It filter your github news feed, so you can watch the latest news at your favorite projects, without being overwhelmed by too much information. Filter your github news feed and keep the riff-raff at bay.
To best use this site, you need a GitHub account. Don’t have one? We’ve setup a test account for you.
username: agorasaurus password: agoranode2
Although its not strictly necessary to use our application, you will only be able to access the “My Projects” tab by being logged in.
Click the filters to toggle which projects' updates you would like to see, then press ‘Update’ and the projects will be displayed below. Click the project to see a list of commits recently pushed to the project.
Mix and match between trending repositories and the projects that are being watched by your Github account.
express jade sass github nko mongoose express-resource express-expose everyauth scraper
Voting is now closed.

(2)
steadicat
chrismatthieuHas potential. For me personally something like this would be useful since I started watching repos as a kind of bookmark manager but I don’t necessarily need to see updates for everything all the time. | |||
therazorbladeToggled some of my projects but they still showed up in the feed below. I was expecting to get my overall activity feed from the dashboard, not just checkins. The social activity stream is actually the part of github that can really use a filer. | |||
I’d have liked an authorization level that didn’t update my private information on Github. I didn’t want to authorize. | |||
__mario__Looks promising, just needs to be better designed to be useful. | |||
amirmanjiThis feels like something that should be a Github feature, not a standalone product. It only seems to show commit messages, which is kind of limiting. Having the stream update live would be a nice touch. | |||
chrissharkeyDesign was very difficult on the eyes, I didn’t like that I had to click the ‘Update’ button when I changed the filters – it seemed to defeat the purpose of the ‘live’ nature of Node. Doesn’t support contexts. Good idea, but would need some work before I considered using it. | |||
Great choice of problem to tackle. Sadly, the solution is a fail for me. A big wall of textual links that all look the same, with no icons, no dates, and no ranking: that’s the best way to make me feel “overwhelmed by too much information”.