Recovering interrupter with occasional relapses, lover of spreadsheets, blogger, programmer, adept debugger, conjurer of analogies, and probably other things.
I've heard good things about Obsidian. My understanding is that it's not OSS, but has a free version and stores files on your file system, so you don't have a vendor lock-in problem.
Yeah, it's not OSS sadly. I use the free version and Syncthing for multiple devices. I'm looking into those others though, I've never heard of logseq and the others look interesting too. I'd greatly prefer using one that is open source!
Posts about Dendron / Docs as Code / DevOps / Linux / AWS / PowerShell / Python / Automating All The Things. Opinions expressed are my own, not those of my employer.
If looking at an OSS alternative to Obsidian, Dendron is a good one to take a look at (also is local-first markdown files). I use Dendron on the Desktop, and the Obsidian mobile app if taking Dendron notes on my phone.
I've heard good things about Obsidian. My understanding is that it's not OSS, but has a free version and stores files on your file system, so you don't have a vendor lock-in problem.
Yeah, it's not OSS sadly. I use the free version and Syncthing for multiple devices. I'm looking into those others though, I've never heard of logseq and the others look interesting too. I'd greatly prefer using one that is open source!
If looking at an OSS alternative to Obsidian, Dendron is a good one to take a look at (also is local-first markdown files). I use Dendron on the Desktop, and the Obsidian mobile app if taking Dendron notes on my phone.
Dendron docs have a high-level comparison: Dendron vs. Obsidian