pipes-and-rust
remy
pipes-and-rust | remy | |
---|---|---|
3 | 33 | |
60 | 269 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 2 years ago | 10 months ago | |
HTML | Python | |
MIT License | GNU 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.
pipes-and-rust
-
ReMarkable 2
It draws all penstrokes on a camvas in the browser and also deletes strokes when the eraser is used.
[1] https://github.com/AnyTimeTraveler/pipes-and-rust
- Can this device work as plug and play for use as a live whiteboard during online meetings?
-
Alternatives to Using Desktop App
You can host a website on the remarkable that streams its screen to the LAN, and would be accessible to every device on the network. No installation is required on the desktop/laptop. https://github.com/AnyTimeTraveler/pipes-and-rust
remy
-
Archiving Tagged Notebooks?
What I do is I create backups with rsync (so "low-level" backups of the actual data the tablet is using to represent the notebooks, not just the rendered pdf). Then I use Remy to browse them if needed. (Disclaimer: I'm the developer of Remy) It currently lacks a way to export/import the notebooks in native formats (that would allow you to restore archived ones through the GUI) so if you need that you need to do it manually, which requires some basic knowledge of how the notebooks are internally stored.
-
My remarkable arrives today. Which hacks do you recommend?
reMy and RCU are the best alternative desktop clients. The former has a focus on notebooks, while the latter is focused on ease-of-use and does it all (templates/notebooks/wallpaper/and much more). Both use their own rendering engine for custom PDF export options. Neither installs anything to your tablet, so they usually work through software updates. (Disclaimer: I am the author of RCU).
-
If I broke or lost my ReMarkable 2, would I be able to download all the old notes onto a new one?
You can also take backups using easy, convenient, community-written software, like RCU (which I'm the author of), reMy, reMarkable HyUtilities, rmExplorer, rmAPI, and many others found in the Awesome reMarkable list.
-
High Size PDFs and Cloud
You could use something local, that uploads over SSH instead of the Web UI. The Web UI and rM Cloud choke on files over a few hundred MBs. reMy + 2.x firmware might be what you're looking for -- it has sync capability. (I assume OneDrive has something like a shared PC folder that you can use as the target directory.)
-
Big note files - timeout on usb webserver export
You could try reMy, which has its own renderer. There are more rendering programs in the Awesome reMarkable list, many of which will work with 2.15 and below--just avoid anything saying 'cloud' or 'web UI'.
-
OCR/LaTeX Update
Mathpix has this functionality and is cheap. I integrated it into Remy, see here for a demo (although it's a bit outdated, the app has now way more features). It's not a fully fledged integration, I was planning to use it for having a search index that could match on handwriting but had no time to implement it.
-
Exporting highlighted text pdf
If you need support for the new v3 software update, not sure. Otherwise Remy can do that for you
-
So, which file management tools are you still using?
I use my own Remy tool (in conjunction with rsync for backups). Unfortunately it is not working with v3 just yet but I plan to eventually add support for it, once the effort to reverse engineer the new file format settles.
-
Support for Remarkable lines version=6 File Format (.rm files)
You're not alone :-); we started discussing it here https://github.com/bordaigorl/remy/issues/49
-
Continuous scrolling is the most frustrating thing I have seen
But parsing and rendering are two different things. RCU used to use the remy parsing, while the developer put considererable effort into the rendering himself. Yet he wasn't satisfied (I was) and started to completely rebuild it. That's where he lost interest in RCU :-(
What are some alternatives?
rmapy - A unofficial python module for interacting with the Remarkable Cloud
awesome-reMarkable - A curated list of projects related to the reMarkable tablet
lol-html - Low output latency streaming HTML parser/rewriter with CSS selector-based API
rmfakecloud - host your own cloud for the remarkable
hackernews2remarkable - Fetch top articles from HackerNews, pack as EPUB right in your reMarkable device
reMarkableWeb
lines-are-beautiful - C++ File API for the reMarkable tablet
rsync-time-backup - Time Machine style backup with rsync.
reMarkableScripts - shell scripts to interact with the tablet from reMarkable.com
rmirro - A script that synchronizes PDFs of documents between a Remarkable and a computer folder that mirrors its file structure without cloud access
dpt-canvas - Template / Base APK for the DPT-RP1
rmapi - Go app that allows you to access your reMarkable tablet files through the Cloud API