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Show HN: Opening lines of famous literary works

This came from an idea that had been knocking around in my head for several years. I had been collecting opening lines of famous works and thought it would be cool to see one everyday as I opened the browser. I tried different styles but landed on the simple background with the text, let the words speak for themselves. Over time i've added more quotes I believe now there are close to 60, so hopefully you can refresh a few times and get a fresh one every time. I hope you guys like it, enjoy!

Show HN: Opening lines of famous literary works

This came from an idea that had been knocking around in my head for several years. I had been collecting opening lines of famous works and thought it would be cool to see one everyday as I opened the browser. I tried different styles but landed on the simple background with the text, let the words speak for themselves. Over time i've added more quotes I believe now there are close to 60, so hopefully you can refresh a few times and get a fresh one every time. I hope you guys like it, enjoy!

Show HN: Juggler – an open-source GUI coding agent, by the creator of JUCE

Hello HN, I don't post on here much, but wanted to get some eyes on a new project I'm just launching. I think we definitely need one more AI code agent..<p>I'm a long-term C++ dev, and over 30+ years I've created some successful audio dev tools (JUCE, the Tracktion DAW, the Cmajor DSP language). All of these came from me getting annoyed with something I had to use, and deciding to have a go at my own take on whatever it was.<p>So Juggler is my attempt at an AI code agent, after spending too many hours loving what the models could do, but hating the CLI experience, and having some opinions of what a better UX might be for this stuff.<p>Lots more blurb on the website and github, but a quick tech dump which might grab your attention if you're into these things:<p>A session is a document, not a log file. Each conversation is a Yjs CRDT tree. It can branch into sub-threads (recursively), and you can drill down, backtrack, edit, undo/redo, and inspect everything: tool calls, approvals, and the raw context JSON going to the model, etc. The UI is based around Finder-style Miller columns rather than a big doom-scroll, and is quick to navigate.<p>Because it's a CRDT behind a local web server, multiple clients can attach P2P to a live session: the native desktop app, a browser tab, or your phone. Run the headless server on the box where the code lives, view it from wherever.<p>Almost everything is a JavaScript plugin: every item in the context (read/write/bash/etc.), the LLM loop strategies, slash commands, and their UIs. You can inspect, fork, or replace any of them. I don't do much agent customisation myself, but lots of people do, and I'd love to see what they think of with this plugin API.<p>Go backend, Wails for windowing (no Electron), plain type-checked JS (strict JSDoc), Yjs for the documents. Usual BYOK provider support: Claude (CLI or API), OpenAI/Codex, Gemini, Ollama, OpenRouter, DeepSeek, etc.<p>The app's AGPLv3; the extension SDK and bundled extensions are Apache-2.0, so extensions have no copyleft strings attached. No signup, no telemetry, trying to make it frictionless for people to try it out..<p>It's very much a beta, and is a one-man side project. It hasn't yet had a proper kicking from the real world, but I'm confident some people with similar preferences to my own will like it!<p><a href="https://juggler.studio" rel="nofollow">https://juggler.studio</a>

Show HN: Juggler – an open-source GUI coding agent, by the creator of JUCE

Hello HN, I don't post on here much, but wanted to get some eyes on a new project I'm just launching. I think we definitely need one more AI code agent..<p>I'm a long-term C++ dev, and over 30+ years I've created some successful audio dev tools (JUCE, the Tracktion DAW, the Cmajor DSP language). All of these came from me getting annoyed with something I had to use, and deciding to have a go at my own take on whatever it was.<p>So Juggler is my attempt at an AI code agent, after spending too many hours loving what the models could do, but hating the CLI experience, and having some opinions of what a better UX might be for this stuff.<p>Lots more blurb on the website and github, but a quick tech dump which might grab your attention if you're into these things:<p>A session is a document, not a log file. Each conversation is a Yjs CRDT tree. It can branch into sub-threads (recursively), and you can drill down, backtrack, edit, undo/redo, and inspect everything: tool calls, approvals, and the raw context JSON going to the model, etc. The UI is based around Finder-style Miller columns rather than a big doom-scroll, and is quick to navigate.<p>Because it's a CRDT behind a local web server, multiple clients can attach P2P to a live session: the native desktop app, a browser tab, or your phone. Run the headless server on the box where the code lives, view it from wherever.<p>Almost everything is a JavaScript plugin: every item in the context (read/write/bash/etc.), the LLM loop strategies, slash commands, and their UIs. You can inspect, fork, or replace any of them. I don't do much agent customisation myself, but lots of people do, and I'd love to see what they think of with this plugin API.<p>Go backend, Wails for windowing (no Electron), plain type-checked JS (strict JSDoc), Yjs for the documents. Usual BYOK provider support: Claude (CLI or API), OpenAI/Codex, Gemini, Ollama, OpenRouter, DeepSeek, etc.<p>The app's AGPLv3; the extension SDK and bundled extensions are Apache-2.0, so extensions have no copyleft strings attached. No signup, no telemetry, trying to make it frictionless for people to try it out..<p>It's very much a beta, and is a one-man side project. It hasn't yet had a proper kicking from the real world, but I'm confident some people with similar preferences to my own will like it!<p><a href="https://juggler.studio" rel="nofollow">https://juggler.studio</a>

Show HN: BillAI Bass, an AI-Powered Big Mouth Billy Bass Using Strands Agents

Show HN: YouTube Guitar Tab Parser

I created a simple CLI that turns a YouTube guitar-lesson video into a PDF of the guitar tab.<p>There are services that transcribe music from Youtube videos into tabs, but they never work well enough for me. Instead I'm taking a simpler approach. It downloads the video, samples frames, uses Claude vision to locate the tab region, crops every frame to that region, de-duplicates the crops by the bar number printed on each line of the score, and stitches the distinct tab lines vertically into a PDF.<p>I didn't test it on a lot of different Youtube videos yet, so problem will arise for sure.

Show HN: YouTube Guitar Tab Parser

I created a simple CLI that turns a YouTube guitar-lesson video into a PDF of the guitar tab.<p>There are services that transcribe music from Youtube videos into tabs, but they never work well enough for me. Instead I'm taking a simpler approach. It downloads the video, samples frames, uses Claude vision to locate the tab region, crops every frame to that region, de-duplicates the crops by the bar number printed on each line of the score, and stitches the distinct tab lines vertically into a PDF.<p>I didn't test it on a lot of different Youtube videos yet, so problem will arise for sure.

Show HN: Nobie – an Excel-compatible runtime for agents and humans

Show HN: Nobie – an Excel-compatible runtime for agents and humans

Show HN: DOM-docx – HTML to native, editable Word docs (MIT)

Show HN: DOM-docx – HTML to native, editable Word docs (MIT)

Show HN: DOM-docx – HTML to native, editable Word docs (MIT)

Show HN: Clawk – Give coding agents a disposable Linux VM, not your laptop

Show HN: Clawk – Give coding agents a disposable Linux VM, not your laptop

Show HN: Clawk – Give coding agents a disposable Linux VM, not your laptop

Show HN: Super Dario

Show HN: Earth Game – An offline CLI for turning life goals into quests

Show HN: Reame – a CPU inference server that gets faster as it runs

Show HN: Shirei, cross-platform GUI framework in native Go

Show HN: Shirei, cross-platform GUI framework in native Go

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