What if I you had to move to Obsidian?
https://discuss.logseq.com/t/what-if-i-you-had-to-move-to-obsidian/20733
I recently asked myself how easy it would be to migrate to Obsidian if I had to stop using Logseq for some reason? I’m happy with Logseq, but like to know that I could switch if I had to - it gives me peace of mind about my data. The question is…
It’s reasonably doable, I migrated a while ago after logseq decided to destroy my data once again.
I’d say obsidian is not really any more a walled garden than logseq is―the storage is a rather common markdown. If anything, obsidian abuses commonmark less. It’s way better as a product, though and it’s experience is rock solid.
@logseq@clj.social @logseq@lemmy.ml Wrong direction.
Moving from a FOSS solution to a closed source solution is not good for your future self.
With Obsidian, you introduce lock-in by using features you can’t get outside as well as a ton of MD syntax extensions that won’t work outside.
Consider a upgrade: https://karl-voit.at/2024/01/28/logseq-from-org-pov/ and https://karl-voit.at/orgmode/ 🙇
(corrected language tag)
@publicvoit @logseq@lemmy.ml@lemmy.ml@clj.social@clj.social @logseq@lemmy.ml@lemmy.ml@clj.social@lemmy.ml did you look at howm? I’d be interested in your opinion @publicvoit
@mykhaylo @logseq I don’t see much use of https://github.com/kaorahi/howm when you do have bidirectional links in org-mode such as https://karl-voit.at/2020/07/22/org-super-links/