Informal Logic—A Pragmatic Approach:
The fault of blind dogmatism, of only seeing one side of the argument as a position worth investigating, is among the most severe impediments or handicaps in reasonable dialogue.
Then Logseq. It’s an outliner (each line can be it’s own…thing…), but it’s open source and a direct competitor of Obsidian. In fact, I was ambivalent between the two when I first started with online note-taking.
This is my second Ducky keyboard and I love it.
CCleaner started with ads so we moved to BleachBit
Can you see bot accounts? You might have a bot message for some reason that isn’t showing.
Now that is a good argument!
I’ll 3rd mechanicalkeyboards.com. I just ordered a new Ducky from there this morning.
It’s been a few years, but I really liked Linux Mint and Xfce. The former is more friendly for beginners. But XFCE is responsive…like…you click and the computer responds immediately. It feels like the computer is really yours. Don’t get me wrong, though, Linux Mint is really responsive, too, particularly in comparison to Windows.
You can always try them out, too, before you commit with your current computer. In the past, I’ve used VirtualBox to virtualize Mint/Xfce. Here’s a tutorial. It sounds fancy, but it’s pretty easy.
Lol no. I take it out when I don’t need it.
Use a USB c flash drive. I have a 128 gb phone with a 256 gb flash drive and it works
I switched over from using a Happy Hacking Keyboard after two or three years and really enjoyed having the left control key in place of the Caps Lock key. So, my main profile has that set up.
I currently have the Ducky One 2 RGB (mechanicalkeyboards.com link) and really like it. I got it because it has programmable macros, which allows me to use the caps lock key as my left control key instead. That was the main reason I got it.
And Varmilo has some beautiful keyboards too!
I think, like Obsidian, it stores them as markdown files.