, and news API.