Thank you, glad to help!
Yeah that’s what I was doing before but in a more streamlined way. Wallabag has an integration with KoReader (which I have installed in my Kobo). So I saved articles in my browser or phone and then pulled them from Wallabag directly in the Kobo.
I hope the dev of Omnivore eventually implements this. He is very responsive and fast implementing features
As the others said, the main reason is that it is FOSS. Before Logseq, I was using Standard Notes, which is also FOSS and was enough for my needs then.
Then Logseq appeared at the same time I was learning about graph structured and linked notes as the likes of Tiddlywikis and RoamReasearch
Strange, try these links maybe:
Let me know if any of those are working. You could also search for daily nomie in your preferred search engine. The developer of this maintained version is https://github.com/RdeLange
I use a variety of FOSS tools for both personal and work productivity.
For personal I use:
For work use:
Update 1: Fixed Nomie link Update 2: added waistline and liftosaur since I had forgotten Update 3: added Inkscape
Agreed.
The feature I like the most in Lollypop is the party mode. It lets the user select various music genres from your library and it plays songs that match the selected options
Do you know if this is possible in Onyx line of ereaders ?
I selfhost Vikunja and have some colleagues and family on my instance. It’s a very complete task and project manager, specially useful to create teams and collaborate in tasks (either work or house related). In mobile I use Tasks.org, which syncs with Vikunja over the Caldav provided by Vikunja.
My goal is to lean typescript so I can program a sync add-on between Logseq and Vikunja