7 comments

  • linuxrebe1 5 hours ago
    I had an issue. A documents folder with over 12k objects in it. A hodgepodge of folders and sub-folders. That over time had created a mess that no amount of file movement was ever going to make it usable. I wanted: 1) To keep my data local 2) be able to filter out PII and other data 3) Be able to find and delete duplicates 4) Get short synopsis of what a document is 5) Semantic and keyword search 6) All of this kept local to me requiring no internet access and no tokens spent to train someone elses AI.

    The result I call DocuBrowser and in it's current form is FOSS (GPL-3) licensed for your personal use. The UI is in your browser. The AI models used are held local and are tiny, Available for Linux(RPM,Deb, and tgz) Windows and Mac. Let me know what you think and thanks for taking the time to try it out.

    • seb1204 2 hours ago
      Sounds similar to https://docs.paperless-ngx.com/

      Key difference I see is that you point it to a folder instead of uploading to a system.

    • bobim 4 hours ago
      Could it be extended so it also extracts pictures from pptx and xlsx and run vision to get a description to be added to the text content before indexing?
      • linuxrebe1 2 hours ago
        Let me look into this
        • clif_mcIrvin 12 minutes ago
          How about jpegs or other scanner images files? We have hundreds of scanned documents that were never pdf wrapped.
    • password4321 33 minutes ago
      Personal use? I need this at work, dragging useful info from tarpits like Teams and GitLab.

      Also need to search git repos including all branches and history (TIL/xkcd#153'd GitLab's web search can basically only do one branch at a time).

  • asciimoo 4 hours ago
    We need projects like this. Automatically classifying the files is smart.

    I'm working on a similar application called Hister (https://github.com/asciimoo/hister). I should borrow some of your ideas. =]

  • drizzler 1 hour ago
    I just installed this and, after a few hiccups, got it up and running on my Ubuntu system. Works great, looks great. Thank you for this. Half of my documents are OpenDocument format. Is there any chance you'll be supporting ODF in the future?
  • jphorism 1 hour ago
    Nice, what are you hoping to accomplish with this project?
  • NKosmatos 3 hours ago
    Looks good, definitely going to try it. Extra thanks for creating something fully local, we need more projects like this one!
  • aucisson_masque 4 hours ago
    I'm a huge fan of recall, going to test this out. This looks very interesting.
  • toomuchtodo 3 hours ago
    How do you feel about supporting an S3 compatible target as a feature request?