[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

I just got this game and I'm having a blast, this is the style of game I've been hungry for for a long time.

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

I agree, but it should still be retired regardless of intended usage - history matters; we don't have to mistakenly other people to show off cool screenshots

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 7 points 1 year ago

i'd settle for more sidewalks in my town

on some streets they just paint a line down the road and call it a sidewalk - one of these is on a road touching an elementary school

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 10 points 1 year ago

Office is weird about it because of their OneDrive product

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

it crashed the first time I tried to reply to this post

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago

"The Lemmy Overseer" as I understand it is a backend service that gives us an API to use.

There is an open-source script for interacting with it. However, it does not tell you how that backend service works, exactly. It's a black box with well defined interfaces, best case, as I understand it.

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 11 points 1 year ago

Important question; author kind of answers here:

https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/comment/204729

If I were to rely on this for my instance, I would require that it be completely transparent and open source. It doesn't look like this is; you have to trust that it is making good selections, and give it power over your federation status. It's a dangerous tool, IMO, but I can understand why it would have appeal right now.

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

I still know permabulls that at least say they are buying with every paycheque. I doubt there are enough dollars doing that to keep the price afloat, if I were a whale I'd probably be selling, personally.

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I've been taking a lot of notes for ~16 years. When you write too many, they become write-only. It's too difficult to sift through them to find nuggets you can synthesize into something else. I've tried structuring my notes after writing them, but this becomes remarkably time consuming and difficult to do unless you are extremely diligent about how frequently you do it.

You've got to structure your notes as you write them, and LogSeq makes this easy.

I still take a lot of notes via "Note to self" in a messaging app; I don't use the LogSeq mobile app because of some opinions I have around syncing (if you pay, you can sync, but I want full ownership of my notes and to trust that they are private). However it's just a copy-and-paste for me, because I've got my hashtag structure figured out mostly.

I have a few tips for new users:

Use hashtags - but not indiscriminately.

It might take you some time to find the "themes" of your notes, before you've really wrapped your head around it you might just pepper hashtags everywhere. Eventually it becomes pretty clear. Use them diligently and later when you get fancy with search and queries you'll be glad you did.

Don't write massive blocks.

Separate larger thoughts in the outliner - sub-thoughts, parallel thoughts. Make child blocks. Remember that child blocks inherent the tags of their parent blocks, so don't repeat tags in child blocks or the search results will get messy. When you come to a conclusion, hide your evidence and reasoning under your conclusion for future reference.

Finally,

Journal!

I am very glad I've been journalling for so long. I wish I had done it more. Every now and then I go back to old journal entries and revisit the me of the past, and the problems I had. I can reflect on them, add amendments, and essentially have a conversation with myself through time. It is remarkably valuable.

My opinion on obsidian

I've used obsidian a bit. It is much more polished and so are the plugins. However, the long-form structure it promotes loses out on the second piece of advice I wrote above: don't write massive blocks. In my opinion, it is much easier to synthesize something later with your notes when you have structured them in an outlier format that is backed by a true graph structure with searchable parent/child relationships. It's more like how your brain works, and if you're using this as a second brain that's important.

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

i getcha, but it was people who did that. it's kind of hard to shut us up, we'll answer more questions wherever we are

most knowledge has a shelf life anyway

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago

right! it's the people, not the product

i think someone forgot that

[-] isosphere@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago

To yes-and this: procedural content in general. No Man's Sky is a snore-fest for me, big, empty, meaningless. Missions in Elite Dangerous and X4 are similarly pretty boring, though the former is more fun the first time around. There has to feel like there's some world-affecting point to what you're doing. IMO

view more: next ›

isosphere

joined 1 year ago