literal
core
literal | core | |
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11 | 9 | |
76 | 366 | |
- | 0.0% | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | almost 3 years ago | |
Java | Vala | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
literal
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⟳ 2 apps added, 64 updated at f-droid.org
Literal (version 1.1.31-foss): Capture annotations, sources, and knowledge from text that you read.
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A notes app that lets me scroll throw notes like a book from left to right , I take notes everyday and I come back to them later to write reports
I've recently come across Literal which makes me share notes or annotations which I want to save for later. It has tag functions too. Maybe this can help.
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I wrote a book about information
There's been some good writing on the general failure of "Hypertext books" (e.g. the first couple of paragraphs here [0]). I personally think this stems from some of the reasons that underlie some of those that you outline - books published on the web simultaneously try to be skeuomorphic in retaining the physical book metaphor (organized linearly, mostly static and plain text, etc), while still losing some of the real-world effects of the physical medium (being able to intuitively understand progress, markup, etc). The way that we publish and read text actually hasn't changed much, even though the target medium has of course changed dramatically, and as a result you end up with arguably the worst of both worlds. E-readers try to side step the problem by extending the book metaphor even further, but text on the web doesn't have that privilege.
I'm working on a product, Literal [1], that aims to solve some of your specific problems, specifically providing for a way to annotate and add notes to web content and enabling some degree of source management. My ambition is to move on to solve some of the other problems you raise as well. If you have an Android device and are interested in trying it out, I'd love to connect!
[0] https://subpixel.space/entries/open-transclude/
[1] https://literal.io/
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How to organize my life ... basically
Along these lines, I'm building an annotation management system, Literal, that fulfills some of your asks, specifically around collecting and annotating articles. It also does source management, and has a tagging system that would let you set up "to read" and "have read" lists. It doesn't yet do audio annotation but that's definitely on my list of things to add. It's Android only at the moment but I'd love to connect with you (or anyone else) that is interested in trying it out.
- Meaning in the Margins: On the Literary Value of Annotation
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An app like Pocket to read articles and highlight?
Thanks! I created an issue to track your idea of making tags more visually distinctive. The app right now is very weighted towards information capture, and I'm actively working on improving organization functionality so I think this idea goes right in with that theme.
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Literal - Textual Annotation Management System
Open source (github) and natively implements the W3C Web Annotation Data Model, meaning your data is safe and portable.
core
- Linux Browsers that support YubiKey/CTAP w PIN for iCloud logins? Which do you use?
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Safari 16.4 Is an Admission
The Midori project I am referring to is a browser project built on webkit.
https://github.com/midori-browser/core
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Modern Web Browser Recommendations For OpenBSD?
Why not compile from source. Try midori lightweight web browser
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Will Firefox survive?
The new Midori has migrated to Blink engine, the WebKit version is no longer being developed, but its source code is available to fork.
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Which browser should I use? I am looking for privacy and less RAM eating.
Midori
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I worried about the future of Midori broswer
After it have be brought , they rewriiten Midori to a electron broswer ( (i don't think they "rewriiten" Midori.i think they basicly forking anthor Electron browser(beaker) because it look like beaker ) and move into new repo https://gitlab.com/midori-web/midori-desktop an left the old webkit Midori repo alone( https://github.com/midori-browser/core). Since then , Midori broswer is dead .it become another browser fork.
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⟳ 2 apps added, 64 updated at f-droid.org
Midori (version 1.7): lightweight, fast and free web browser for Android
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fastest web browser
I would avoid Midori. It used to be a cute alternative WebKitGTK-based browser, but sometime in the past few years it quietly changed hands and became Electron-based, and development stalled. There’s some discussion here https://github.com/midori-browser/core/issues/443
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Cohort IDs can be collected over time to create cross-site tracking IDs
new [1]
See also this extensive list of browsers [2].
[0] https://github.com/midori-browser/core
What are some alternatives?
yashlang - PeerTube and YouTube player for Android with local playlists and whitelisted recommendations
midori-desktop
Simple-SMS-Messenger - An easy and quick way of managing SMS and MMS messages without ads.
Jitsi Meet - Jitsi Meet - Secure, Simple and Scalable Video Conferences that you use as a standalone app or embed in your web application.
Olauncher - Minimal AF Launcher for Android. Reduce your screen time. Daily wallpapers.
grocy-android - ERP beyond your fridge, now on your phone – An awesome companion app for grocy
midori-android
android-file-manager
Infinity-For-Reddit - A Reddit client for Android
jitsi-meet-release-notes - Release notes for Jitsi Meet: the web frontend, mobile apps and mobile SDKs