•  Euphoma   ( @Euphoma@lemmy.ml ) 
    link
    fedilink
    English
    21 year ago

    Obsidian looks interesting, but I’m already using emacs and I’m pretty sure every feature in obsidian can be done in emacs.

    Honestly emacs is pretty decent for almost every text related task and many non text related tasks as well.

    • …I’m pretty sure every feature in obsidian can be done in emacs.

      It definitely can. Unfortunately, I was the only emacs user on my team at work, so switching from org-mode to something that used plain markdown files was beneficial. There’s a network effect here – sharing notes is valuable.

      Also, since Obsidian (and Logseq, which is what I use now) both use save plain markdown files, you can still edit your notes in emacs.

      Honestly emacs is pretty decent for almost every text related task and many non text related tasks as well.

      For sure, emacs is still my favorite operating system. :)

      •  Euphoma   ( @Euphoma@lemmy.ml ) 
        link
        fedilink
        English
        11 year ago

        Idk, there’s a wide range of text related tasks. Some of those tasks, I would say emacs is very good at (like programming or taking notes), and others are good enough (like email and file management). The reason that I would want to use it for the worse tasks is that the text editing tools between the tasks are all the same and its all programmable.

        Its all personal preference though.