OneTab-Night-Mode
Toshi
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OneTab-Night-Mode | Toshi | |
---|---|---|
48 | 12 | |
31 | 4,100 | |
- | 0.5% | |
10.0 | 6.1 | |
about 5 years ago | 2 months ago | |
CSS | Rust | |
- | MIT License |
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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.
OneTab-Night-Mode
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How do I get the list of "opened tabs" on firefox? Active and inactive tabs.
(Hopefully you're using something like Auto Tab Discord?) It gets to that many tabs before I stash them all away into OneTab. I've nearly 15k tabs in there.
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How do you save and manage random cool bits of information you find on the internet? Fror example: tweets, reddit threads, lyrics, book passages, and random important info you want to find later.
I have used OneTab for a few years now. It's available for Firefox and Chrome as an extension. It will take all your tabs and save them all onto a single private tab. You can then go through that and organise it further into smaller groups.
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[needadvice] how do I stop wasting time on reddit+youtube without completely banning them?
You could get this extension: https://www.one-tab.com, one click and all the tabs are closed but saved as a list, so your addicted mind can think "I can look at them later.".
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Anything you wish there was an open source solution for?
Self-hosted OneTab. OneTab currently is local only. I would like to have a self-hosted backend so all bookmarks could be synced across my devices (ideally, with E2EE).
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How do ADHD people cope on here?
Several other people mentioned the "file away" open tabs approach (but not necessarily try to go back to them). I'm a big fan of the One Tab extension for this: https://www.one-tab.com/ for this task. I have it in both my browsers FF (personal) and Chrome (work), and I have history of interesting stuff from HN from years back. I don't plan on ever going back to all those links, but it helps to save them to avoid FOMO.
I also have a script[1] for cleaning up my Desktop (which gets filled by various files I download). It puts all the contents into a date-named folder, in subfolders based on file extension.
[1] https://gist.github.com/ivanistheone/9daa23ae2a7abb472cb2
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Show HN: Rethinking Tabs in Firefox
+1 for https://www.one-tab.com/
To provide a bit more context: OneTab closes (all, or specific) tabs and dumps the URLs in a queue, grouped by window or category to be quickly popped open/combed through at your leisure.
It's great for the times I get sidetracked and need to hold onto thirty pages of docs without keeping them open at all times; I use it as a sort of tab purgatory which I will probably not revisit (I have 1025 tabs saved at the moment ).
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Fresh computer setup
One Tab
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Browser Tab Hoarding: How do you organize/archive your research? Trying to reach Tab Zero.
OneTab for the win! I've also been using this for years. I love that you can make a QR code and be able to access your lists from anywhere. Each machine has its own unique set since the data is stored in the extension. The ability to import and export is great though so you can basically easily save all the links to any other management system. If you want to save the URLs to all your tabs this is the easiest way to go. I love being able to save them in groups and then I can reopen that entire group for a research session. Oh yeah guys it has drag 'n drop between groups as well.
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Why are bookmarks second class citizens in browsers?
I use this extension called one tab (https://www.one-tab.com/) which saves all the currently open tabs into a list which can be given a name!
This is the most helpful extension that I've installed on my browser.
well true but the advantage of the plugin is more that its not really that persistent.
For instance: when I research a new topic i sometimes have 20 open tabs out of which i really want to bookmark none, but as long as i am working on the issue i want to be able to use them still. This is where onetab shines, because it lets me remove all, lets call them virtual bookmarks, that have been gerated by one specific window. Henceforth i can use a window more like a topic of interest and am totally able to "hibernate" on research. and when i come back i just click "open all tabs" on the index and will be goot do go:
I believe my actual point was, that I have much more stuff that i like to store temporarily, instead of a "permanent bookmark" and the ability to remove bookmarks by "window" really allows me to ogranize myself better.
Toshi
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Tantivy 0.20 is released: Schemaless column store, Schemaless aggregations, Phrase prefix queries, Percentiles, and more...
I don't think you have an active project that addresses all those use cases. There was an attempt in Rust with Toshi that is built on top of tantivy, but the project seems to have stalled.
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An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM
You're right I should put bleve on there as well. This isn't even the whole list. Toshi (https://github.com/toshi-search/Toshi) is also out there...
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Postgres Full Text Search vs. the Rest
I wish we had an extension like ZomboDB but using a lighter search engine like https://github.com/quickwit-oss/quickwit, https://github.com/toshi-search/Toshi and https://github.com/mosuka/bayard
Here I'm listing engines based on https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy - tantivy is comparable to Lucene in its scope - but I'm sure there are other engines that could tackle ElasticSearch.
Another thing that could happen is maybe directly embed tantivy in Postgres using an extension, perhaps this could be an option too.
Yup! I'd heard of Quickwit and sonic, but Quickwit seems to have pivoted to being a log-search focused engine. It's built on Tantivy[0] IIRC so I could have used something like Toshi[1].
Sonic[2] I know much less about but it also seems good. Honestly anything except ES is what I like to hear about (though OpenSearch is interesting).
Another thing I think the world really needs is a CLI +/- API tool (ideally rust lib + CLI + API) that unifies interacting with these things. I got REALLY close to writing it while working on this article, but I was already running late and I have a penchant for yak shaving.
This won't be the last thing I write about search engines -- there's been a LOT of movement in the space that has nothing to do with the elastic/opensearch debacle and I don't see enough tires getting kicked.
[0]: https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy
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Ask HN: Does anybody still use bookmarking services?
I do something similar, though I index the page myself via a little browser extension I wrote. I click a button, the content gets POSTed to a server that throws it in Toshi[1]. I hacked it together on a Saturday, and it's been pretty handy; as you describe, much more useful than any bookmarking approach I've tried before.
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*set Edge as default browser*
There is some incredible work being done in the web department, frameworks like rocket.rs and actix.rs are amazing. To get the latest info on web development in Rust, check arewewebyet.org. It doesn't list Toshi though, which is weird.
- Zinc Search engine. A lightweight alternative to elasticsearch that requires minimal resources, written in Go.
- Zinc Search engine. A lightweight alternative to Elasticsearch written in Go
- AWS releases forked Elasticsearch code. Announces new name: OpenSearc
What are some alternatives?
elasticsearch-rs - Official Elasticsearch Rust Client
MeiliSearch - A lightning-fast search API that fits effortlessly into your apps, websites, and workflow
narg - A tool to generate LC/AP formulas for a given seed in Noita.
sonic - 🦔 Fast, lightweight & schema-less search backend. An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM.
lnx - ⚡ Insanely fast, 🌟 Feature-rich searching. lnx is the adaptable, typo tollerant deployment of the tantivy search engine.
OpenSearch - 🔎 Open source distributed and RESTful search engine.
scaphandre - âš¡ Energy consumption metrology agent. Let "scaph" dive and bring back the metrics that will help you make your systems and applications more sustainable !
OpenSearch-Dashboards - 📊 Open source visualization dashboards for OpenSearch.
zincsearch - ZincSearch . A lightweight alternative to elasticsearch that requires minimal resources, written in Go.
bookmarks - My personal DIY bookmarks app
default-args.rs - zero runtime cost default arguments in rust
knowledge - Everything I know