Asking the hive mind: What do we know or recommend about using tools such as #logseq or #obsidian all along with #NextCloud or #Koofr? I'd basically like to sync notes between Android and Linux desktop and have read mixed statements on that.
Boosts welcome.
#Followerpower
@z428eu Depending on how you use those tools @silverbulletmd might be an interesting alternative, which bypasses the sync problem through a selfhosted client/server architecture.
@thenorthcore Noticed @silverbulletmd as well, looks interesting / promising but in my current hosting environment I don't really have a good option to keep such a service running at the reliability and stability I'd like to see in a daily-driver tool. ๐Ÿ™ˆ
@z428eu @silverbulletmd Understandable, Iโ€™m currently testing it locally to see if itโ€™s usability fits my needs. As I havenโ€™t managed to get logseq to sync before the test, Iโ€™m not yet missing the sync feature ;)
@thenorthcore @z428eu a current solution that's worth considering if you don't want to self host is using @Pikapods: https://www.pikapods.com/pods?run=silverbullet
PikaPods - Instant Open Source App Hosting

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@silverbulletmd Interesting, thanks, will look into this. Seems an approach worth considering. Just wondering, here: What about encryption? If I get that right, logseq and obsidian support E2EE which would be helpful specifically in a client/server setup like this.
@thenorthcore @Pikapods
@z428eu @thenorthcore @Pikapods E2EE is on the roadmap. Currently you can opt in to encrypt synced data on the client, but the server side is up to you (in principle it's just regular, unencrypted files on disk, although that disk can be an encrypted disk, of course). For self hosting this probably fine (and useful, because it also allows you to use non-SB tools to manipulate your data), but for shared hosting environment it's probably not ideal.