awesome-web-archiving
floccus
awesome-web-archiving | floccus | |
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13 | 98 | |
1,818 | 5,047 | |
2.1% | 2.6% | |
5.2 | 9.4 | |
4 days ago | 8 days ago | |
JavaScript | ||
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | Mozilla Public License 2.0 |
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-web-archiving
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Show HN: OpenAPI DevTools – Chrome ext. that generates an API spec as you browse
https://github.com/iipc/awesome-web-archiving/blob/main/READ...
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DPReview.com is going down effective April 10.
People have pasted this around, https://github.com/iipc/awesome-web-archiving Could probably do it with wget if you had enough time?
- DPReview.com to close on April 10 after 25 years of operation
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This Layoff Does Not Exist: tech layoff announcements but weird
Maybe something on this list can help you https://github.com/iipc/awesome-web-archiving
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Software to keep Website pages "alive"?
Awesome Web Archiving has a longer list of tools and software
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How to Download All of Wikipedia onto a USB Flash Drive
Not related to the OP topic or zim but I was looking into archiving my bookmarks and other content like documentation sites and wikis. I'll list some of the things I ended up using.
ArchiveBox[1]: Pretty much a self-hosted wayback machine. It can save websites as plain html, screenshot, text, and some other formats. I have my bookmarks archived in it and have a bookmarklet to easily add new websites to it. If you use the docker-compose you can enable a full-text search backend for an easy search setup.
WebRecorder[2]: A browser extension that creates WACZ archives directly in the browser capturing exactly what content you load. I use it on sites with annoying dynamic content that sites like wayback and ArchiveBox wouldn't be able to copy.
ReplayWeb[3]: An interface to browse archive types like WARC, WACZ, and HAR. The interface is just like browsing through your browser. It can be self-hosted as well for the full offline experience.
browsertrix-crawler[4]: A CLI tool to scrape websites and output to WACZ. Its super easy to run with Docker and I use it to scrape entire blogs and docs for offline use. It uses Chrome to load webpages and has some extra features like custom browser profiles, interactive login, and autoscroll/autoplay. I use the `--generateWACZ` parameter so I can use ReplayWeb to easily browse through the final output.
For bookmark and misc webpage archiving then ArchiveBox should be more than enough. Check out this repo for an amazing list of tools and resources https://github.com/iipc/awesome-web-archiving
[1] https://github.com/ArchiveBox/ArchiveBox
- Self Hosted Roundup #14
- SingleFile: Save a Complete Web Page into a Single HTML File
- [HELP] Starting Out for a Beginner
- Reflections as the Internet Archive turns 25
floccus
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⟳ 2 apps added, 13 updated at apt.izzysoft.de
floccus bookmark sync (version 5000002): Sync your bookmarks privately across browsers and devices
- Tab Sync between Browsers
- Floccus – Sync Bookmarks Privately
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Can Chrome Sync or Firefox Sync be trusted with sensitive data?
There are solutions external to the browsers that work pretty well and where you have control on your data :
Floccus for bookmarks (https://floccus.org/) : it works also on mobile devices : a great plus ! You need only a webdav server (or a Nextcloud account), I use Dave (https://github.com/micromata/dave)
Vaultwarden for the passwords (https://github.com/dani-garcia/vaultwarden)
A huge advantage of this solution is that you can have synchronization also between different browsers and on mobile devices.
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Discount for bookmarks app: Bookmarks - Read Later ($8.99 -> $0.99)
I have used things like xsync, raindrop and others over the years and recently started using Floccus (https://floccus.org/) which is free and opensource just does not support Safari. Private bookmarks on my own sync system and can keep any chromium or firefox based browsers bookmarks and tabs synced.
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Extension - Open Source Bookmark Sync
xBrowserSync and Floccus.
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Safari retakes second place in global browser market share, but Edge is close behind
Try floccus if you want to sync between different browsers.
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Looking for a selfhosted tool to store/sync/backup URLs using a Firefox extension
maybe this: floccus
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Looking for recommendations (Bookmarks/Links)
I've got floccus running between browsers for the bookmarks I use more often, and benotes for the ones I want to keep for reference or for later.
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Best cross-platform bookmark tracker/manager?
Floccus https://floccus.org/
What are some alternatives?
SingleFileZ - Web Extension to save a faithful copy of an entire web page in a self-extracting ZIP file
Firefox Sync Server - Run-Your-Own Firefox Sync Server
ArchiveBox - 🗃 Open source self-hosted web archiving. Takes URLs/browser history/bookmarks/Pocket/Pinboard/etc., saves HTML, JS, PDFs, media, and more...
synology-download-manager - An open source browser extension for adding/managing download tasks to your Synology DiskStation.
obelisk - Go package and CLI tool for saving web page as single HTML file
nightTab - A neutral new tab page accented with a chosen colour. Customise the layout, style, background and bookmarks with nightTab.
SingleFile-MV3 - SingleFile version compatible with Manifest V3. The future, right now!
linkding - Self-hosted bookmark manager that is designed be to be minimal, fast, and easy to set up using Docker.
firefox-scrapbook - ScrapBook X – a legacy Firefox add-on that captures web pages to local device for future retrieval, organization, annotation, and edit.
api-docker - xBrowserSync API for Docker
youtube-dl - Command-line program to download videos from YouTube.com and other video sites
SyncMarks-Extension - Browser Webextension for Firefox, Edge or Chromium derivatives to sync your bookmarks with a private backend.