


A birb in engineering. Everything is a lisp if you try hard enough.
The opinions are my own and do not represent the such of my employer.

I’m sure there are some #pkm people in here that use a digital #zettelkasten. How do you solve "where to file a note" problem? Let me elaborate.
I’m sure there are some #pkm people in here that use a digital #zettelkasten. How do you solve "where to file a note" problem? Let me elaborate.
I don’t use any IDs because it seemed that it's a paper process problem. At the same time, when I wrap up a note, I don’t immediately know which ones to link it to to add it to the graph. The paper approach solves this by filing it under the closest relevant ID.
If I don’t link the note immediately it's effectively lost forever, because it's outside of the graph, it most probably has some random title (titles are hard!) and it is in a folder with 400 other notes.
Maybe I should keep such notes as Fleeting until I can link them into the permanent graph? For me it created a problem of notes being fleeting for too long because there's no place to anchor then either.
I suppose that IDs solve this problem because you can always apply at least the "soft" structure of ID top
@twistypencil I've a mix of windows, mac and iphone. Git is regularly screwed up on the windows box.

@joseamastodon @twistypencil @logseq I’m aware of syncthing. That said, I moved back to obsidian a while ago and had a total of zero sync issues since :-)
I do miss the outliner.

@twistypencil I've a mix of windows, mac and iphone. Git is regularly screwed up on the windows box.
@twistypencil @logseq I've a mix of windows, mac and iphone. Git is regularly screwed up on the windows box.

I think I'm (sadly) done with . It corrupted some data again and when I went to pull the stuff from git I figured it corrupted the .git/config even earlier than that. So now I have to pull the
I think I'm (sadly) done with @logseq. It corrupted some data again and when I went to pull the stuff from git I figured it corrupted the .git/config even earlier than that. So now I have to pull the correct content from an old windows backup, ffs. What if I didn't have a full disk backup?
I like the idea of block references, I love the query engine and the simple UI. But data safety comes first, really. Logseq is a forever beta at this point.
I really like the concepts behind the logseq db version but @obsidian doesn't fuck with my data and you can see good iterative progress of its development. Yeah, it's not opensource. It's open data format, though, something logseq db will have to figure out eventually anyway.