reMarkableWeb
create-t3-app
reMarkableWeb | create-t3-app | |
---|---|---|
14 | 183 | |
69 | 23,559 | |
- | 3.0% | |
10.0 | 9.2 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | 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.
reMarkableWeb
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Export highlighted text? Getting overview of all highlights? Basic features that still are not available? Is there some roadmap as to which features are being implemented?
There's a web-app (https://remarkable-web.vercel.app) which allows you to export highlighted text. It is useful but not perfect. For some weeks (or months) it disappeared. I just ask for an official, reliable, way of doing something most 30$ ebooks can do.
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Exporting highlighted text pdf
I am currently reading many books and papers and use highlighting a lot. My life would be a lot better if I could automatically extract the highlighted text. I tried several (by now outdated) solutions like Biff (https://github.com/soulisalmed/biff ), RCU and https://remarkable-web.vercel.app/ . The first two are apparently outdated, and the last I can't connect to (and all my files are >4 MB, so manual select doesn't work).
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Where is reMarkable-web app?
Since I discovered this app (https://remarkable-web.vercel.app/), I've been using it to extract some highlights.
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Has anyone on 3.0 extracted highlights from 3rd party app?
I'm still on 2.15 and my work relies on https://remarkable-web.vercel.app/ to extract highlights from PDFs I mark up. Seems like reMarkable's updates have broken the directory browsing feature there, but I can still upload reMarkable PDFs manually and get my highlights.
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3.0 and extracting highlights
They also have appeared to change the web api such that it has broken https://remarkable-web.vercel.app/.
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The new 3.0 update is rough!
I can't export any annotated pdfs since the beta installed. With the desktop app or the remarkable itself. Also https://remarkable-web.vercel.app/ seems to not work with the beta. So far the beta has completely broken the pdf annotation workflow as well as problemitizing reading pdfs.
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Any way around/hack for enforcing two-way sync?
Digest -- that also extracts all your highlights and notes for easy review. Here a workaround is to use https://remarkable-web.vercel.app for extracting highlights, and inserting blank pages in pdfs for more extensive notes.
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Remarkable 2 as part of Readwise - Obsidian workflow
However, recently, I discovered a non-hack app that allows me to extract my highlights, export them as a Markdown file (there's the possibility to connect Readwise) and use them in Obsidian.
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Features that you feel missing
Standard recognisable highlights (I made a post about it). Recently I discovered Remarkable-web, a very useful tool to extract my highlights. However this should be supported by the very company.
- rM2 is useless for me unless it features a proper highlighter tool
create-t3-app
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Deploy Full-Stack Next.js T3App with Cognito and Prisma using AWS Lambda
import { unstable_noStore as noStore } from "next/cache"; import Link from "next/link"; import { CreatePost } from "~/app/_components/create-post"; import { getServerAuthSession } from "~/server/auth"; import { api } from "~/trpc/server"; export default async function Home() { noStore(); const hello = await api.post.hello.query({ text: "from tRPC" }); const session = await getServerAuthSession(); return (
Create T3span> App h1>
First Steps →h3>
Just the basics - Everything you need to know to set up your database and authentication. div> Link>Documentation →h3>
Learn more about Create T3 App, the libraries it uses, and how to deploy it.div> Link> div>{hello ? hello.greeting : "Loading tRPC query..."}p>
{session && Logged in as {session.user?.email}span>} p> {session ? "Sign out" : "Sign in"} Link> div> div> div> main> ); } async function CrudShowcase() { const session = await getServerAuthSession(); if (!session?.user) return null; const latestPost = await api.post.getLatest.query(); return (
{latestPost ? (Your most recent post: {latestPost.name}p> ) : (
You have no posts yet.p> )} div> ); }
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Interview with Senior JavaScript Developer 2024 [video]
I thought he was making stuff up - "t3 stack vs t4 stack". But about 2 minutes in, I realized that I'd heard of a few things that he's talking about so I looked it up and they're real!
