Me too. Something about the bullet point style of note taking just clicked in me, and now I can’t go back.
Me too. Something about the bullet point style of note taking just clicked in me, and now I can’t go back.
Looks like someone is ready to start enjoying retro gaming! For real beginners I recommend Data frog SF2000, for about €15 you get device that can run 6k games (and it arrives with RCA cable too) and doesn’t require poking Retro arch settings. Once hooked you can search and find dedicated device that can run more advanced consoles, can be plugged directly into HDMI port of your TV, etc.
A “fit of minimalism” 😁
Nextcloud is one of the most used self-hosted services in my family. I am very happy how well maintained the software is. Easy to maintain, and keep up to date.
So far we use it for:
What I don’t like is:
This is how I manage it:
Looks like it’s not shutting down after all.
Transportr is not covering all cities in Germany, while DB does. So do have both :)
I use Logseq as well, and I love it. Something about journaling bullet points fits me so well and feels natural. But, templating system is a bit clunky, the app is rather unstable (do enable git
tracking or you might lose your notes), themes/plugins quickly get out of sync and to fully power-use it you need to know Clojure programming lanugage (I don’t and I’m missing out powerful filters).
But, all data is in simple markdown files, so we are not locked in.
I use Tree Style Tab for vertical tabs. Clearly one of the best things one can do for browser productivity.
I use CamelCamelCamel for Amazon. Besides price history it allows notifications on sales or price drops.
This is something my son will love. Thank you!
Your definition of a year is not really correct: https://github.com/jellyfin/jellyfin/releases