:sparkles::seedling: Smarter GitHub notifications. Organize and score notifications based on importance and relevance.
Just visit https://meteorite.dev, log in, and let the notifications roll in as they happen!
It's actually pretty simple - we use GitHub's notifications API to get your notifications as they come in, and keep track of relevant heuristics overtime on a per-thread basis, so we know why you're getting a notification and the previous reason's you've gotten it.
Using this information, we're able to give a score of importantce to each thread based on the history of reasons we saw coming in. For example, a pull request that is assigned to you, has your review requested, and has 30 comments on it, will be scored much higher than an issue you opened up and received a single comment of someone saying "nice" on it.
We're also able to hook into desktop notifications to alert you when you get a GitHub notification if you'd want - something like this is totally opt-in.
Some key features include:
We're also able to categorize some types of notifications and put a badge on them to help you quickly identify different kinds of issues. We support:
Meteorite aims to solve the problem where GitHub notifications don't provide enough context, nor have enough smart functionality to help you be as productive as possible.
However, you might be looking for more general tools for managing your notifications. If that's the case, there is an excellent paid tool called Octobox which aims to treat your GitHub notifications more like an email inbox (with some additional features).
I believe these two tools solve different (but related) problems, but at the end of the day you should use whichever tool makes you more productive.
All contributions are welcome, even if its just submitting feedback, giving a suggestion, or reporting a bug. If you're looking to add a feature to Meteorite, make sure you open an issue first (if there's not one open already), and make it known that you're going to be working on it as to avoid multiple people trying to pick up the same issue.
This software is free to use under the MIT License. See this reference for license text and copyright information.