I think it's possible everything he's saying is true, more or less. LOL
t3: https://create.t3.gg
t4: https://t4stack.com
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Localized tRPC errors
We start with a project that was bootstrapped with create-t3-app. For internationalization we use next-intl and set it up as described in the getting started guide. With this initial project setup we can jump into implementing localized error messages.
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Building an Admin Console With Minimum Code Using React-Admin, Prisma, and Zenstack
I used create-t3-app to scaffold the Next.js app, with TypeScript, Prisma, and "app router" enabled in the options. You can also use create-next-app for the job and install Prisma manually.
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Leaving Everything Behind For Elixir [Theo – t3․gg] [video]
I agree that the quantity of publicly available code isn't the most reliable indicator of someone's seniority.
My issue with this individual arises from the discrepancy between his public claims of significant expertise in the content he produces. He positions himself as a highly experienced developer, attracting a large following of junior developers who take his advice at face value.
I am trying to collect data points supporting his claims of seniority. For instance, his website prominently features a statement that he is the creator of the T3 Stack. However, a review of the contributor statistics for the T3 Stack (https://github.com/t3-oss/create-t3-app/graphs/contributors)... minimal contributions from him, which raises questions about the validity of his claims.
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Ask HN: Which full stack framework (NextJS, Remix, SvelteKit) would you use?
I would recommend - https://create.t3.gg/
It uses the following, which as of late are pretty well know and common, so you can punch in your problems to stackoverflow, google, or chatgpt and get some pretty good answers.
It uses:
Nextjs (React), typescript, trpc (typescript rpc), auth, tailwind, and Prisma (ORM)
Though of course these could go out of fashion tomorrow, but I don't think the essential idea behind these libs and frameworks are that wacky, unique or unordinary.
Prisma ORM, is a little opinionated, and you could swap it out for Drizzle, which is basically typescript side sugared SQL.
TRPC might be also be a little sticky because it is tied to typescript, this is the tradeoff for the buttery smooth coupling for the fullstack experience. I think there exists a typed-rest solution out there, but haven't used it.
Personal anecdata, I used this stack for a little hobby project and it was FUN.
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You don't need to pay for SaaS boilerplates - Open SaaS
Open SaaS was built with Typescript, and because it’s a full-stack app, type safety from the back-end to the front-end can be a real lifesaver. I mean, some opinionated stacks have gotten hugely popular on this basis.
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Building a Local Development Environment: Running a Next.js Full-Stack App with PostgreSQL and Minio S3 Using Docker
Let's start by creating a Next.js application. We will use the T3 stack (TypeScript, TailwindCSS, and Prisma ORM) for this tutorial to skip installing and configuring all the dependencies which is out of the scope of this article. You can find more information about the T3 stack.
- Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (January 2024)
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Show HN: Build your startup or side project faster with these SaaS templates
https://github.com/t3-oss/create-t3-app
You still would need to add Stripe but there are so many examples publicly available that it should be straight forward
What are some alternatives?
remarks - Extract annotations (highlights and scribbles) from PDF, EPUB, and notebooks marked with reMarkable tablets. Export to Markdown, PDF, PNG, SVG
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
reader
next-pwa-contentlayer - Next.js PWA App with `next-i18next` and `Contentlayer`.
remy - Remy, an online&offline manager for the reMarkable tablet
Refine - A React Framework for building internal tools, admin panels, dashboards & B2B apps with unmatched flexibility.
remarkable2-hacks - A collection of hacks, mods, tools, tips & tricks, specifically focused on the reMarkable 2
supabase - The open source Firebase alternative.
news2reader - Serve online articles directly to your e-reader using OPDS
turbo - Incremental bundler and build system optimized for JavaScript and TypeScript, written in Rust – including Turbopack and Turborepo.
cal.com - Scheduling infrastructure for absolutely everyone.
next-auth - Authentication for the Web.