#logsec — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #logsec, aggregated by home.social.
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Last évolutions techperso :
1️⃣ #localfirst :
Avec #obsidian, j’ai bâti une documentation CRM + un reporting autoethnographique. J’y croise activité prescrite, réelle, empêchée.#logsec = bullshit tracker sur tablette. Sur smartphone : traque des traces numériques IRL, en mobilité.
2️⃣ #sync :
Ma veille ? Un canal #ReadLater sur #Kchat de @infomaniak_network.
Parfait pour dispatcher entre Zotero et Europress, depuis le canapé ou le desktop.
C’est #Euria qui m’a filé le tuyau 🙂 -
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11 Best Open Source Note-Taking Apps for Linux (and many are Cross-Platform)
I make daily use of a note-taking app to record what I learn when problem-solving, prepare for YouTube videos, and much more. I save everything in Markdown format so that it is future-proof and stays compatible with whatever I’ll be using in 20 years time.
...continues
See https://gadgeteer.co.za/11-best-open-source-note-taking-apps-for-linux-and-many-are-cross-platform/
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I make daily use of a note-taking app to record what I learn when problem-solving, prepare for YouTube videos, and much more. I save everything in Markdown format so that it is future-proof and stays compatible with whatever I'll be using in 20 years time.
I had originally got started with Evernote but exported everything to QOwnNotes later on. After that I started using Obsidian (powerful, free but not open source), and I'm thinking of making a change again back to something open source. Although I've also tried Joplin and Standard Notes, I never fully migrated to them. The beauty of an open standard like Markdown is that you can switch apps and just continue using all your notes from 10+ years ago.
The only issues you may experience are that some "features" like say generated tables of contents, Kanban, to-do's, highlighting, etc are not standardised in Markdown, so you can lose these when changing apps. But generally, headings, bold, italics, indenting, links, images, tables, etc are all fine. So, if you stick to one editor then go wild with the extra plugins, but if you want to retain compatibility across editors then you may want to think about what plugins you make use of.
Although not listed in the linked article, I see that open source and cross-platform (including mobile) Logseq has vastly improved, and I may want to give that a spin. Its feature is "everything is a referenceable block" with a block being a paragraph of text, and it calls notes pages. Only thing is it seems to mark the start of every block with a dot (and this shows in other editors) so hopefully I can disable that being inserted into the saved text. Its philosophy also centres around a daily journal where you just write your notes and can flag to-dos or link/search for anything. It also has whiteboards and graph views of linked notes (just like Obsidian).
Very interestingly, I noted that both Logseq and also Obsidian, have various Chat-GPT plugins to help generate content or even to rewrite your rough drafts. So yes, AI has already invaded open-source text editors!
See 11 Best Note-Taking Apps for Linux Desktop
#technology #notes #opensource #Logsec #LinuxA note-taking app allows you to record notes on the go, whether you are in class or studying, reading somewhere, at work, or in a meeting.
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11 Best Open Source Note-Taking Apps for Linux (and many are Cross-Platform)
https://gadgeteer.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Joplin-Note-Taking-App-400x244.jpg I make daily use of a note-taking app to record what I learn when problem-solving, prepare for YouTube videos, and much more. I save everything in Markdown format so that it is future-proof and stays […]
https://gadgeteer.co.za/11-best-open-source-note-taking-apps-for-linux-and-many-are-cross-platform/
https://squeet.me/display/962c3e10-21ece470-61c6aff7c5f623e5
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@kubikpixel that is a tough question. I have used all three. Jrnl is great in the terminal. I used #neovim for the editor. But if you are looking for something to be able to collect and farm your notes, something more like a zettel, it is not the best at that. #obsidian and #logsec both are very good. You also “own” all your writing and can easily get to it through the terminal or other programs. It is not locked in to a system. Right now I am using #logseq the most. It works better for me to capture thoughts and link them. #obsidian has lots of pluses too and is more comfortable for mid-length writing. For long form, I too use #ulysses.
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"Knowledge gardening" - Hinweis auf #bibfobi auf einen Artikel, in dem jemand seine Erfahrung mit einem Open Source-Tool beschreibt und welche Erfahrungen er bei der Organisation des #Wissens gemacht hat. #wissensmanagement #tools #logsec https://bibfobi.wordpress.com/2023/01/26/knowledge-gardening/
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@post @bitbonk The thing is, if you just use the journal pages and leave the other pages as empty "tags" (as it seems to be intended by design), the graph won't show any connections between those "tags", because the block-level links (references) aren't displayed.
So if I use #Logsec as intended the graph will be useless.
For it to show a proper network of concepts, all blocks should be in the pages, which would become containers and not only empty "tags".
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"Knowledge gardening" - Hinweis auf #bibfobi auf einen Artikel, in dem jemand seine Erfahrung mit einem Open Source-Tool beschreibt und welche Erfahrungen er bei der Organisation des #Wissens gemacht hat. #wissensmanagement #tools #logsec https://bibfobi.wordpress.com/2023/01/26/knowledge-gardening/
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"Knowledge gardening" - Hinweis auf #bibfobi auf einen Artikel, in dem jemand seine Erfahrung mit einem Open Source-Tool beschreibt und welche Erfahrungen er bei der Organisation des #Wissens gemacht hat. #wissensmanagement #tools #logsec https://bibfobi.wordpress.com/2023/01/26/knowledge-gardening/