Show HN: Desklamp – convenient and collaborative notemaking on PDFs
99 points| pj747 | 3 years ago |desklamp.io | reply
To make reading more engaging and to make sure we could remember what we read, we built a note-making system integrated with a PDF reader. The aim is to encourage you to make notes! LaTeX support, clipping out sections from the document, linking notes to sections in the PDF - everything is designed to really make sure you have no excuse to not make notes as you read.
We've also added a lot of fixes for minor inconveniences (scrolling across sections, hitting the wrong page number, light mode, viewing your highlights at a glance). And all of this is collaborative, because that just makes notes even more useful.
It's free for a while - we want to know what the rest of you think! Feedback can only help us make this even better. It's available as a web-app and a desktop app for Mac and Windows (Linux users, mail us, we're operating on a very closed beta right now).
[+] [-] vasvir|3 years ago|reply
Apparently the whole annotation thing is a W3C standard https://web.hypothes.is/blog/annotation-is-now-a-web-standar... but you know how these things go...
[+] [-] anigbrowl|3 years ago|reply
It's free for a while
I'd rather you set up free and paid tiers now, in which case I could make pricing decisions (because I do pay for things I like). I don't like the idea of getting used to something and then becoming a price taker because I have a lot of data stored already, so I would prefer to do without.
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
The plan is that anything you do right now you’ll ALWAYS have access to, and at some point (not before December 2022) we begin charging a subscription to begin saving data to new documents. New users post that deadline will have a threshold of documents that they can use the product on for free.
If free and paid tiers are what you absolutely need, please drop me a mail! Would hate to have an early user disappear because we’re still figuring out exact pricing strategies.
[+] [-] muti|3 years ago|reply
So I hit the `open in browser` button, but left as soon as I was prompted to create an account.
[+] [-] vsroy|3 years ago|reply
The thesis was to make annotated textbooks, so if 100 people read a book then the 101th person could benefit from the knowledge of the previous 100 people.
I hope you guys consider the multiplayer aspect of note-taking!
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] killjoywashere|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dimal|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] lf-non|3 years ago|reply
It has pretty much replaced other note taking tools for me, but I know of people who use it in conjunction with Obsidian/Zettlr/Zotero.
[1] https://logseq.com/
[+] [-] dotancohen|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Brajeshwar|3 years ago|reply
Here are my exciting observations.
- I see you guys have been working on it for over a year, which shows perseverance.
- Most co-founders have professional LinkedIn Professionals -- very un-student but rather business-like.
- You already have one of the co-founders nurtured by Antler.
I feel you are thinking of exiting to one of the big EdTechs in India or becoming one. Best of luck to all of you.
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] thelamest|3 years ago|reply
Some quick, very minor UI comments: on a large screen, workspace switching could be available immediately through single-click icons instead of a dropdown menu. Similarly, minimizing open stickers could be done with a dedicated icon instead of through the “…” menu (right-click suggested in an example in the quick start guide didn’t work for me). Otherwise everything feels pretty intuitive.
One thing I’d want to learn from the introductory guides is if adding the metadata (comments, notes, highlights, etc.) changes the original PDF file (always, optionally, never?), so that for example you’d be able to send an annotated document right away, or need to keep backups of unmodified originals, etc. (I strongly assume the metadata is stored separately, as PDFs can be unwieldy to modify, but you never know.) In general, exporting/printing notes seems like a natural feature. I like that it’s easy to export clips.
As a casual right now, I don’t have any input regarding the possible business model, but will certainly be interested in where you go with it.
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
Your assumption about the metadata is correct! The original file is not tampered with. If you want to share a file with your highlights and annotations, there’s an export button in the hamburger menu on the top left (this UX is really bad, gonna fix this soon). Yeah should rework the guide too.
We have added an export notes as well but it’s in beta because it behaves a little weirdly with the LaTeX. Probably a good idea to export the entire notebook as a LaTeX file.
[+] [-] zeagle|3 years ago|reply
I am not sure if it is something specific to comp sci/engineering but most of the note taking apps have a similar focus on taking source material, pretty figures and equations, and then annotating it. Maybe it is undergraduate level nitpicking where every minutiae might be tested. This mirrors old paper-based annotating and highlighting a textbook, but not note taking which aims to summarize. I think the right panel partly addresses this which is great.
I switched to digital note taking towards the end of my first degree so maybe I’m a fossil, but my then digital approach on the life sciences/medicine side has always been the opposite: take screenshots of the important content, paste them into a note taking app (e.g. onenote), and annotate or re-organize that. That cuts down the amount of notes to sift through and then review by at least an order of magnitude, if only thorugh eliminating duplication and whitespace. Years out I still do this for my CME and during meetings.
[+] [-] pkd|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] lamfm95|3 years ago|reply
Lots of folks and I at my ML team found it hard to use these kinds of tooling without compromising the intranet. We have to have a permit to bring our laptop inside, otherwise stick to a proxy server.
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pbhjpbhj|3 years ago|reply
Any chance this does that, or any other suggestions?
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] wdpt|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kobiguru|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] FastMonkey|3 years ago|reply
My one question though would be how are the notes stored? Is it possible to download them as latex or a markdown file or something? If I have to keep up a membership to return to them that would be unfortunate.
Cool project though, there's definitely a need for something more fluidly interactive in the university notetaking space. Best of luck!
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] loudouncodes|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Brajeshwar|3 years ago|reply
Once you learn to listen to them, a whole new world opens up.
About the payment/price; you are lowering the cost of your time way below what you should priced yourself at. Instead of me doing, maintaining, if I can buy time with a subscription the price of a coffee, I'd always go for that and free up my time just to laze around or read something or sleep under a tree. Just imagine that, not worrying if the server I self-hosted on a German ISP will go down because I paid off $9.99 a month. ;-)
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kretaceous|3 years ago|reply
All those long hours in the library paid off =)
Go IITM!
[+] [-] pj747|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] flakiness|3 years ago|reply
[1] https://store.desklamp.io/
[+] [-] Brajeshwar|3 years ago|reply
JEE[1] is an engineering entrance assessment conducted for admission to various engineering colleges in India.
For students who want to study the general stream of physics, Chemistry, and Biology would go through the NEET[2]. This is for the Medical Colleges in India.
For everything else -- colleges, undergraduate, graduate, and other courses after 12th, students will go through the CUET[3]. This is the latest introduction to circumventing colleges and universities doing the test on their own.
I should add why these tests are crucial to students and parents alike in India. These decide the fate of most students and their careers.
I have a friend who collected and organized the questions for just JEE, and that's it. He charges a very minimal fee, and he is a Crore-ian (roughly $1M = ₹8 Crore) and leads a happy lifestyle. I'm no longer in regular touch with him and have no idea if he grew big or moved on or is sipping Mai Tai in Tahiti.
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_Entrance_Examination
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Eligibility_cum_Entra...
3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_University_Entrance_Tes...
[+] [-] ale42|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] derekzhouzhen|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|3 years ago|reply
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