#nixos is so cool. I am currently writing my own #homeManager module for #jrnl because I want to try it out, but also sync it (with #syncthing) and ensure that calls to the jrnl binary are not added to my #atuin driven history. I can just write that module and have it on all my hosts easily. How awesome is that?
@deyvisdiaz @victorhck @moribundo @manosymaquinasentrevideos sí, #jrnl está chulo para llevar un diario cifrado en el terminal, después me hice uno propio en bash y ahora ando usando #RedNoteBook
gemini://sl1200.dystopic.world/art/diario.gmi
https://flathub.org/apps/app.rednotebook.RedNotebook
Install RedNotebook on Linux | Flathub

Graphical diary and journal

Flathub - Apps for Linux

My #commandline and #tui everyday productivity workflow is getting more solid: #taskwarrior, #jrnl, #offlineimap, #notmuch, #neomutt. I was using some of these tools one or two decades ago until I was tempted or forced onto GUI and cloud solutions by various projects. But now I can access my terminals from anywhere thanks to my #tailscale #vpn – no need for other people's clouds.

One of these days I'll write a proper blog post or series about this setup.

Also rediscovering #jrnl and finally spending some quality time with #jq.

I've had two things on my personal todo list lately: journaling more (thanks for the reminder, @pluralistic) and using the command line more. As it turns out, there's a tool called #jrnl that lets me do both.

Jrnl is a command like journaling tool that supports encryption, templates, tags, and more. Looks promising, and has proven decent to use so far!

https://jrnl.sh/

jrnl - The Command Line Journal

Collect your thoughts and notes without leaving the command line.

jrnl - The Command Line Journal
Notizen blitzschnell per Textzeile erfassen: JRNL – Digital Cleaning

Just stumbled upon #jrnl (https://jrnl.sh). Is anyone else using it? Seems like a nice way to quickly log thoughts/activities #journaling
jrnl - The Command Line Journal

Collect your thoughts and notes without leaving the command line.

jrnl - The Command Line Journal