Found this video interesting and wonder if there are any alternatives within Linux systems

  • whaleross@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Watched the first video. Interesting.

    Reminds me of when I realized some twenty years ago that hierarchical filesystems are just a convention and I was daydreaming about a dynamic database-like filesystem where files are stored with meta data in tags that could be addressed according to whatever your chain of association may be. I even conceptual a bridge of how common OS like Windows or Linux could connect and interface such a file system using the familiar system of slashes transparently for the user with all the benefits and none of additional complicated learning. Of course this was way beyond any technical scope of mine and I didn’t bring it to attention beyond nerdy beer conversation.

    Maybe I was on to something.

    • Guenther_Amanita 🍄@slrpnk.net
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      1 month ago

      If you’re a fan of that principle, then consider checking out Logseq.

      It’s main workflow is that you use the Journal page and write down everything that’s on your mind, may it be projects, research, social stuff, or whatever.

      And while writing, you link that stuff with other stuff, and in the end, even when forgetting the exact search cues, you can go hunting for words mentally, and always find what you wrote months ago.

      Obsidian, the competitor of it, is also great, but more similar to traditional note taking software, and therefore more hierarchical.

      Logseq is FOSS too btw!