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Open Source does not win by being cheaper
(github.com)
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Love it. Trust is also why I'm using Logseq for note taking and "Building a Second Brain". I'm putting lots of sensitive personal and work information into it, so having plain text files stored locally in a standardized format is critical. My data is completely safe and future-proof.
Ironically, the lack of vendor lock-in is likely going to lead to me sticking with Logseq for a very long time.
I also pay/donate $5/mo to get access to their fully-encrypted cloud sync (and to support the project). I really like the idea of nobody having access to the content of my notes, as would be the case if I used Google Drive or OneDrive to sync plaintext files.
As the article says, in cases where trust is important, open source has a significant advantage.
I moved recently to logseq on the same premise.
However I found that logseq markdown is a kind of a vendor lock in. To be honest I have also tried joplin and obsidian as well.
While obsidian failed because NoT FOsS duh, joplin was disregarded (at first) because it uses a database and not plain text files.
I was migrating from tiddlywiki. First to joplin, then to obsidian and then to logseq.
And although the latter are using all markdown format as their base, they all have their small catches where they differentiate. Sure you do not loose access to bulk of your data. But what would have been the difference to be vendor locked in in years and extract the data from a sql database?
To be fair, it's much easier to write some sed commands in a bash script that will convert between markdown formats, than something that will migrate databases.
Fair point. (Y)