One more terminal app for good measure! Been working on this one for awhile now and it's already my main driver for writing anything. It's designed to be a standalone text editor, but you can also set a vault, daily note convention, and inbox to quickly view and create files from specific locations (i.e. Obsidian vault) with simple commands and keybindings plus light syntax highlighting for those who need to interact with code. It's also beautiful, so iA Writer users should feel at home and bonus features like spellcheck, a printable PDF output, and other markdown features you've come to expect like pasting a link over selected text to turn it into a markdown link or wrapping selected text with markup, checking off and reordering lists, and more. It's open source and available to download via brew.
apps
15 postsPosts tagged with apps
sportsball /// terminal app
A terminal dashboard for live sports — Plain Text Sports meets Golazo, as a Bubble Tea TUI.
Been working on this one for a bit, but it's basically ready for primetime now. I took inspiration from Plain Text Sports and the Golazo TUI and built out my own terminal TUI for all sports. You can follow scores live, see past scores, upcoming games, favorite teams, and see standings - all from the terminal. Installable via brew.
Dirty Little Zine /// Free 8-Page Printable Zine Maker
Make a printable 8-page folded zine from a single sheet of paper. Free browser-based editor with photo layout, captions, and 300 DPI JPG/PDF export.
Awesome little tool to help you make single-page zines. More zines please!!! Rick also made a library so folks can share the zines they make with the tool.
YouTube now lets you turn off Shorts
Limit your Shorts scrolling to zero minutes per day.
And to think, I just cancelled my YouTube Premium Family subscription… maybe I should keep it after all…
ByeDoom — Give a Link → Get a Feed
Add any public Instagram profile, YouTube channel or X account to quickly get an RSS feed for your favorite reader.
I feel like I've seen a few of these tools before. I'm always skeptical that following something like Instagram through an RSS feed won't break eventually, but this one does look like one of the more well-polished versions, so I'm not opposed to giving it a try.
This guy recorded 10,000 concerts and now you can stream them
Adam Jacobs, an avid concertgoer and once casual, later committed, concert archivist, began recording the concerts he attended in 1984 to tape. He went on to record over 10,000 concerts
I've seen this floating around for a bit, but you should also make sure you're familiar with the Relisten app. It's on iOS and Android, and it pulls concert recordings from the Internet Archive. I imagine these 10,000 concerts will eventually make their way there, which will be a huge boon on top of the already incredible number of concert tapes on the app.