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Thanks for the reply. I’ve found my own workflow using open source alternatives, but I used to use Obsidian too, a while back. I find myself looking back wistfully at all the things I loved about it, the QoL differences that I can’t justify switching over for.
I use logseq for the most part - I have multiple graphs for each domain I’m interested in. I’ve learned with time the way that I should structure my graphs to make the most sense, the best ways to actually use the stuff that logseq offers and stuff. And it didn’t take that long either, I’ve only done this for the last couple months. It’s open source and passes under enough eyes for me to be comfortable with it.
I miss some things though - Adding in multiple files (like PDFs or images or audio) is still a pain.
The user discussion forum is where my dreams go to die (devs are a bit conservative in considering new features). - The UI looks like it was made by a Soviet survivor of a nuclear armaggedon (Utilitarian to the point of blandness).
A whole bunch of the plugins come out of china (Or atleast chinese sounding usernames) (I hope that’s not racist), I assume because it has a large userbase there; and I don’t really vibe with that.
It has relatively fewer plugins than obsidian does.
That’s pretty much everything I can think about off the top of my head. Sorry for the wall of text.
Thanks for the reply. I’ve found my own workflow using open source alternatives, but I used to use Obsidian too, a while back. I find myself looking back wistfully at all the things I loved about it, the QoL differences that I can’t justify switching over for.
What’s your new work flow? Always interested to see alternatives And if they’re open source could maybe be polished up a bit
I’ve put up a wall of text in this thread to another comment. Let me know if you have suggestions for improvements.
@Tangent5280 What did you end up using?
I use logseq for the most part - I have multiple graphs for each domain I’m interested in. I’ve learned with time the way that I should structure my graphs to make the most sense, the best ways to actually use the stuff that logseq offers and stuff. And it didn’t take that long either, I’ve only done this for the last couple months. It’s open source and passes under enough eyes for me to be comfortable with it.
That’s pretty much everything I can think about off the top of my head. Sorry for the wall of text.
We need to know