HedgeDoc
simonwillisonblog
HedgeDoc | simonwillisonblog | |
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48 | 28 | |
4,710 | 163 | |
2.1% | - | |
9.8 | 8.1 | |
1 day ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | Apache 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.
HedgeDoc
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Building a Blog in Django
Nice and simple. I feel the only lacking feature for a basic blog is having unlisted blog posts, which is very handy when you want to share it to proof-readers. This can be done on google doc/hedgedoc [0] for sure, but then when porting there are very often typos creeping in.
[0] https://hedgedoc.org/
- HedgeDoc is a collaborative Markdown editor
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Looking for a note taking app with inline tags.
Maybe Hedgedoc will fit these needs? You can use markdown to format. https://hedgedoc.org/
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Note taking app with collaboration (may be not real time)
If self-hosting is an option for you I would recommend that you go with HedgeDoc. Completely open source, you get all the features you asked for including real time collaboration.
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Google CEO Sundar Pichai Received $226M Compensation While Firing Thousands
You can give HedgeDoc (https://hedgedoc.org/) a try as a replacement for Google Docs.
It is the one that works best for concurrent editing IMO (but it is markdown which can be a problem for some)
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Alternative to Google Keep?
I use one singular HedgeDoc document for that purpose. It's not exactly the same intent as Google Keep, but it's an awesome project I use anyway and fills the role perfectly for me personally.
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IT Pro Tuesday #245 - Collaboration Tool, Automation Blog, Flow Collector & More
HedgeDoc is a web-based, self-hosted, collaborative markdown editor. This open-source option allows a team to easily share ideas on notes, graphs and presentations in real-time. troubleshootmertr finds it a good option "for knowledgebase."
- Class Note taking for courses
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Marp: Markdown Presentation Ecosystem
HedgeDoc [0] allows you to collaborate in markdown, and also create slides.
[0] https://hedgedoc.org/ and https://demo.hedgedoc.org/slide-example?both
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Just finished migrating my old tower servers to a Kubernetes cluster on my new rack!
For writing Markdown documents I use Hedgedoc.
simonwillisonblog
- Sandboxing Python with Win32 App Isolation
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AI for Web Devs: Addressing Bugs, Security, & Reliability
Simon Willison has pointed out several examples of prompt injection attacks and why it may never be a solved problem:
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Where Have All the Websites Gone?
I want more people to have link blogs.
I have one in the sidebar of https://simonwillison.net/ which I've been running since November 2003. You can search through all 6,836 links here: https://simonwillison.net/search/?type=blogmark
I can post things to it with a bookmarklet. It has an Atom feed.
It's such a low-friction way of publishing. A lot of https://daringfireball.net works like this too. I also like https://waxy.org/ and https://kottke.org/ for this.
I'd love to see more of these.
- Ask HN: Is it feasible to train my own LLM?
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Moving Away from Substack
My approach is to publish to my own blog at https://simonwillison.net and then copy and paste content from that into a Substack newsletter at https://simonw.substack.com a few times a month.
It's been working really well.
Substack don't have an API, but they do support copy and paste - so I built myself a tool that assembles my blog content into rich text I can copy and paste straight into the Substack editor.
I wrote about how that works here: https://simonwillison.net/2023/Apr/4/substack-observable/
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Building a Blog in Django
Hah, yeah securing something like WordPress can be a challenge, especially if you're running a bunch of plugins.
My blog is a pretty straight-forward Django setup without many other dependencies, so it's a lot less of an attack surface: https://github.com/simonw/simonwillisonblog
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Show HN: Superfunctions – AI prompt templates as an API
That specific prompt is just an example and it's pretty bad, it was the shortest and simplest prompt I could come up with that would be easily understood.
You can set response content-types (text, html, json, etc...). If you use json it will get pretty good results because I have some is some logic to attempt to pick out json or json5 objects from the text output. I dont yet have logic to support json arrays, but I'm hoping to add that soon.
But still client side validation is needed for applications with untrusted input. I dont attempt to solve prompt injection. I saw a lot of interesting posts on this topic from this blog https://simonwillison.net/. I need to find sometime to read more about it.
Try this one instead, it should be better
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Stopping at 90%
I've started to consider "commit to writing about it" as the price I have to pay for giving into the lure of another project. It's one of the main reasons I publish so much content on https://simonwillison.net/ and https://til.simonwillison.net
A project with a published write-up unlocks so much more value than one which you complete without giving others a chance of understanding what you built.
I've maintained internal blogs (sometimes just a Slack channel or Confluence area) at previous employers for this purpose too.
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Stanford A.I. Courses
I think you are asking specifically about practical LLM engineering and not the underlying science.
Honestly this is all moving so fast you can do well by reading the news, following a few reddits/substacks, and skimming the prompt engineering papers as they come out every week (!).
https://www.latent.space/p/ai-engineer provides an early manifesto for this nascent layer of the stack.
Zvi writes a good roundup (though he is concerned mostly with alignment so skip if you don’t like that angle): https://thezvi.substack.com/p/ai-18-the-great-debate-debates
Simon W has some good writeups too: https://simonwillison.net/
I strongly recommend playing with the OpenAI APIs and working with langchain in a Colab notebook to get a feel for how these all fit together. Also, the tools here are incredibly simple and easy to understand (very new) so looking at, say, https://github.com/minimaxir/simpleaichat/tree/main/simpleai... or https://github.com/smol-ai/developer and digging in to the prompts, what goes in system vs assistant roles, how you gourde the LLM, etc.
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Seeking Your Top Recommendations for Resources on ChatGPT and Generative AI
Simon Willison's Weblog
What are some alternatives?
HackMD - CodiMD - Realtime collaborative markdown notes on all platforms.
pg_cjk_parser - Postgres CJK Parser pg_cjk_parser is a fts (full text search) parser derived from the default parser in PostgreSQL 11. When a postgres database uses utf-8 encoding, this parser supports all the features of the default parser while splitting CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) characters into 2-gram tokens. If the database's encoding is not utf-8, the parser behaves just like the default parser.
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
pgvector - Open-source vector similarity search for Postgres
Etherpad - Etherpad: A modern really-real-time collaborative document editor.
awesome-personal-blogs - A delightful list of personal tech blogs
Trilium Notes - Build your personal knowledge base with Trilium Notes
tsv-utils - eBay's TSV Utilities: Command line tools for large, tabular data files. Filtering, statistics, sampling, joins and more.
CryptPad - Collaborative office suite, end-to-end encrypted and open-source.
awesome-ml - Curated list of useful LLM / Analytics / Datascience resources
Planka - The realtime kanban board for workgroups built with React and Redux.
knowledge - Everything I know