MarginaliaSearch
utterances
MarginaliaSearch | utterances | |
---|---|---|
59 | 75 | |
851 | 8,638 | |
6.7% | 0.8% | |
9.9 | 0.0 | |
6 days ago | 11 months ago | |
HTML | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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.
MarginaliaSearch
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Marginalia: 3 Years
> I think a larger concern is how you'll address the Bus Factor going forward
I can't speak to how much energy it is to go from code to serving requests, but FWIW the code is AGPLv3 and seems to be updated regularly https://github.com/MarginaliaSearch/MarginaliaSearch/blob/v2...
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The Internet Is Full of AI Dogshit
Regarding the last sentence: The problem is that capitalism knows no limits. Sure, it would be nice to pay a monthly subscription for genuinely good and desirable content/search results...
But what if the CEO of the service provider needs another $5m bonus? What if the stock needs to go up so that the shareholder gamblers can get more dividend paid? What if all of a sudden the service gets bought out?
The truth is that what you are seeking is more likely to come from someone who is just passionate about it with not that much motivation based on profit. That doesn't mean that this entity or person can't be financially supported but it gets problematic when profit is the _main_ incentive.
For a good example of an interesting search engine built by a single guy, see Marginalia: https://search.marginalia.nu/
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Where Have All the Websites Gone?
Have you heard of https://www.marginalia.nu/ in general, and especially the https://search.marginalia.nu/ from there?
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The Web Is Fantastic
There's a decent amount of people still keeping the fire burning for the "old web." It takes a little digging, but it's out there.
Some links for you:
* https://wiby.me/ — search engine that emphasizes simple/plain/hobbyist pages. Try the "surprise me" link a few times.
* https://neustadt.fr/essays/the-small-web/ — article, "Rediscovering the Small Web"
* https://search.marginalia.nu/ — author (hangs out on HN sometimes, too (marginalia_nu)
Actually, here's a link to a similar discussion on an old HN thread: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30783391
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Ask HN: What's your "it's not stupid if it works" story?
I built a recipe detector. You can, you know, train some sort of AI model to do this like with fasttext, or maybe do naive bayesian inference, but as it turns out, you can also:
https://github.com/MarginaliaSearch/MarginaliaSearch/blob/ma...
It works annoyingly well.
- Marginalia is a great search engine that returns results from lesser-known blogs and websites
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Browsing the Eastern Side of the Personal Web
For some values of "nobody"; this westerner enjoys https://search.marginalia.nu (in addition to more common engines) and has high hopes for the new site browser:
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A new approach to domain ranking
Result ranking takes a lot of variables, and factors like excessive tracking and affiliate links is one of them in my search engine.
You can poke around in the result valuation code here: https://github.com/MarginaliaSearch/MarginaliaSearch/blob/ma...
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"We pulled off an SEO heist with AI and stole 3.6M impressions."
#1 cause in the decline of Google maybe. https://search.marginalia.nu/ seems to manage though, so maybe Google just doesn't care.
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Show HN: I am curating the best websites on the internet
Congratulations on shipping.
I see a lot of focus on startups, AI tools, productivity hacks, tech stacks, etc. What audience do you have in mind? I personally find that the most interesting sites on HN are outside of your scope here (examples: https://ciechanow.ski/, https://neal.fun/, https://search.marginalia.nu/).
utterances
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Converting BlogCFC blog to Eleventy
Handling New Comments: There are excellent lightweight comment utilities available for managing comments on your eleventy blog. I personally use Utterances, but Giscus is also a great alternative.
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Unleash Your Dev Blog: Write More with GitHub Issues as Your CMS
We can use utteranc.es, a lightweight comment widget built on GitHub Issues to integrate authed comments in our blog.
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Must-Have Features to Look for in a Blogging Platform
utterances (open-source)
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Blog Comments
Typically, a comment requires server side code and a lot of messy management. It’s a pain. These comments rely on a tool called utterances. Utterances uses GitHub’s issue tracker which was designed to track bugs, as part of that it includes extensive comment and discussion capabilities. If an issue doesn’t exist, utterances will automatically create that issue for you. It created this issue for the comments in this page...
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How do I use utterances on a static GitHub pages site with no custom theme?
I've installed utterances on my GitHub repo. I've configured it and given it the appropriate permissions. At the end of setup, it provided me with an HTML script and the following instructions:
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Add comments to blog website in minutes
Fortunatly we have free, lightweight and efficient options to add comments in blog website or any website. I am talking about utteranc.es. A lightweight comments widget built on GitHub issues. Use GitHub issues for blog comments, wiki pages and more!
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🚀 Creating a Personalized Blog Website in minutes with Gatsby - A Step-by-Step Guide
Go to https://utteranc.es and follow the instructions to set up the commenting system.
- Free, non-self-hosted website comment system powered by GitHub Issues
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Add reactivity to your Next.js blog using giscus
Giscus drew significant inspiration from utterances, which utilize an issue-based comment system instead of discussions. I experimented with utterances initially, but I found it less convenient due to its reliance on an issue tracker for conversational purposes.
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Website engine or static content + dynamic functions implementations
If you're building a blog for developers, you can use a third-party commenting service that requires login with github, for example https://utteranc.es/
What are some alternatives?
artadosearch - Artado Search is open source, private and highly customizable search engine
giscus - A comment system powered by GitHub Discussions. :octocat: :speech_balloon: :gem:
tersenet - A new type of JavaScript-free light-weight fast browser built on rst and web assembly. Does not actually exist.
gitalk - Gitalk is a modern comment component based on Github Issue and Preact.
Senpwai - A desktop app for tracking and batch downloading anime
staticman - 💪 User-generated content for Git-powered websites
lieu - community search engine
remark42 - comment engine
mwmbl - An open source, non-profit search engine implemented in python
commento
worstpress - Welcome to the world's *worst* website builder.
boring-avatars - Boring avatars is a tiny JavaScript React library that generates custom, SVG-based avatars from any username and color palette.