awesome-rss
SingleFile
awesome-rss | SingleFile | |
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2 | 95 | |
184 | 14,013 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.6 | |
about 1 year ago | 21 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
awesome-rss
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AdGuard’s new ad blocker struggles with Google’s Manifest v3 rules
I haven't updated it since Firefox dropped live bookmarks, but I made Awesome RSS, which also works with Feedly and a few other services. Or a regular desktop RSS client.
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What Happened to RSS?
Reading the rest of the comments, I was wondering if I missed something. I use awesome-rss firefox extension [1] to discover RSS feeds on firefox. I maintain a list of feeds using elfeed-org and follow them using elfeed on Emacs. It's clean and extremely fast - especially while searching. Granted that it isn't really beginner friendly. But there are nice beginner-friendly alternatives like liferea too. Here are somethings that confuse me while reading these sorts of articles and discussions:
1. I don't see why they say browsers killed RSS/atom feeds. The only casualty was the discoverability of those feeds (like the discontinued live bookmarks on Firefox). But it is easy enough to restore it using extensions like awesome-rss, if you care enough. And I find a lot of dedicated feed reader applications catering to all sorts of users.
2. I don't understand how twitter and firefox killed RSS/Atom feeds. I find it extremely tedious to search for meaningful information with them. These sites are full of material designed to hold your attention captive while frustrating your efforts at finding worthwhile material. In contrast, RSS/Atom is information dense, easy to search, narrow and archive.
3. There is no dearth of RSS/Atom feeds on the web. Every good news website news site seems to host one. Almost all the blog engines and static site generators automatically generate them without any configuration or intervention. I find my feedlist growing very large overtime.
4. It also appears like many people associate RSS/Atom feeds with an online service like feedreader or (the dead) Google reader. My understanding is that you don't need an online service to aggregate feeds. An intermittently online desktop/mobile client can do it just the same. I haven't noticed an RSS/Atom client ever failing to aggregate a feed. The only thing I found missing was an automatic way to share and synchronize the feed list itself - though it's easy enough to implement with something like syncthing. Am I missing something here?
For me, twitter, FB etc are inferior to RSS/Atom feeds in every conceivable way - with the exception of lack of a discussion forum. I too find the death proclamation of RSS/Atom a bit of an overstatement.
[1] https://github.com/shgysk8zer0/awesome-rss
[2] https://lzone.de/liferea/
SingleFile
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How SingleFile Transformed My Obsidian Workflow
That's interesting. I have been saving articles as PDF files, which is browser-independent, but useful just for search and reference, a nuisance to quote/copy-and-paste.
If I search only the computer, I don't get results from EBay and Amazon at the top. The idea of keeping the knowledge base separate from the primary notes is a good idea. In my case, that knowledge base is the file system, and the primary notes are whatever I choose.
When I was using Evernote, the inbox was the knowledge base and notebooks were the focus. I just had too many different potential projects going on to manage this well.
Looking to focus.
I'll revisit Firefox and SingleFile.
Explanation of the zip file inside.
https://github.com/gildas-lormeau/SingleFile/blob/master/faq...
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Webpage is also a PNG file and a ZIP file
[2] https://github.com/gildas-lormeau/SingleFile/blob/master/faq...
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My website is one binary
I agree it would be "great" a complete website in the ZIP. I think this is technically possible, someone just have to code it.
[1] https://github.com/gildas-lormeau/SingleFile#singlefile
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Omnivore – free, open source, read-it-later App
Singlefile [1] works pretty well for me for that use case.
It has the added advantage that the file format is just plain HTML, and together with “reader mode” in most browsers, it’s a great way to save long-form text or other mostly static pages for later reference.
It obviously doesn’t work for very dynamic pages, let alone web apps.
[1] https://github.com/gildas-lormeau/SingleFile
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Pocket: It gets worse the more you use it
I’ve tried all the third party services for archiving interesting things over the years but nothing beats saving everything to your local filesystem using [SingleFile](https://github.com/gildas-lormeau/SingleFile) and using a full-text search front over the directory (something like Houdahspot, for example).
- 11. 使用浏览器插件保存完整网页
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How to easily and quickly save all my subbreddit's wikis?
If you want to save them as a file locally you could use something like SingleFile. You could also put the URL for each wiki into archive.org's Save Page Now so that anyone can access it. Either way, without scripting, you'll have to do some manual labor to get the URL for each wiki.
- Save webpages into Obsidian (mobile)
- Wayback: Self-hosted archiving service integrated with Internet Archive
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Ask HN: Looking for a great tool to archive websites
For small numbers of pages, the SingleFile[0] extension for Firefox (WebExtension) is pretty handy. It's not "archival quality", though, if that's the kind of "archiving" you're doing.
[0] https://github.com/gildas-lormeau/SingleFile
What are some alternatives?
live-server-web-extension - It makes your existing server live. This is a browser extension that helps you to live reload feature for dynamic content (PHP, Node.js, ASP.NET -- Whatever, it doesn't matter)
leetcode-rating-predictor - Leetcode Rating Predictor built with Node. Browser extension and web interface.
nodejs-news-feeder - Node.js news feeder
ArchiveBox - 🗃 Open source self-hosted web archiving. Takes URLs/browser history/bookmarks/Pocket/Pinboard/etc., saves HTML, JS, PDFs, media, and more...
fx-private-relay-add-on - Companion add-on for Firefox Relay. Keep your email safe from hackers and trackers. Make an email alias with one click, and keep your address to yourself.
page-ruler-redux - An awesome page ruler extension for google chrome
pronounce - Never doubt how to pronounce a word. Double-click it and your browser will say it out loud for you!
monolith - ⬛️ CLI tool for saving complete web pages as a single HTML file
Selfoss - multipurpose rss reader, live stream, mashup, aggregation web application
sidebery - Firefox extension for managing tabs and bookmarks in sidebar.
rss-proxy - RSS-proxy allows you to do create an RSS or ATOM feed of almost any website, just by analyzing just the static HTML structure.
headless-recorder - Chrome extension that records your browser interactions and generates a Playwright or Puppeteer script.