

Logseq still supports plain .md files (“Logseq OG”) in addition to the new DB backend., so a convoluted import isn’t necessary.


Logseq still supports plain .md files (“Logseq OG”) in addition to the new DB backend., so a convoluted import isn’t necessary.


That’s not how hardware works, like at all. I agree with the spirit of what you’re asking for but you can’t just wave a magic wand and put any software on any hardware.
Pedantry warning
Mamdani is mayor (city level), not governor (state level).


Be careful what you wish for… My i7-1260p failed a few months ago.
I will say though, upgrading to an ai 340 is a serious quality of life upgrade in terms of gpu and battery life. Even the NPU is useful now with the latest drivers and kernel modules.


Personally I have never had an issue with the build quality. I think that’s more of a reviewer gripe than a real world issue.
They occasionally have great sales too. I’ve seen prebuilds for $650 with previous gen boards. With the pro launch I wouldn’t be surprised to see prices for the older models drop over the next month or two.


It’s bigger in both dimensions.


I propose a little cultural exchange. I’m sure Framework and Fairphone could stand to do a little cross pollination.


Great, now how about action against the murderers caught on film.


That’s fair. Once you understand some basics though it’s not too bad. There’s a UI just like any router you might already be used to. The most confusing part for someone who is new to this would probably be setting up the VM hardware plumbing, and understanding that a passthrough means that hardware is unavailable to the host.


If you want a dedicated device, sure. Image it with OPNSense and it’ll basically just work.
You can also take any desktop you already have, fire up an OPNSense VM, pcie passthrough your WAN NIC + WiFi card, bridge to a separate LAN NIC, go through the setup, and there’s your router.
Best of both worlds – Debian + Nix home-manager. Debian gives you incredible stability and plenty of usage resources. Nix gives you anything too new for Debian and functionally confines the more experimental end of your config to user space.


How are “public shareable links” handled? Are you just saying links generate nicely when your version is exposed on the www or is there some kind of centralized back door for public access?


I don’t see how that’s logical at all. Why restrict a technology to the desktop?


Sure, in 20 years when it catches up with other ecosystems


I’d love to see an ARM CPU with unified memory outside of the apple ecosystem. Maybe in 5 years we’ll see a framework laptop that competes with the M chips on efficiency.


Nix store go: 😭


I’ve heard that a lot of custom domains get filtered by tech giants. Have you experienced any problems like that? I agree it would be nice and self hosting it is pretty straightforward.


Like?


What is an option then?
Obligatory actual direct link (it’s just a common sense subdomain): noai.duckduckgo.com