userscripts
omnivore
userscripts | omnivore | |
---|---|---|
21 | 67 | |
2,845 | 8,988 | |
- | 4.6% | |
8.9 | 10.0 | |
19 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Swift | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
userscripts
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Show HN: My first programming project – userscripts to change forum UIs
Hi, I'm Will. I'm 24, autistic, and have OCD tendencies. I'm learning to code and this is my first public project. I’d really appreciate your feedback and encouragement!
This project lets me solve some of my OCD problems online. There are a couple of parts of the forums that I visit – Space Battles, Sufficient Velocity, and Questionable Questing – that I want to remove. Specifically, I hate seeing indicators of how much is left in a forum thread, because I keep thinking about how much content is left. It stops me from immersing myself in the story. It stressed me out. Before I learned to code, I'd use my hand to block the total chapter count so I could read the blurb and see the word count. I would do my best to ignore the page navigation bar except for the next page button, but I usually ended up failing. One of the reasons I always read in full-screen Safari is that I didn't have to see the tab name that always had the page number. I learned not to hover my cursor over the window because it would tell me the page number.
This project is a series of userscripts that hide those indicators. I coded the userscripts in JavaScript, and I'm using [userscripts](https://github.com/quoid/userscripts) as the system. Despite the fact I didn't know what a userscript was until I started coding them, AI assistance allowed me to code them with minimal help from my brother, Stevie. Khanmigo helped me plan, write, and debug code. ChatGPT taught me the theory. Part of the reason I coded a lot faster with the later userscripts is I knew enough to realize when AI was talking about something irrelevant and redirect it. One cool moment was when I correctly predicted I didn't need to code different userscripts for SpaceBattles and Sufficient Velocity because Sufficient Velocity used to be part of SpaceBattles.
I find it relaxing not to have to worry about accidentally seeing the chapter count or the final page number. Maybe they’ll help one of you!
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Show HN: HNRelevant – Explore Related Discussions on HN in an Integrated Sidebar
You can use userscripts [1] which is a safari extension which allows you to add userscripts, and the author of this work have an userscript [2] that you can use with safari (or any other browser)
[1] https://github.com/quoid/userscripts
[2] https://github.com/imdj/HNRelevant/blob/main/HNRelevant.user...
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Apple and Safari playing catch-up?
That Safari also supports UserScripts and Extensions also somewhat mutes some of Arc's benefits, so it will be interesting to see how/if Arc responds.
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App that would let me remove specific elements of webpage in Safari?
UserScripts (More explanation on Github)
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HN: Thank you for being fast, ad-free and text only
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In Safari, using Userscripts extension: https://github.com/quoid/userscripts#userscripts-safari
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Ask HN: Does anybody use the HN hide button?
You might want to take a look at this Safari Extension for userscripts on iOS.
https://github.com/quoid/userscripts
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Web Clipper for Apple Notes or Obsidian
Try this userscript. In Safari you can install userscripts via free extension
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AdGuard stopped working on iOS
Strict Mode wrapper prevents @require libs from working (1.3.2)
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When using Safari’s “Style sheet” feature, is it possible to add styles only to specific websites?
Something like https://github.com/quoid/userscripts seems like what you want.
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[iPhone][DTNet - Desktop Browser][$0.99>Free]
Ask the developer on GitHub: https://github.com/quoid/userscripts/issues
omnivore
- Show HN: I made a tool to clean and convert any webpage to Markdown
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What is Omnivore and How to Save Articles Using this Tool
Omnivore is a complete, open source read-it-later solution for people who like text.
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MozillaSocial
If only they can add RSS support and newsletter subscriptions backed by Firefox Relay in Pocket, it can actually become a whole lot more useful.
If you need something like this today, try Omnivore[1]. Their RSS support is a bit wonky but very promising.
[1]: https://omnivore.app
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Evernote is not alone.
Use https://omnivore.app/ it's free.
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Instapaper Doubles Subscription Price
I'm quite happy with Omnivore: https://github.com/omnivore-app/omnivore
It's open source, I can host it myself it I want to but the reference hosted version on omnivore.app is free and quite reliable. Dark mode, progressive webapp, native apps, full text search, Obsidian integration, Pocket migration.
Compare that with instapaper: Terrible Android app that looks like Android apps from 2015, okayish iPad/iOS apps, quite expensive now, every interesting feature behind a paywall. I guess if you're into the minimalist aesthetic or if you've grown accustomed to it, sure, keep on using it. But it feels as if this product has been somewhat on extended life support and people would care a lot less if it wasn't run by Marco Arment.
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Grimoire: Open-Source bookmark manager with extra features
I used to use Pocket extensively until I realized it wasn't going anywhere with features. I have since moved to Omnivore [1] and I couldn't be happier.
The devs are also ex-Pocket users and have worked hard to get feature parity and then some. There are mobile apps too for reading on the go (and work offline) which I use extensively when I am on flights. There is a graphql API and webhooks you can use for extending its functionality. Search could be a little better, but I use the labeling system which works well. I also use the logseq integration to keep a persistent log of articles I read on any given day.
[1] https://github.com/omnivore-app/omnivore
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How do you read large parts of a codebase and figure out what you're looking for?
I briefly tried Omnivore and it seems to be have a good system for scraping web articles, especially for downloading them into Obsidian as markdown. I want to isolate that and have my script that that I can feed URLs into and get the contents as markdown files. I tried looking at the repo to see how it works and at this index.js file since the folder is called "puppeteer-parse". I tried reading it line by line multiple times it feels like too much to keep in my head at one, it makes me wonder how SWEs work with large codebases. I wonder if there are tools or ways to make reading large code files faster or easier.
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Omnivore – free, open source, read-it-later App
This looks very nice, but self hosting requires reliance on google cloud.
https://github.com/omnivore-app/omnivore/issues/25
What are some alternatives?
BTTV-for-Safari - Unofficial BTTV/ FFZ Safari Extension for Twitch
Wallabag - wallabag is a self hostable application for saving web pages: Save and classify articles. Read them later. Freely.
uBlock - uBlock Origin - An efficient blocker for Chromium and Firefox. Fast and lean.
zotero - Zotero is a free, easy-to-use tool to help you collect, organize, annotate, cite, and share your research sources.
hush - 🤫 Noiseless Browsing – Content Blocker for Safari
Tiny-Tiny-RSS - A PHP and Ajax feed reader
SponsorBlockSafari - Safari web-extension glue code for SponsorBlock
logseq13-full-house-plugin - Logseq Templates you will really love ❤️ 🏛️
redditweaks - A Safari App Extension to help make Reddit suck just a little less on Safari 13+. Written (mostly) in SwiftUI.
obsidian-omnivore - Obsidian plugin to fetch articles and highlights from Omnivore
NXEnhanced - Adds "quality-of-life" features to NextDNS website for a more practical usability
LDWin - Link Discovery for Windows