Show HN: A native Hacker News reader with integrated todo/done tracking
As a daily HN reader, I've always struggled with keeping track of interesting posts I want to read later. Browser tabs pile up, bookmarks get forgotten, and I lose track of what I've already read. I needed a way to:
1. Browse HN efficiently (across all sections - hot, new, show, ask, jobs, best) 2. Quickly mark posts as "todo" for later reading 3. Mark posts as "done" when finished 4. Filter and search effectively
I couldn't find a tool that combined all these features, so I built one. It's been tremendously helpful for my own HN reading workflow, and I thought others might find it useful too.
Features:
- *Integrated todo tracking*: Mark stories as "todo" and "done" to manage your reading progress
- *Search functionality*: Filter stories by keyword in title, domain, or author
- *Multiple sections*: Browse all HN sections (hot, new, show, ask, jobs, best)
- *Threaded comments*: View comments in a Reddit-like threaded format
- *Dark/light mode*: Easy on the eyes in any environment
- *Keyboard shortcuts*: Efficient navigation with keyboard-centric design (1-6 for tabs, Ctrl+F for search)
- *Auto-loading*: Automatically loads more content when scrolling
- *Color-coding*: Stories color-coded by score for easy scanning
- *Native app*: Fast, responsive, and works offline with local caching
Built with Rust and the egui UI framework, with SQLite for local storage. The app scrapes Hacker News HTML directly rather than using the official API to capture the full story context.
Check out the GitHub repo (https://github.com/yourusername/hacker_news_reader) for installation instructions and source code. Built and tested on macOS, Linux, and Windows.
This started as a personal tool to solve my own HN reading habits, but I hope others find it useful too. The code is MIT licensed and I'd love your feedback, feature suggestions, or contributions!
Link is dead
The repo is https://github.com/haojiang99/hacker_news_reader
"The Electric Monk was a labour-saving device, like a dishwasher or a video recorder. Dishwashers washed tedious dishes for you, thus saving you the bother of washing them yourself, video recorders watched tedious television for you, thus saving you the bother of looking at it yourself; Electric Monks believed things for you, thus saving you what was becoming an increasingly onerous task, that of believing all the things the world expected you to believe."
- Douglas Adams.