@Are0h Do you mean something like #Recfiles or more like dumping records in individual files in some directory?
I'd say the latter is less subject to catastrophic screw-ups when editing manually.
As for largely unstructured flat files, there was a thread that I think explains well-enough why I think they're a horrible idea: https://social.treehouse.systems/@psykose/109967460650885493
#Recfiles are an interesting option for human-readable data formats that remain machine-usable.
Similarly for simply 'write-ing alists or readable structure definitions to files.
Logseq looks pretty good for personal wiki/knowledge management/notes-taking stuff. I like a lot of things about it.
But I’m resisting the usual urge to go all-in once I find something good, to transfer everything from my previous systems to this asap.
Going slow will let me find out what the weak spots of this particular ecosystem are, before I invest too much into it. Then, I can figure what use-cases are best fit for it, and what should remain in other systems.
#logseq #vimwiki #personalwiki #zotero #recfiles
Logseq looks pretty good for personal wiki/knowledge management/notes-taking stuff. I like a lot of things about it.
But I’m resisting the usual urge to go all-in once I find something good, to transfer everything from my previous systems to this asap.
Going slow will let me find out what the weak spots of this particular ecosystem are, letting me figure what the best use-cases for it are, and what should remain in other systems.
#personalwiki #zotero #vimwiki #recfiles #logseq