notes
22120
notes | 22120 | |
---|---|---|
8 | 13 | |
120 | 2,638 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.7 | |
about 1 year ago | over 2 years ago | |
Shell | JavaScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
notes
-
My productivity app is a never-ending .txt file
I've been doing something similar for ~20 years at: https://github.com/nickjj/notes
- Running `notes` will open this month's notes for YYYY_MM.txt
-
What is your approach to quick note taking during development?
I use a very command line focused approach with https://github.com/nickjj/notes.
-
Keep a Knowledge Log
Since about 2001 I used YYYY-MM.txt plain text files and have a shell script to help create notes in the most friendly way I could think of from the command line at https://github.com/nickjj/notes.
Totally works fine for a knowledge log when you're streaming high level details. I still use it today.
But when you want to really go all-in with in-depth notes it's tricky because in 1 month's time if you're hardcore deep in the woods of learning, applying and using something you're going to end up with hundreds of concepts from an assorted set of tools and it kind of stinks to have all of that info sitting in 1 file. Think about using something like Kubernetes. That's really Kubernetes, Kustomize / Helm, EKS, various cloud hosting details (networking, etc.), Terraform and ton of super useful commands / context. Details you for sure want recorded for later.
For this type of info I've been building up a knowledge base with https://obsidian.md/. It's really nice and I highly recommend it. It's been working well for keeping things reasonably categorized without wasting a lot of time on the details around keeping links and tags up to date. It also has Vim mode that's good enough where day to day writing feels natural.
-
Show HN: Then – Understand how you spend your time and what influences your mood
Did you end up automating the entries?
For example, I have a command line note taking script at https://github.com/nickjj/notes.
It creates a YYYY-MM-DD.txt file and doesn't include time stamps but it would be a 1 line change to make each entry get timestamped. I didn't do that because personally I'm more interested in monthly notes not per minute.
But I do think removing the barrier of creating entries is an important step with jotting things down, this way you can focus on what you want to write and not the boilerplate.
-
Ask HN: Tools you have made for yourself?
A whole bunch of little things, mainly command line tools.
Most of them are open source and also have extensive documentation and a screencast video going over them.
In no specific order:
- https://github.com/nickjj/notes
- https://github.com/nickjj/invoice
- https://github.com/nickjj/wait-until
And a few recent little scripts to solve specific things:
- https://nickjanetakis.com/blog/using-ffmpeg-to-get-an-mp3s-d...
- https://nickjanetakis.com/blog/a-shell-script-to-keep-a-bunc...
- https://nickjanetakis.com/blog/bash-aliases-to-prepare-recor...
-
Show HN: Note, my simple command line note taking app
Along similar lines, nickjj also has a similar (but bash) notes script at:
https://github.com/nickjj/notes
-
Ask HN: What are you surprised isn’t being worked on more?
While I don't use it personally there's: https://obsidian.md/
It's cross platform and works offline. You write markdown and it produces a visual graph of your data. It supports interlinking notes, tags and images too.
Plain text notes[0] work best for me but I'd probably use Obsidian if I wanted to see things visually. When I tried it out briefly it was really solid.
[0]: https://github.com/nickjj/notes
22120
-
Is there a browser addon which locally archives every website I visit?
Here. An archivist browser controller that caches everything you browse, a library server with full text search to serve your archive.
- Show HN: Irchiver, your full-resolution personal web archive
-
Ask HN: Full text search engine in JavaScript for English and and Chinese?
Following your "hilarious" and disrespectful answer here https://github.com/i5ik/22120/issues/63#issuecomment-7275272..., I would prefer that you remove any reference to SingleFile in the description of your project. I could not open an issue because you blocked me. And please don't accuse people without proof.
- 22120: self-host the Internet with an Offline Archive. Similar to ArchiveBox, SingleFile and WebMemex. Works well with WorldBrain/Memex to give you full-text search. Why not WARC? Uses Chrome DevTools protocol to intercept all requests, and caches responses against a key of (method, URL)
-
Request: Proxy caching all visited websites text in DB, making history searchable
https://github.com/i5ik/22120 is a tool that archives as you browse that you can then view offline later
- Is the there a way I can cache videos(reddit.4chan) I watch in browser (Linux)?
-
So you want to write a GUI framework
My solution to this (it's been done before), is to use the existing browser engine (not the system webview) installed. So far I only utilize Chrome, but as the way I connect to it is over the Chrome DevTools protocol which is somewhat fluent with the Remote Debugging Protocol[0] that Firefox is doing, this is a reasonable approach.
So far my "tool" to do this is simply a template repository with some conveniences, providing in essence a skeleton for these types of apps. I hope to flesh this out a little more, and expose a much richer API, as well as convert some of my existing popular apps (like 22120[1]) to the "framework".
The benefit of this is Graderjs has a built in 'app builder' that can create a cross-platform binary (excluding or ignoring the necessity (on MacOS) and near-necessity (on Windows) to sign your executable somehow, that lets you display your UI in JS/HTML/CSS using the already installed browser engine, as well as run code in NodeJS and using the rich APIs[2] of the browser engine itself. I'm really happy with this project and think that, even tho it's small now, it will in time become my most popular and powerful one: even bigger than my remote browser and popular web archiver.
Just give it time! :)
[0]: https://firefox-source-docs.mozilla.org/remote/index.html
[1]: https://github.com/i5ik/22120
[2]: https://chromedevtools.github.io/devtools-protocol/tot/Brows...
The GraderJS: https://github.com/i5ik/graderjs
-
Ask HN: Why saving webpages on hard disk has not got better?
I use this to backup pages automatically
https://github.com/i5ik/22120
-
Saving all browsed websites automatically
Does this potentially help? https://github.com/c9fe/22120
-
Make Your Own Internet Archive with Archive Box
From the blog comments, I think this is what you’re after https://github.com/c9fe/22120
What are some alternatives?
neatroff - Neatroff troff clone
ArchiveBox - 🗃 Open source self-hosted web archiving. Takes URLs/browser history/bookmarks/Pocket/Pinboard/etc., saves HTML, JS, PDFs, media, and more...
ping-heatmap - A tool for displaying subsecond offset heatmaps of ICMP ping latency
asciidoctor-latex - :triangular_ruler: Add LaTeX features to AsciiDoc & convert AsciiDoc to LaTeX
pdftilecut - pdftilecut lets you sub-divide a PDF page(s) into smaller pages so you can print them on small form printers.
pywb - Core Python Web Archiving Toolkit for replay and recording of web archives
dockly - Immersive terminal interface for managing docker containers and services
SingleFile - Web Extension for saving a faithful copy of a complete web page in a single HTML file
shpotify - A command-line interface to Spotify.
DownloadNet - 💾 DownloadNet - All content you browse online available offline. Search through the full-text of all pages in your browser history. ⭐️ Star to support our work!
wireguird - wireguard gtk gui for linux
linux-surface - Linux Kernel for Surface Devices