I have not met logseq, tho I am currently reading up on it. There’s apparently a docker container for it as well along with a plethora of plugins to extend it’s functions. I’m down with trying it. I will read some more. Thanks very much for the recommendation.
Comment on Searchable db/Knowledge Management Software
enemenemu@lemm.ee 4 weeks ago
Nice collection.
Have you met logseq? Maybe using multiple files? folders?
irmadlad@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
sxan@midwest.social 4 weeks ago
Try it, it’s good. There’s a mobile app, for Android, at least. It’s free; it only takes a little time investment, so low barrier for entry.
sxan@midwest.social 4 weeks ago
LogSeq is nice.
For this who don’t know, it’s well designed, in that it doesn’t add bloat and obfuscation like a DB would; it keeps everything in a filesystem structure in markdown files. What’s really nice is that this makes it something you can use with a plain editor, or with the application, or with the app on mobile; the app(s) add a lot of convenience functionality to the basic storage design.
It’s a well-thought-out system, and I appreciate how clean it is, and how independent of the application the data is. I haven’t looked at the code base, but I have a lot of respect for the developer must based on the design & architecture decisions.
N0x0n@lemmy.ml 4 weeks ago
LoqSeq looks nice, but I do hate the part that everything is a bulletpoint :/ And that’s their core feature !
That’s not futur proof IMO. If logSeq disappeared, your notes become useless :/. Or maybe I did misunderstood something on how it works?
sxan@midwest.social 4 weeks ago
LogSeq has other note types; it’s just the default is bullets.
LogSeq is about as future proof as you can get. Notes are stored in a directory tree as markdown files.