I like the quest 3. Quest 2 is fine as well
Buddhist, FOSS, Linux, selfhosting enthusiast, researcher, plantbased, anarchism and MLM interested
I like the quest 3. Quest 2 is fine as well
Relatedly, there was a company was selling a cloud(🤡)-based product called “Little Printer” from 2012 to 2014; after their backend predictably shut down, some fans of it recreated it as https://tinyprinter.club/ and later https://nordprojects.co/projects/littleprinters/
This is super cute. Thanks for sharing!
I’ve heard the reMarkable e-ink tablet’s cloud service has good-enough-to-be-usable handwriting recognition, but sadly I haven’t heard of anything free/libre and/or offline that is.
I’ve eyed those for some time but I do prefer FOSS or at least only connected to my own server… That is a cool suggestion!
Thanks for sharing
That would certainly be more interesting. Sorry you don’t find it relevant…
I checked my local backup server and I have two directories:
/home/share for backup files
/home/app data for backup appdata
My main server which unfortunately runs unraid is structured like
/mnt/user/array/media
/mnt/user/array/Nextcloud
/mnt/cache_ssd/appdata
That’s funny you share this, a friend just sent it to me yesterday.
Similar to this: https://github.com/alibahmanyar/breaklist
This is an interesting way to receive data but I wish there was a way to do the reserve. Take handwritten/handled input into a computer. I asked this question the other day if I could somehow input my handwritten notes into programs like Trilium (or logseq whatever) and memos. OCR/HCR seems to far behind still so I am unsure. That would certainly be a cool method!
Thanks for the links! Odd he included that video but didn’t include the points you/he made beyond the criticism.
Edit: Watching the video you linked that is included in the posted video, not sure how big a deal Xanadu is. I wonder how this would compare to git history and tag maps such as Obsidian.
Interesting! I will have to check those out. It also made me think of Obsidian and Trilium mindmapping. Very useful. Wonder if this could apply to file structures?
It’s relevant to linux in I think the average linux user is more open to consider alternative interfaces than a windows user.
Video is more than just a history, I thought it was eye opening for considering what could be an alternative. I also don’t know but find the question interesting.
That’s why the all feed has so many images, right? why comment then? (softened my tone)
lol that’'s such a random assumption. It makes sense though from middle school onwards I thought victoria’s secret was “sexy” and popular with women since it was back then. When I went with my wife once I realized how garbage it was.
Is the main difference that it tiles instead of floats?
Edit: oh it seems much more hotkey, terminal, and search focused watching than clicking. I think that is a much bigger difference than I originally expected.
Thanks for watching what I shared and sharing own thoughts :)
Your idea makes me think of my vague understanding of plan9.
Check this out: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plan_9_from_Bell_Labs#Union_directories_and_namespaces
Do you imagine something like a mind map from obsidian where things are linked or unlinked by tags?
I haven’t used that so you’ve given me something to read about :) I’m not sure I fully get it
Highly recommend the video when you have time. I found its point really engaging
Haha mine is white too but not deaf. That’s weird if true
Super cute
What?? The link Arthur sent is not in that third video. What does your comment even mean?