jarvis
ht
jarvis | ht | |
---|---|---|
1 | 39 | |
22 | 4,798 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.0 | |
over 2 years ago | 2 days ago | |
C++ | Rust | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
jarvis
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Ask HN: Show me your Half Baked project
A personal assistant for the desktop computer called Deus. Cross-platforn and open source here: https://github.com/nuttyartist/deus, https://awesomenessnotes.wixsite.com/website-5 (didn't update it for a long time)
Code is in C++ using Qt. Uses Porcupine for wake-up-word detection and Google API's for speech-to-text and text-to-speech.
It can play music, move your windows, you can shout google searches at it, tell it open Gmail, take screenshots, etc.
After launching it I found people didn't find it useful, including myself, after some time. Still, I open sourced it in case somebody will find it interesting. I loved developing the NLP engine part using tree structure to load the database and travel on it to find the most suitable command based on the user input.
Moved on to the next idea (:
ht
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Curl is now a CVE Numbering Authority
No need to use curl, make HTTP requests great again with https://github.com/ducaale/xh
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Why people in Google hate Go?
Except when you actually enjoy things being fast. For example, HTTPie easily adds 0.5-1s delay to every request because it's written in Python, especially on the first invocation. xh (https://github.com/ducaale/xh), on the other hand, starts immediately because it's written in Rust. I very much like this trend.
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HTTPie Desktop: cross-platform API testing client for humans
HTTPie is great and was a big improvement for me over cURL.
However, I ended up switching to xh[1] as it's significantly faster and I prefer its output.
https://github.com/ducaale/xh
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Tell HN: Postman just wiped all my stuff
No, but unless portability is a concern or you're massively familiar with curl, you might want to consider xh. It's much more intuitive.
https://github.com/ducaale/xh
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🐚🦀Comandos shell reescritos em Rust
xh
- Insomnia REST client now requires an account
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The curl-wget Venn diagram
wget on the other hand, automatically converts the ñ to UTF-8 hex and resolves the link perfectly.
I've searched the curl manpage and couldn't find a way to solve this. Please help.
I'm having to use `xh --curl` [1] to "fix" the links before I pass them to curl.
[1] https://github.com/ducaale/xh
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Get better with Vim one tip at a time
Very nice, you should add xh to the User-Agents though.
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I Could Rewrite Curl
While not a rewrite - one recent tool for making http requests which i quite enjoy is:
https://github.com/ducaale/xh
It's basically python httpie rewritten in rust. my only gripe is that i keep forgetting that it exists - and that "xh" is for http and "xhs" is for https.
So i frequently end up with curl anyway:)
- xh: Friendly and fast tool for sending HTTP requests (HTTPie in Rust)
What are some alternatives?
hacn - A "monad" or DSL for creating React components using Fable and F# computation expressions
rustdesk - An open-source remote desktop, and alternative to TeamViewer.
xact - Model based design for developers
htmlq - Like jq, but for HTML.
pastty - Copy and paste across devices
httpie - 🥧 HTTPie CLI — modern, user-friendly command-line HTTP client for the API era. JSON support, colors, sessions, downloads, plugins & more.
pcopy - pcopy is 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.
gitoxide - An idiomatic, lean, fast & safe pure Rust implementation of Git
ws-monitoring - A simple & lightweight realtime monitoring web UI + server in Node.js
tty-share - Share your linux or osx terminal over the Internet.
thgtoa - The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Online Anonymity