There's also a small wrapper for the GitHub CLI. I should call this a "survival kit for corporate life". But since I'm not that creative, "emacs-utils" it is:
https://git.sr.ht/~sebasmonia/emacs-utils
Story below:
I've had versions of a piece of code to pull info from JIRA, in private repos associated with different jobs, for years now.
When I started my current gig I realized I should put that code in a public place, and maybe someone would write a "proper" JIRA package out of it. If anything, this lets you read details and comments (doesn't do inline images nor attachments). I find it useful in its current state and maybe some of you will too.
And last weekend I wrote a Confluence reader. After being BEYOND ANNOYED that you can't read pages without JS.I remember the old (and good) versions of Confluence that didn't force the fancy editor down your throat and you could write everything in wiki markup...anyway.
The reader detects when a link isn't external, so it doesn't send you to EWW. It doesn't work in 100% of the cases, will probably revisit that code.
Oh and both JIRA and Confluence support Emacs' bookmarks, thank to EWW's implementation and our beloved editor being open in the truest sense of the word.
https://git.sr.ht/~sebasmonia/dotfiles/tree/master/item/.emacs/init.el#L116
In my case I use OS-level notifications. For my work computer (Windows) I changed the function to
w32-notification-notify
instead.