A suggestion tho: Maybe add an "About" page or a lil explainer or something. It's not immediately obvious what this is and how it works (at least to me).
I've been on the lookout for a bookmarks manager tool, I'm gonna give this a whirl.
I am not the creator of this project, actually, I was reading something that someone said on hackernews and replied[0] that linkhut fitted perfectly into it and I mentioned how I had tried to raise more awareness about linkhut by creating a previous hackernews submission but there wasn't much discussion.
Then someone said to me that they are sad to see that (it didn't get past /new and that linkhut is a cool project)* so I decided to repost it now.
> I've been on the lookout for a bookmarks manager tool, I'm gonna give this a whirl.
Personally, I really love the tool as a way to show the world genuinely cool things I found more than a bookmark manager, especially with their notes feature.and especially with tags feature, you can have both, to me personally the possibilities definitely feel up to the imagination.
Edit: I have also been thinking now, if you do end up using linkut, then what if you and I/ anybody who wants to join can just share cool articles/submissions that us or others have created on hackernews with the tag of #hackernews and in the bottom have a privatebin discussion on say an instance like notebin.de which can allow us to use it as a commenting engine as well or comment on hackernews submission itself and tell that we came from (referring to linkhut post which we might have come to see a post from!) My point is, you can start sharing the hackernews things you find interesting and I can share mine and community can quickly join on it all :-)
To be fair, that's less "cramming AI for the sake of it" and more "people are going to do funky handrolled things, let's make and maintain one thats native to the ecosystem".
I bet there's plenty of internal FastAPI apps duct-taped together serving that exact purpose.
I was trying to find a certain github page, it was like a forum entirely within github issues, or something like that, people were posting bypasses--solutions to that problem(for the technically-minded). Now I can't find it.
> have in an offline format. I keep offline docs either in pdf or in html format of most of the programming languages and frameworks that I use. I keep the source code of various projects that are essential to me.
This is such a good idea. Thanks. I'm going to start to do the same.
> I keep a local wiki with notes on various things that are useful
I've been using Zim Wiki for years; back then there was nothing better available and now I can't be bothered to migrate formats. Plus I've already contributed a bunch of plugins to Zim :)
Dr. James Giordano: The Brain is the Battlefield of the Future
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N02SK9yd60s
Dr. Robert Duncan (RIP)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bGjvPhBwL8&t=14s
https://nobulart.com/media/the-matrix-deciphered.pdf
https://ia800609.us.archive.org/25/items/robert-duncan-proje...
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https://github.com/autonomous019/ahronov-bohm-cybersecurity
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