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232
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Felt compelled against my will to sing this out loud.

  • I currently use primarily Logseq with a little Obsidian because it’s just a really pleasant text editor and Zettlr for long form writing and research. The nice think about keeping it all Makrdown is that I can use any of them depending on what features/UI I need.

    Logseq does have the web editor but it’s more of a demo (it’s literally called demo.logseq.com) but it gives you the full vanilla feature set as long as you connect a local directory. I use Logseq Sync just because I was paying to support the team anyway, and it’s worked very well so far. Just ran into an issue where my laptop with most of my notes broke and so I made a portable version of the app to put on a USB and work on a library computer and it ran and connected to my Logseq Sync remote graph surprisingly seamlessly.

  • I edit college essays and some academic papers for L2 English speakers. Decent pay, could be higher but I work through a small company that handles all of the client-side stuff so I just get papers in my inbox to edit every so often without needing to wrangle anyone. Slow now since its summer, and sometimes you end up doing way too much work or have people who want content rather than grammar editing (sorry I don't know any actual physics, just how to make English write good) but overall its been really helpful as a little side income.

  • The reverse-hustle! Love it, great way to get to the same end goal all while being good to yourself and the planet.

  • In case anyone is wondering the Chinese says “it is forbidden to feed the fish with your own food”

  • IT IS SEEN. WITNESS HIM.

  • They’re some really good beans from a small farm on Alishan (Taiwan), a mountain which is generally known for tea but the coffee is amazing

  • you put in 100% more effort than everyone who didn’t post a meme at all, so congratulations

  • I feel this way unironically because i just got some really nice coffee and am now excited to make my nice coffee each morning

  • I like this mental image of a scientist meticulously combing the grass with a magnifying class for an already dead ant

  • We’ll now since they’re retiring it as the default font in favor of Aptos we can check for forgeries starting in 2023, brb have some documents to… amend.

  • Love Logseq for a lot of reasons, but their PDF annotator is really a gamechanger. I can open a PDF, mark it up, copy the highlighted reference to my notes, and then when I review my notes just by clicking the copied reference I can jump to that section of the PDF. Awesome.

  • Both are pretty versatile and make use of local markdown files. Logseq is more ouliner/bulleted note focused, while Obsidian is paragraph first (but with plugins for either you can really modify this quite a bit). Another difference is Obsidian organizes things into folders, while Logseq's organization is flatter and more reliant on tags and hyperlinks to connect things (although you can nest pages, for instance having pages like this: pets, pets/cats, pets/dogs). Obsidian is more stable with a larger plugin ecosystem, but Logseq is being very rapidly developed and the dev team is super responsive.

    Finally, Logseq is open source, while Obsidian is not. Their monetization models are pretty similar too, with the free version of both being really generous and limited features like Logseq/Obsidian-native Sync being available for a $5 monthly subscription. I regularly use both and encourage you to check them both out and explore what works for you.

  • The the Wikipedia article on personal knowledge management is a little dense, but basically it's a way to keep track of everything you learn or consume and link them together to develop new ideas or insights. Sometimes people will call it a second or digital brain. There's a lot of different ways to do it, and recently there's been a lot of software like Logseq, Obsidian, and Notion, that facilitates linking everything together and keeping it organized using [[hyperlinks]] and #tags among other things.

  • As a phenomenon you'll see a lot of people call it "enshittification." The term seems to originate with Cory Doctorow who writes, "Here is how platforms die: first, they are good to their users; then they abuse their users to make things better for their business customers; finally, they abuse those business customers to claw back all the value for themselves. Then, they die."

    The whole article on his blog is worth a read here: https://pluralistic.net/2023/01/21/potemkin-ai/#hey-guys. His Mastodon handle is @pluralistic if you'd like to follow his work there (woohoo federation!).