![]() ![]() My experience was that the Org-mode in Emacs was great. I used Org for about 8 months last year, while I was testing out Spacemacs and Doom Emacs. What about if I want to represent some idea with a quick spreadsheet? Or a sketchup? It would be fantastic if those were somehow all represented as first class documents in the filesystem, as markdown is inside the current wave of proprietary markdown editors. An idea becomes a lesson plan for a class, which morphs into a handout with tables, admonitions etc. What about if I want to style a real PDF in Asciidoc? It’s really common for a note to evolve into a document. It’s almost like Obsidian et al are highly featureful filesystem browsers, but where the only files one can have are markdown files. I feel like that was a mistake I made already, and don’t want to repeat. I’d like to use a more powerful app like the one promoted here, but I feel desperately uncomfortable tying my notes to a piece of proprietary software. I just want the notes, plus a tool to traverse them that’s got a bit more beef to it than Finder.app. After having used Bear, Notable, and Atom + plugins, I’m realizing I don’t really want an app to manage my notes.
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