It somewhat can
It somewhat can
Thanks for the idea. I definitely have to give this a bit more thought. I’m not sure I want to implement user signups like Piped/LibreTube do it as I would rather keep using the Newpipe app, so I’ll think of other ways of achieving data syncing.
I’m actively working on a web front-end for Newpipe (Tubo) in my spare time. Alhough the core functionality is already there, I have yet a lot of features/nice-to-haves to tackle, as well as many refinements to the UX to make it as close to the Newpipe app as possible.
I’ll share mine: Tubo; it’s mainly a web version of Newpipe with all its supported services.
It does neither atm, it simply serves you the streams as-is. The plan, however, is to eventually proxy all requests so that the services aren’t able to see it was you who made the request but only get the proxy’s IP
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Leaving my project Tubo in case someone finds it useful. Support for it just got merged on Libredirect
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vi
support is built into the browser, you only need to enable vi-mode
in your default-modes
. There is no concept of tree tabs, you manipulate tabs as “buffers” that you can switch to via fuzzy search, which IMO is far more efficient. You can take a look at one of the core maintainers’ config. Alternatively, I’ve recently added a Guix home service and feature into rde for those that want a more batteries-included config, which you can check how I use in my dotfiles
More people should be aware of Nyxt as I believe it’s one of the greatest efforts towards a customizable browser out there. It aims at being renderer-agnostic, but it currently only supports Webkit and there are plans to support Blink via Electron. I built some extensions for it in Common Lisp and I can say the ecosystem is much more fun and open than standard browsers.
Yeah my bad, I should rephrase it to “true control over the note-taking experience”. With Emacs, you don’t need Internet connection or a web browser (or a sandboxed wrapper) to access your notes, plus you can take notes in the same environment you write code/emails/read books, which means you can share all your settings.
I remember this being marketed as the Emacs Org mode + Org Roam combo for the masses, which is totally fine. However, if you want true control over your data and you’re willing to step out of your comfort zone, consider using Emacs + Syncthing
432432$@$#@23
Looks good! You might want to join forces with https://github.com/LunaticHacker/lemmy-terminal-viewer