For Android users - orgzly is the go-to (http://www.orgzly.com/)
I did a quick rain-check on the IRC channel if such a post is okay with us - all I got was one thumb up. But myself I wasn’t sure if this would fly. My only line of defense is that I guess we could both agree that there exist more powerful and direct ways of self-promotion.
I’ve decided to spice up my schedule by giving out 1-hour long mentornig/coaching sessions for early stage startups/projects. If you know someone who is either stuck or needs a brain to pick - I’d be glad to help.
Free of charge, no strings attached -wanted to start giving something back to the community. Details http://generativestuff.com/sparring/
In similar vein https://ahprojects.com/projects/skylift/
You have powerful automation tools at your disposal, scripting and browser automation at you fingertips, but instead you turn yourself (even more than before) into a factory worker optimizing the ergonomics of your tools. I find this a step backwards.
Well I’ve done both - I also have quite a bit of automation using command-line scripts, using custom-built tools, and using browser extensions sitting on top of whatever I’m looking at as well.
Customizing your input methods isn’t a step backwards, it’s just optimizing a different direction. This custom hardware, when paired with my custom software, makes for a really comfy working setup :D
I read most of the article, but I’m not sure what inks actually is. It’s 90% up my alley, but I’m missing a line or two explaining what it is - just looking at the page wasn’t too revealing for me.
seems like a minimal version of Pinboard?
A more personal Slashdot - links with editor-written snark and insight. Or something like Daring Fireball, where its a dude’s thoughts on things he shares on the internet. Or maybe its inks - it’s links, but without an “l.”
This is much more OS centered - http://www.codersnotes.com/notes/a-constructive-look-at-templeos/
Ranger (http://ranger.nongnu.org/)
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For anyone considering this, there’s also a more elaborate fuzzy searcher called fzf that comes with shell history search shortcut
I’m using fzf and I was wondering whether there’s any advantage using hstr (performance, packages, etc) - as it offers the same feature (and a lot more).
Is there a web-based apporach to doing the Carmack Plan files for teams?