listudy
exomind
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listudy | exomind | |
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34 | 5 | |
262 | 56 | |
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4.5 | 9.4 | |
11 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Elixir | TypeScript | |
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.
listudy
- Listudy: Improve your chess skills with the help of spaced repetition
- Rebuilding Memchess.com from Its Archive
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How do you chess maniacs visualize the board so clearly?
It comes with experience. There is a website called listudy.org that has a section called “Blind Tactics” that might help with visualization.
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The Best Chess Resources 2nd Edition
Listudy: Memorise openings with spaced repetition. Chess Endgame Training Chessercise: Practice chess with YouTube. Chess Madra: Build and practise an opening repertoire. Aimchess: Learn your strengths and weaknesses.
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Opening Books Practice Partner
If you are trying to practice a certain opening, I would highly recommend listudy.org just to build that spaced repetition in your head.
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How do you memorize certain openings
I find https://listudy.org very useful for drilling lines. I don't see it mentioned often, but it allows you to import any lichess study (selfmade or other) into it and it'll pick a random line that's up to you to correctly play out until the end. Works very well if you do it enough
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I know slow time controls are best.. but what openings should I play to improve the fastest.
I use private Lichess Studies to store/build my repertoire. Start "choosing" your preferred responses to various opening moves and store them there. Start 1 move deep at a time and branch out slowly. At low level of play it's actually better to go just a few moves deep and have some canned responses to common bad moves from your opponents. You can import your lichess study into listudy.org which turns your saved opening prep into spaced repetition exercises to practice.
- How do I practice openings on lichess?
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A tool to memorize chess openings?
listudy.org
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FEATURE REKWEST - Lichess Opening Drills
Second, you can check out https://listudy.org which can do this with lichess studies.
exomind
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Ask HN: What is your current side-project?
Is your PDF reader open sourced? It's a feature I'd like to implement at some point in my own personal project (https://github.com/appaquet/exomind)
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What is your “I don't care if this succeeds” project?
I just added a few screenshots in the README: https://github.com/appaquet/exomind
As for the Gmail integration, it is quite crude at the moment. I use it mostly to organize incoming emails, but I still use Gmail to send or reply to my emails. Exomind inbox is synchronized with Gmail, so all emails that you remove from one or the other get removed / archived on the other side. It also supports multiple accounts.
If you are interested to try and not afraid of the rough edges, just let me know. I added Discussions to the GitHub repository.
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Ask HN: What Are You Working On?
Exomind[1], a personal knowledge management tool that takes the form of a unified inbox in which you can have your emails, tasks, notes and bookmarks organized into collections. I have an iOS and a web/electron client at the moment. I plan to eventually add files (blobs), definitions and support extensibility via WASM applications.
Its backend (Exocore[2]) is built on top of a personal / private blockchain and is made from the ground up to be hosted in a semi-decentralized fashion on your own personal devices (your computer, raspberry pi, a cloud instance, etc.)
It has very rough edges, but I'm using it daily to organize my life. It has also been my learning playground to improve my Rust skills over the last two years. If all goes well, I'm a few months away from some kind of tech preview.
[1] https://github.com/appaquet/exomind
What are some alternatives?
lichobile - lichess.org mobile application
openmiko - Open source firmware for Ingenic T20 based devices such as WyzeCam V2, Xiaomi Xiaofang 1S, iSmartAlarm's Spot+ and others.
stockfish.wasm - WebAssembly port of the strong chess engine Stockfish
DsHidMini - Virtual HID Mini-user-mode-driver for Sony DualShock 3 Controllers
lila - ♞ lichess.org: the forever free, adless and open source chess server ♞
ExtPay - The JavaScript library for ExtensionPay.com — payments for your browser extensions, no server needed.
scraper - Nodejs web scraper. Contains a command line, docker container, terraform module and ansible roles for distributed cloud scraping. Supported databases: SQLite, MySQL, PostgreSQL. Supported headless clients: Puppeteer, Playwright, Cheerio, JSdom.
electron-browser-shell - A minimal, tabbed web browser with support for Chrome extensions—built on Electron.
openingtree - Consolidated view of all your chess games from chess.com, lichess, grandmaster games or custom pgn.
Video-Hub-App - Official repository for Video Hub App
Arthur - How to build your own AI art installation from scratch [Moved to: https://github.com/maxvfischer/DIY-ai-art]
scraper - A scraper for EmulationStation written in Go using hashing