Great. I watched all the videos at x1.25. I don't go above that speed as I'm retired and not as nimble-minded. Study the manual next, do some experiments, and see how others are using the software. It's wonderful having goals but no time constraints after writing c/c++ for 35 years. Play the piano, read, study, or spend all day in my recording studio and create synthwave. I should have retired 10 years ago!
6
I tried Dendron for a while. I really wanted to like because it would be great to use vscode for note taking as well as programming, but I've given up on it and am back to Logseq for the following reasons: - No wysiwyg editor. It really makes the reading much nicer. - Dendron Markdown preview has some rough edges - Some things are oddly hard coded. Like you can use @person to link a person, but the person note must be in user.person hierarchy. Can't change it. - Templates are handlebar templates. No idea why they don't use vscode snippets, which are much more powerful in this context. - They use [[label|Source]] wikilink labels, which is backwards from every other tool I use. - No implementation of aliases for searching And finally development on the project appears to have pretty much stopped. Hopefully they start up again. My biggest complaints about Logseq is that the non-standard markdown makes sharing/publishing difficult, but being able to tell a coworker to open a graph in the browser helps a lot