anyone else i know using #LogSeq? it's a little bit arcane, but i'm finding it fits with the way i tend to use these note apps—e.g. in #obsidian i was mostly just keeping logs of what i was doing anyway, rather than organizing/collecting bits of knowledge.

in logseq, most of what i write goes into the daily journals, using appropriate tags/links in the outline headers. it's easy to then view all of the logs for a single tag/project in a single place afterwards,

@bunnyhero I’m doing the same.. something like

- ## Meetings
- ### [[Project xyz]] - Alignment bla
- [[PersonA]]

@stefan yeah! it took me awhile to get my head around it but it clicked when i realized how powerful the automatically generated 'linked references' were

@bunnyhero Exactly. I'm using this a lot and can tell immediately when certain topics have been discussed, or from which event I know a person.

Really powerful, and so easy to create

@bunnyhero btw. could be nice to have #markdown support in #Mastodon

CC @ivory, @Gargron

Or would it be to disturbing? hmm

@stefan @ivory @Gargron i know some forks already do, like glitch-soc
@bunnyhero I'm just getting into using #Logseq and I'm finding it really works well to record project tasks, who is responsible to accomplish them, and when they need to be done. I really like that I can set a task to be completed at a future date and it shows up on that days journal page - reminding me to follow up.
@ukdataguy oh i haven't even tried the future-dating thing yet! cool

@bunnyhero @ukdataguy Just start typing /datepicker and it will create a link to that journal entry.

I switched from Obsidian to Logseq quite some time ago and feel much more at home. Working with bullet list in hierarchies feels so natural to me.

I also have a bit of hierarchy in my links. Like

[/Team/PersonA] and [/Customer/ProjectA/] and so forth

@taseroth @ukdataguy i’ve just started using hierarchy in links. works great

@bunnyhero

#LogSeq #obsidian
I do similar. Started with vanilla Org mode, moved to Obsidian with the siren's song of Markdown, and finally found LogSeq as a good mix of the two approaches.

Long common pages get interspersed with dates so that I have a record of what happened when.

@bunnyhero I've been using it for a couple of years. Loving it (mostly). Transclusion, daily journal, simple tags. Works great. I just wish its markdown support was more standard. I've fully switched to it as my main second-brain/diary/everything.