UdeRecife

joined 1 year ago
[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 2 points 8 months ago

Not really that fancy. It's just a marketing euphemism. The giving of a cool name to something very mundane.

You're right, it's just a clouded way of saying 'someone else's computer '.

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 21 points 8 months ago (3 children)

I've been using it for more than 20 years, but I still love when someone pulls the GNU/Linux card.

To me it feels like reading an old plaque in Latin. It reminds me of an important past that shouldn't be forgotten.

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 9 points 8 months ago (6 children)

The rotary disc on phones!

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 5 points 8 months ago

Hello! Nice to meet you. I know and love your kind. One monitor is pretty standard, so I have a lot of friends just like you.

Yup, 3 monitors user here. I guarantee it's not that uncommon.

(And yes, I'm still running X11)

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Philosophically, the premise is flawed. Best life... according to whom?

I mean, the best life for a slug or a fly won't cut it for you. I can imagine a fly being born in such conditions that from that fly's perspective it would be 'the best life' imaginable... for a fly.

There's this passage from Roger Crisp's Mill on Utilitarianism, where he proposes this thought experiment. There one reads:

"You are a soul in heaven waiting to be allocated a life on Earth. It is late Friday afternoon, and you watch anxiously as the supply of available lives dwindles. When your turn comes, the angel in charge offers you a choice between two lives, that of the composer Joseph Haydn and that of an oyster. Besides composing some wonderful music and influencing the evolution of the symphony, Haydn will meet with success and honour in his own lifetime, be cheerful and popular, travel and gain much enjoyment from field sports. The oyster's life is far less exciting. Though this is rather a sophisticated oyster, its life will consist only of mild sensual pleasure, rather like that experienced by humans when floating very drunk in a warm bath. When you request the life of Haydn, the angel sighs, ‘I'll never get rid of this oyster life. It's been hanging around for ages. Look, I'll offer you a special deal. Haydn will die at the age of seventy-seven. But I'll make the oyster life as long as you like...’"

So, a pig or Haydn? A fly or your own life right now?

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 1 points 8 months ago

Not being open source is the great... sin for me. Note taking is an investment in the future, and betting on a closed source platform is a big no no—for me, that is.

I know the content is safe in Obsidian, since it's just Markdown files. But the workflow? Not so much.

And I know the developers behind Obsidian have their reasons to close source it. Nothing against that. But since that's their way, it's not my way.

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 2 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Please, I don't want to be rude, so don't take me wrong.

I think that's not accurate. Trillium is not even an outliner, let alone a block note taking app. I think you're mixing trillium with Logseq.

My memory may be failing me, but I think trillium has been around longer than Roam Research.

And yes, it's a great open source note taking app!

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 2 points 8 months ago

Logseq user here too.

However, for a quick, transitory note, I use Kate or, more recently, Xpad. Only then I transcribe the content to Logseq. Why?

Because while Logseq is great as an outliner and for network thinking, it's as graceful and agile as an elephant.

The gist of what I'm saying is: for now, and for me (hardware might be playing a role here, but I don't think so) Logseq is a good note database. For quick typing, I have to use something else.

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 2 points 8 months ago

Espanso. A text expander that also runs commands.

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 5 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)
[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 1 points 9 months ago

Got my first smartphone in 2017. My first dumbphone in 2008. Late to both parties.

[–] UdeRecife@literature.cafe 7 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

My aside:

In every community I see this. There are always folks trying to narrow the community to some cut and dry descriptors—which for them are always obvious.

Sometimes the jab is perhaps intended as a joke. But to my reading it's always a trope, namely the tired fallacy of taking a part as the whole.

Either way, it's myopic. In any internet community, we're always bound to narrowly see what's happening. Because:

  • We can only see the posters, never the lurkers—which far exceed the former;
  • Posters, by virtue of taking the time to post, are most often than not highly opinionated;
  • Our reading is always selective. We're either misguided by the way the comments are sorted, by our mood at the moment, by chance, or simply because we're really bad at reading;
  • Our reading is always biased. Either by our mood, our current situation in life, our upbringing, our milieu, whatever;
  • the list goes on and on and on.

This results in a very reductive view that, although very teasing because very personal and idiosyncratic, is ultimately an exercise in futility. To those already biased, it simply supplies them with fodder to confirm what they already believed.

From afar, it's just noise. Any view on what the community is is but a poor reflection of what the community ultimately is.

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