Today I stumbled on https://github.com/tanrax/org-social and while, despite being an #Emacs user for decades, I've never been an #orgmode user, I really like this idea and might have to play with it at some point soon.
GitHub - tanrax/org-social: Org Social is a decentralized social network that runs on an Org Mode file over HTTP.

Org Social is a decentralized social network that runs on an Org Mode file over HTTP. - tanrax/org-social

GitHub
@davep I've never really been an #Emacs user and therefore never used #orgmode, but I have to say there's a certain appeal in something as simple and elegant as this which, TBH, doesn't even need emacs.
@frassmith Yup. Emacs is handy here in that there’s also a client app for it built in Emacs too; but even that’s not the only client (genuinely tempted to build a client library for Python and build an app on top of that).
@davep I installed the rust client though I'll probably give the NVim client a try at some point.

@frassmith @davep Be aware that those Org-mode clones do cover only maybe 5% of its functionality.

You're really missing out extremely interesting functionality. I'd urge you to learn Emacs, maybe using vim bindings. I know many people who say that Emacs is the better vim. Emacs can everything that vim has (except vimscript) and tons of additional stuff.

Disclaimer: using vim + Emacs on a daily basis since the 90s myself - both with their native bindings.

Some thoughts for beginners: https://karl-voit.at/2020/01/20/start-using-orgmode/

UOMF: How to Start With Emacs Org Mode

UOMF: How to Start With Emacs Org Mode

public voit - Web-page of Karl Voit
@publicvoit @frassmith Note that we weren't talking about org-mode here, but org-social and also some of the clients.

@frassmith @davep

You would be surprised how easy it is to use emacs for nothing but org mode by just setting a target of what features you want and sticking to that.