Tekkadan 🍓 on Nostr: Codium? Like VSCodium? That's where I work for code. I think for long-form articles ...
Codium? Like VSCodium? That's where I work for code.
I think for long-form articles and content, LogSeq doesn't really do anything spectacular, unless you're comfortable sorting segments up into a graph. I understand why overall LogSeq is less popular- because many users are "do'ers" more than "archivers". LogSeq as a package aims to serve do'ers who need to manage their notes in a graph type ecosystem. As well as archive them, or publish them in theory.
So generally Joplin/Obsidian are by far the most popular solutions. VSCodium for devs. And emacs and so on for really efficient devs. I have never gotten into emacs, but I actually do have an interest in trying it some day. I could never really get comfortable with Vim either. There is an insanely fleshed out terminal version of essentially LogSeq. I could dig it up some time. Never used it myself but certainly cool to see.
Published at
2025-01-21 11:19:22Event JSON
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"content": "Codium? Like VSCodium? That's where I work for code.\n\nI think for long-form articles and content, LogSeq doesn't really do anything spectacular, unless you're comfortable sorting segments up into a graph. I understand why overall LogSeq is less popular- because many users are \"do'ers\" more than \"archivers\". LogSeq as a package aims to serve do'ers who need to manage their notes in a graph type ecosystem. As well as archive them, or publish them in theory.\n\nSo generally Joplin/Obsidian are by far the most popular solutions. VSCodium for devs. And emacs and so on for really efficient devs. I have never gotten into emacs, but I actually do have an interest in trying it some day. I could never really get comfortable with Vim either. There is an insanely fleshed out terminal version of essentially LogSeq. I could dig it up some time. Never used it myself but certainly cool to see.",
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