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Jorge Sanz | 2023-03-28 | 536 words | techie
It is been a year since I started using a new note taking application and it is due time I write a bit about the topic. Logseq[1] is a desktop and mobile application with a wide plugin ecosystem for the desktop version and lots o features. Briefly, the main characteristics of this app would be:
I use it mostly to keep a journal of my daily activities, tracking notes of my meetings, and drafting content or ideas. I don't use the pages a lot, but I have some summaries there for things I want to keep at hand.
2: https://github.com/logseq/logseq
3: https://github.com/logseq/logseq/releases
The synchronization part is a bit tricky at this moment so it may change over time. What I'm doing is to have the "main" repository on my work laptop, synced with my NAS through the Synology file service. Then I also run syncthing[4] on it to allow my phone and Chromebook to refresh their copies or push changes if I happen to write anything on those devices. I only synchronize the content, so each device keeps its own configuration.
I don't write much on the Chromebook, but the phone is a different story. I basically open Logseq on my phone anytime I want to record anything on my journal for later review or action. While traveling last month it was my main way to keep notes on everything we were doing, visiting, etc. It is a bit of a "private microblogging" system in the sense of just adding notes sequentially through the day for myself.
As for plugins I won't write now much about this. There's a ton of useful plugins and they are easy to switch on and off. This includes themes and UI improvements to adapt the software to your requirements. I will only mention a relevant plugin for me: the Readwise[5] connector. This plugin pulls all my highlights saved in Readwise, making them easier to consume and backup on my own terms (because we all now that nice cloud things eventually end). Through this plugin I keep a local storage of all the highlights and notes saved in my Kindle account, Reader[6], hypothes.is[7], Pocket, Instapaper, etc.
A screenshot of the Readwise log [IMG]
Anyways, logseq has in my opinion this balance of features that makes it easy and a bit of *fun* to use. Being local and Open Source, I expect it to stick with me for a long time and if its development eventually stops, I will still have everything in a pretty simple Markdown format. You know, always thinking on the exit strategy.
Have you seen logseq before? Have you tried it? Want to share your experience?
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Want to comment anything? Continue the discussion here[8] or contact me![9]
8: https://mapstodon.space/@jorgesanz/110100366544089987
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