impermalink
pcopy
impermalink | pcopy | |
---|---|---|
1 | 17 | |
0 | 317 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 2 years ago | 2 months ago | |
TypeScript | Go | |
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.
impermalink
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Ask HN: Show me your Half Baked project
https://impermalink.spiffy.tech - Save Links for Later. Optimized for a triage-save-read-trash loop.
I'm a long-time Instapaper/Pocket/Wallabag user. I love scanning my RSS feeds, saving links into those, and clicking 'mark all as read'. Then, when I have some downtime, I pore over all the interesting articles/videos I saved. I always have something interesting to read, and I can read it with focus, not doomscrolling and hoping to luck into something good.
But Instapaper et al. aren't built for the way I use them. I put a link in, read it, and delete it. No tagging, no archiving. I usually don't even want text extraction. I just want to read something interesting, then I'm done with it. I can bookmark the link in my browser if I really want to.
Also, I want to open HN/Reddit/YouTube links in their native mobile apps. Instapaper/Wallabag make that clumsy, Pocket makes it almost impossible. These apps also have bugs with sync, but I don't care about offline access, so why am I paying the cost for buggy offline sync I don't use?
Impermalink is designed to streamline my workflow. You can share to it from other apps. When you click a link to open it, it's marked for deletion and will disappear the next time you click another link. You can rescue a link from the recycle bin. Links are grouped by domain, so it's easy to lump all those YouTube videos under a collapsed header so you can focus on other content. Links are just links - your browser will open them however it's normally configured to, including opening them in native apps on mobile.
The app's condition is "rough and ready". It works enough that I use it every day and really enjoy it. The UX has obvious areas for improvement. The home page has no content. Svelte has bugs that double-render some of the content sometimes. But it's there, and it works.
Give it a try, let me know what you think, [email protected]
Install the app to your home screen with Chrome on Android. Yes, Chrome, not anything else, not even Chrome derivatives. I haven't tried on iOS yet. You can use the app in any browser you want, but only Chrome on Android knows how to share links to web apps.
https://impermalink.spiffy.tech
https://github.com/spiffytech/impermalink
pcopy
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File share via HTTP link?
nopaste/pcopy, that you can selfhost. Just a single binary file.
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Self Hosted Pastebin Website
Heyy I made a thing like that. https://github.com/binwiederhier/pcopy
- Show HN: A tool to send push notifications to your phone, written in Go
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Show me your REST APIs 😊
And another one here:https://github.com/binwiederhier/pcopy (same, see server.go)
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Looking for Docker based Self Hosted Pastebin
I host a version of it on https://nopaste.net
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Question about bytes and ioutil.ReadAll
re 1: as fellow gopher has said, `io.CopyN` is your friend, though I have recently implemented a similar thing that may be interesting to you. I implemented a `Peak()` method that will read up to N bytes and return a reader that can be read as if it's the original reader, but you'll be able to get the `PeakedBytes` from it too: https://github.com/binwiederhier/pcopy/blob/master/util/peak.go
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Transfer.sh – Easy file sharing from the command line
Since we're listing alternatives, here's the one I made: https://nopaste.net -- It's open source and available on https://github.com/binwiederhier/pcopy
curl usage is available via: "curl nopaste.net".
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I made a temporary file host, nopaste and clipboard across machines. It can be used from the Web UI, via a CLI or without a client by using curl. It's open source, and I host a demo on https://nopaste.net
I have an issue on github (https://github.com/binwiederhier/pcopy/issues/20) to "modernize" the JS code a little, i.e. use "class"es, modules, strict mode, consts, exports, ...
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Any way of reducing the verbosity at the web development with Go?
If you want to see them implemented, see https://github.com/binwiederhier/pcopy/blob/284b6502fa736951b4ace0dfc62152ff707639ae/server.go
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pcopy: secure copy/paste across machines, with a web UI
Source is here: https://github.com/binwiederhier/pcopy
What are some alternatives?
pastty - Copy and paste across devices
pastefy - Pastefy is an Open Source self-hostable Pastebin.
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