Hello 👋,
Je demande #conseil
J'aime les blogs de gens qui parlent à cœur ouvert, genre coup de gueule, intimiste, mood, enfin vous voyez style journal, diary. Et en français.
Vous allez me dire que c'est pas difficile à trouver. Mais pas tant que ça. Les moteurs de recherche me baladent de portail en portail.
Ça m'énerve.
Donc si vous avez un ou des liens à partager, ze suis intéressé.
Un grand merci !!!
Repouet serait apprécié aussi... #blog#blogfr#journal#journalfr#diary#diaryfr
Frage zu LogSeq
Sagt mal, hat hier einer von euch zufällig die Opensource Notiz- und SecondBrain-APP LogSeq (logseq.com/) im Einsatz und kann sagen, ob das für mehr als die "persönliche Einkaufsliste" funktioniert? Es soll ja eine freie Alternative zu Obsidian sein und macht rein von der Webseite einen "fetten" Eindruck.
Ist es damit wirklich sinnvoll möglich, seine Projekte nicht nur zu koordinieren, sondern auch umzusetzen? Ist LogSeq geeignet für textuell umfangreiche Anleitungen, Protokolle, Planungsideen, Faktensammlungen, das ganze ggf. in verschiedenen Versionen?
Ich hab drei, vier Projekte, die in Obsidian jeweils inzwischen einen ewig langen Dateibaum mit oft mehr als 5 Unterebenen und bestimmt einigen 100 Dateien Umfang haben.
Mir kommt bei LogSeq die Handhabung, an jeden Absatz / Gedanken ein TAG zu setzen, etwas unhandlich vor. Auch habe ich die Sorge, wenn da viele TAGS - also Seiten - zusammen kommen, dass das ganze dann schnell unübersichtlich wird.
In Obsidian finde ich ja die Aufteilung des Fensters in viele kleine, parallele Dokumente sehr hilfreich. Das ist so, wie wenn man auf seinem Schreibtisch mehrere Zettel gleichzeitig liegen hat. Da kann man immer mal einen Blick nach links und rechts werfen und mal hier und da neue Ideen / Notizen notieren. Geht sowas mit LogSeq? Ich hab's noch nicht gefunden ...
Hintergrund ist, dass ich bei Obsidian als nicht freie Software immer so das Gefühl des Damoklesschwertes habe, dass da plötzlich ab der nächsten Version der "Hahn" zugedreht wird ...
So my #website has two main sections: #articles & #blog posts. Articles on technical stuff for general audiences, while blog posts are about stuff that happened in my life and are more written to be read by people who know me.
(Also some creative #writing but this isnt about her)
But stuff I want to write doesn't always fit into either category... Sometimes I want to write something weird and whimsical, something about my day, or just a couple sentences about something that's been on my mind. I watch weird films sometimes and it'd be cool to put reviews on my site. Etc
I'm inspired by Ken Perlin's blog (guy who invented Perlin noise). He writes a couple paragraphs pretty much every single day, just about whatever. http://blog.kenperlin.com/
Anyway, I'm just wondering if there's a better way to organize my site. Maybe I should add a third #journal category for random semi-regular posts, or maybe I should put everything in one pile like Ken Perlin, or maybe something else? Idk
Truly humbled to have one of my papers included in the 50th Anniversary Special Collection of the Oxford Review of Education (ORE).
The ORE has published research by some of the most leading scholars in education. To have my work recognised alongside many whose contributions have shaped the field, and my thinking, is a real honour.
I've sat on this news for a while, gobsmacked. It was a lovely way to start the year.
My paper with Claire Noronha that was selected for the Special Collection: 'The myth of free and barrier-free access: India's Right to Education Act - private schooling costs and household experiences.'
How about a comfy little stream this morning? Finished This Woven Kingdom and need to pick a new book! That's 4 books read this year!!! See you at 6am CT on twitch.tv/gnomedic!
Browsing #hashtags is quickly becoming useless. Even important ones for #MastoAdmin like #Fediverse and #Mastodon are filled with toots of random #photos and #art. Some even promoting their #porn or #gamedev#gaming project. Even random #journal or #blog posts FILLED with random irrelevant hashtags. It's quite infuriating...if you know what I mean.🤦♂️😬
🎙️ I'm excited to share our latest episode of the @sharedsecurity podcast! This week, don't miss our discussions on these hot topics:
1️⃣ The most sophisticated iPhone exploit known to date
2️⃣ Google's $5 billion privacy lawsuit settlement over incognito mode tracking
3️⃣ Apple's new iOS app called Journal. What are the privacy concerns, if any?
Start the year informed and entertained! 😁
Let us know in the comments what you think about this latest iPhone exploit and if you plan on using the new Apple Journal app!
Listen now and subscribe on your favorite podcast app at sharedsecurity.net/subscribe.
Been making a habit of reading instead of binge watching shows/movies before sleeping (30 minutes), and journaling what I’m grateful for today. Going back to these journal entries makes me appreciate every day.
I'm still skeptical about interstitial journaling, but I'm going to try it tomorrow.
Basically, you write your entries this way:
[Time stamp]: What I've just done and how I feel about it + what I'm doing next
And you do it throughout the day.
Honestly it feels like a lot of busywork, but I'm curious whether it makes me more focused and less prone to procrastinating.
Will be doing it in my Daily Notes in #Obsidian of course.
“Interstitial journaling” is the practice of making short journal entries between tasks. Sometimes I wonder if this is just a lot of busywork. However, for someone like me, the notes I make could help me get up to speed on my projects the next working day, especially if you deal with multiple projects or tickets at the same time.
What do you think about the practice?
Mit iOS 17.2 hat Apple das Versprechen eingelöst und die «Journal»-App, welche mit iOS 17 vorgestellt wurde, nachgereicht. Jeder, der sein iPhone auf die neuste iOS-Version aktualisiert, hat die App automatisch auf dem Home-Bildschirm. «Journal» ermöglicht es, besondere Erlebnisse und auch alltägliche Momente festzuhalten. Die App unter…
The Cozy Stationery Friends Club discord holiday hangout starts N O W!
Come join us for writing and crafting and coworking! Journal prompts, activity list, and giveaways! If you love stationery or just getting into, this is the place for YOU! <3
The feature article reports a study of the compression of the remanent lunar magnetic field by the solar wind, based on data taken at several Apollo landing sites.