Memacs
monolith
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Memacs | monolith | |
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20 | 23 | |
963 | 9,870 | |
- | 41.5% | |
2.7 | 6.9 | |
3 months ago | 27 days ago | |
Python | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal |
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.
Memacs
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Show HN: Khoj – Chat Offline with Your Second Brain Using Llama 2
Might look into some of the tools like novoids Memacs. Notion here is to build tools that push feeds, history data, into Emacs. Using org in your use case with the Khoj tool, could be the "glue" you need to tie it all together. https://github.com/novoid/Memacs#readme.
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Multi-Layered Calendars
See the whitepaper, called "What really happened on September 15th 2008? Getting The Most from Your Personal Information with Memacs"[2].
This project is now a little bit dead, but the concept of private data fusion was fantastic, and transformed my view of calendars.
Agree that calendars are a little underused in that way, and would love to see more work towards that private calendar data usage.
[1]: https://github.com/novoid/Memacs
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Indexing and tagging files: how to do this?
Another method is used via Memacs filename module: it generates a text file with all files that start with a date- or time-stamp. This file can then be used for all sorts of workflows for retrieving files. For example, this is how I include images in my blog using lazyblorg and its "Smart tsfile Image File Search".
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Share your folder structure
Renaming files isn't an issue any more once you've started using file file referencing methods that are not prone to changed folder paths (alternative method) or even the basic file name (by using the unchanged first part of the file name as long as it is unique among all indexed files). This way, I really don't care about broken links any more because I don´t get them. But you don't get that freedom with most PIM tools except mine, I'm afraid.
- Memacs: Visualize your (digital) life in Org-mode
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Best practices / examples of using org attach for file management/system.
Yes. AFAIK, it is exactly how Karl Voit uses his file tags. And a lot more: https://github.com/novoid/Memacs
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[Poll] Best software for hoarders and curators?
Memacs - a framework for integrating various data sources into Org-mode
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Cobbling together a Resonance calendar in org-mode
https://github.com/novoid/Memacs sounds like it might be somewhat related to your goal of making a timeline of your activity.
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Is there a good list of up-to-date data archiving tools for different websites?
Back to the original question. In order to get as much content as possible into a common format to be displayed in a common temporal view, I've created a framework that consists of some general functionality and a set of modules that deal with different input sources and formats. This project is called Memacs. You can also read a whitepaper about it.
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How do you curate your knowledge while browsing the web?
My observation in the last few years here seem to indicate that - not many Emacs users are necessarily into Org mode and this kind of data curation, or atleast that few have very elaborate setups that they have shared. Here's some serious inspiration: https://beepb00p.xyz/myinfra.html, and AFAIK the most comprehensive example out there. For example, there's the Promnesia package by the same author (https://github.com/karlicoss/promnesia) which I used for awhile and its cool ! There's also Karl Voit's Memacs https://github.com/novoid/Memacs/ (which appears mentioned in the previous link).
monolith
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🛠️Non-AI Open Source Projects that are 🔥
Monolith is a CLI tool for saving complete web pages as a single HTML file.
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An Introduction to the WARC File
I have never used monolith to say with any certainty, but two things in your description are worth highlighting between the goals of WARC versus the umpteen bazillion "save this one page I'm looking at as a single file" type projects:
1. WARC is designed, as a goal, to archive the request-response handshake. It does not get into the business of trying to make it easy for a browser to subsequently display that content, since that's a browser's problem
2. Using your cited project specifically, observe the number of "well, save it but ..." options <https://github.com/Y2Z/monolith#options> which is in stark contrast to the archiving goals I just spoke about. It's not a good snapshot of history if the server responded with `content-type: text/html;charset=iso-8859-1` back in the 90s but "modern tools" want everything to be UTF-8 so we'll just convert it, shall we? Bah, I don't like JavaScript, so we'll just toss that out, shall we? And so on
For 100% clarity: monolith, and similar, may work fantastic for any individual's workflow, and I'm not here to yuck anyone's yum; but I do want to highlight that all things being equal it should always be possible to derive monolith files from warc files because the warc files are (or at least have the goal of) perfect fidelity of what the exchange was. I would guess only pcap files would be of higher fidelity, but also a lot more extraneous or potentially privacy violating details
- Reddit limits the use of API to 1000,Let's work together to save the content of StableDiffusion Subreddit as a team
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nix-init: Create Nix packages with just the URL, with support for dependency inference, license detection, hash prefetching, and more
console $ nix-init default.nix -u https://github.com/Y2Z/monolith [...] (press enter to select the defaults) $ nix-build -E "(import { }).callPackage ./. { }" [...] $ result/bin/monilith --version monolith 2.7.0
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What is the best free, least likely to discontinue, high data allowance app/service for saving articles/webpages permanently?
For example, here’s a command-line tool to save webpages as HTML files: https://github.com/Y2Z/monolith
- Offline Internet Archive
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Rust Easy! Modern Cross-platform Command Line Tools to Supercharge Your Terminal
monolith: Convert any webpage into a single HTML file with all assets inlined.
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Is there a way to (bulk) save all tabs as a pdf document in a quick way?
There is also a program (monolith: https://github.com/Y2Z/monolith) that does the same
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Is there a good list of up-to-date data archiving tools for different websites?
besides wget, for single pages I use monolith https://github.com/Y2Z/monolith
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Ask HN: Full-text browser history search forever?
You can pipe the URLs through something like monolith[1].
https://github.com/Y2Z/monolith
What are some alternatives?
mycloud-restsdk-recovery-script - A script to recover files from MyCloud REST SDK Folder Structure
SingleFile - Web Extension for saving a faithful copy of a complete web page in a single HTML file
ArchiveBox - 🗃 Open source self-hosted web archiving. Takes URLs/browser history/bookmarks/Pocket/Pinboard/etc., saves HTML, JS, PDFs, media, and more...
emacs-everywhere - Mirror of https://git.tecosaur.net/tec/emacs-everywhere
SingleFileZ - Web Extension to save a faithful copy of an entire web page in a self-extracting ZIP file
aw-watcher-window - Cross-platform window watcher (for use with ActivityWatch)
shrface - Extend eww/nov with org-mode features, archive web pages to org files with shr.
OrgModeClocking2Calendar - one way synchronization of your clocking (time tracking) entries from OrgMode Emacs
archivy - Archivy is a self-hostable knowledge repository that allows you to learn and retain information in your own personal and extensible wiki.
HPI - Human Programming Interface 🧑👽🤖
Wallabag - wallabag is a self hostable application for saving web pages: Save and classify articles. Read them later. Freely.