@cypherpunks@lemmy.ml who I responded to. What do you seek to add?
ocean
What?? The link Arthur sent is not in that third video. What does your comment even mean?
I like the quest 3. Quest 2 is fine as well
Interesting!
Relatedly, there was a company was selling a cloud(🤡)-based product called “Little Printer” from 2012 to 2014; after their backend predictably shut down, some fans of it recreated it as https://tinyprinter.club/ and later https://nordprojects.co/projects/littleprinters/
This is super cute. Thanks for sharing!
I’ve heard the reMarkable e-ink tablet’s cloud service has good-enough-to-be-usable handwriting recognition, but sadly I haven’t heard of anything free/libre and/or offline that is.
I've eyed those for some time but I do prefer FOSS or at least only connected to my own server... That is a cool suggestion!
Thanks for sharing
That would certainly be more interesting. Sorry you don't find it relevant..
I checked my local backup server and I have two directories:
/home/share for backup files
/home/app data for backup appdata
My main server which unfortunately runs unraid is structured like
/mnt/user/array/media
/mnt/user/array/Nextcloud
/mnt/cache_ssd/appdata
That's funny you share this, a friend just sent it to me yesterday.
Similar to this: https://github.com/alibahmanyar/breaklist
This is an interesting way to receive data but I wish there was a way to do the reserve. Take handwritten/handled input into a computer. I asked this question the other day if I could somehow input my handwritten notes into programs like Trilium (or logseq whatever) and memos. OCR/HCR seems to far behind still so I am unsure. That would certainly be a cool method!
Thanks for the links! Odd he included that video but didn't include the points you/he made beyond the criticism.
Edit: Watching the video you linked that is included in the posted video, not sure how big a deal Xanadu is. I wonder how this would compare to git history and tag maps such as Obsidian.
Interesting! I will have to check those out. It also made me think of Obsidian and Trilium mindmapping. Very useful. Wonder if this could apply to file structures?
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