rmrl
obsidian-ocr
rmrl | obsidian-ocr | |
---|---|---|
10 | 8 | |
113 | 267 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 5.2 | |
over 2 years ago | 3 months ago | |
Python | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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rmrl
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Show HN: Obsidian Canvas – An infinite space for your ideas
Cool project! Note that if you want to support the Remarkable scribbles, there's a Python project that does that:
https://github.com/rschroll/rmrl
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PFD & PNG
If you need a high detail at the cost of cosmetics (e.g. pencil texture), rmrl is a pretty good renderer: https://github.com/rschroll/rmrl
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New Yorker: Can “Distraction-Free” Devices Change the Way We Write?
100% and yet it's still worth it. I write this as a programmer meaning that, ironically enough, my distraction is when I pick the reMarkable to start reading or sketching but despite the minimalist setup still get distracted. Not by social network notifications or the possibility of a web search but rather here for example to suggest you https://github.com/rschroll/rmrl for your PDF and if its too limited (it always is) to consider what prototypes I could build that challenge the very way I read and write. I believe it's worst for researchers because the process itself must be described in order to publish a result. One must step back and describe the experiment so that it can be both challenged and reproduced. Consequently there is always on the back of the mind a simple and justified question "Is this the right way to do that?". I believe it is quite taxing but it still worth because, and that's just my view, thinking itself relies extensively on tools. We like to imagine that it's a pure process of the mind but for any complex enough thought, we need tools. We run simulations, we sketch diagram, we organize a bibliography which represents the thoughts and experiments of others, etc. This is literally unmanageable without tools regardless of ones "intelligence". This in turns mean that the better the tool, at least in regard to the final goal, the further one can go.
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Any way to export a folder with multiple notebooks?
Then use https://github.com/rschroll/rmrl to convert the data files you get from the previous point to pdf.
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Command line tool to convert page to png or pdf on the device, or from a third party?
I love this tool: https://github.com/rschroll/rmrl
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Programmatically changing the opened notebook
Reading/parsing .rm files has been already implemented by these 2 Python libraries: * https://github.com/bsdz/remarkable-layers (not maintained any longer) * https://github.com/rschroll/rmrl (looks up-to-date)
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PSA: rsync, cryptsetup and veritysetup binaries now included in 2.8 update
This would also be less of an issue if you ran your own infrastructure (see rmfakecloud, or use something like Syncthing or Nextcloud together with rmrl for file conversion).
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Issue w/ highlighter tool (beta 2.7.0.30)
This has been a gripe of mine for a while. The problem is that reMarkable isn't implementing the PDF standard correctly. Their highlights are just visual overlays but not Annotation objects. I have submitted a pull request to the RMRL python library to fix this, but the author has not been responsive. I also submitted a support request referencing the specific standard, but I'm not holding my breath. In the mean time you can always try using my version of RMRL, but it requires use of the command line and a working python install.
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Ondevice .rm to .svg/.pdf conversion
One way to manage the issue, would be to look into rmlr, install python and pip via Entware/Toltec, and try to have rmlr running on the RM if all the dependencies can be found for the ARM architecture.
- rmrl: reMarkable Rendering Library
obsidian-ocr
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Let's talk about my 'painful to read' old handwritten journal notes in Evernote...in BEAR!
There is an OCR plugin for Obsidian that supports search (haven’t used it but now I’m curious): https://github.com/MohrJonas/obsidian-ocr However I believe Bear 2.0 is going to have a pretty sweet OCR tool built-in, so if you can hang on until it’s released or nab the beta that could be worth trying out.
- Does Obsidian suitable for my usecase (I use Notion + OneNote)?
- I'm joining Obsidian full-time as CEO
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I didn't realize the community has grown so much..
-OCR: this is what i've found so far but haven't tested: https://github.com/MohrJonas/obsidian-ocr I've been waiting for a good ocr plugin,
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Show HN: Obsidian Canvas – An infinite space for your ideas
Not quite there yet, but there is an Obsidian plugin developing similar functionality: https://github.com/MohrJonas/obsidian-ocr
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Support for recognising latex
Thanks, I didn't know they had a student plan. I guess I'll use that for now, I opened an issue on this plugin and the dev said it's something they're willing to add in the future.
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Obsidian OCR version 1.1.0 released 🎉
Link: https://github.com/MohrJonas/obsidian-ocr/releases/tag/1.1.0
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OCR extensions to Obsidian
Alright version 0.0.1 is available: https://github.com/MohrJonas/obsidian-ocr
What are some alternatives?
remarkable-layers - Python module for reading and writing Remarkable Lines files
rextract - A simple toolchain for moving Remarkable highlights to Readwise
rmStorageTools - Based on rmWebUiTools but uses local flat files and rmrl!
ob-table-enhancer - Manipulate markdown tables without touching the source code in Obsidian.
scrypt-js - Pure JavaScript implementation of the scrypt password-based key derivation function.
obsidian-projects - Plain text project planning in Obsidian
remarks - Extract annotations (highlights and scribbles) from PDF, EPUB, and notebooks marked with reMarkable tablets. Export to Markdown, PDF, PNG, SVG
obsidian-text-extractor - A (companion) plugin to facilitate the extraction of text from images (OCR) and PDFs.
rmrl - Render reMarkable documents to PDF
obsidian-advanced-uri - Advanced modes for Obsidian URI
rmapi - Go app that allows you to access your reMarkable tablet files through the Cloud API
obsidian-livesync