

IIRC based on the snazzy labs video about it, the answer to both those questions is yes
IIRC based on the snazzy labs video about it, the answer to both those questions is yes
The open toolchain foundation also has a similar list I think
Honestly this is such a shame, it was a really good app
This is it: https://github.com/Flomp/wanderer So far it’s just a way to host your own trail maps, but hopefully it will expand to have more functionality like tracking your walks/runs.
It’s not ready yet, but Wanderer looks like it may end up being a good Strava alternative
Lots of people like to keep their 2FA separate from their password manager, so that there isn’t a single point of failure
If wallabag isn’t your jam, then omnivore also works well
Breezy weather looks great, but it isn’t available on the Play Store, which unfortunately limits it’s adoption
I feel the pain, I also really want it to be open source (and I think it’s funny that they talk about most of the community plugins being open source as a plus, but don’t recognise how that could be a plus for the app as well if they open sourced it).
As for missing bits of LogSeq, I use both LogSeq and Obsidian together. I have my LogSeq graph and Obsidian vault use the same folder, and have them configured so they use the same default folders and date formats. It works quite well for me
FWIW I was using LogSeq for a while because I wanted a FOSS obsidian equivalent… As I discovered, it isn’t really an equivalent at all, it’s very much it’s own thing. One thing LogSeq really doesn’t do well is long form notes, I tried using it in combination with Zettlr for long form notes, which was good when I was doing my academic and engineering work, but didn’t really fit with my personal notes very well.
I recently decided to try LogSeq and Obsidian together and so far I’m finding it really works well. I treat LogSeq as my daily notepad, I put in my tasks and small thoughts. I use Obsidian for my more permanent, bigger notes about things. My LogSeq graph and Obsidian vault are the same folder, and I have it configured so both use the same date format and assets folder. The only thing I’ve yet to check is if I can use YAML front matter in LogSeq in place of their style of front matter, because they would make the notes fit together much better.
The open book looks to be the sort of thing you’re looking for, it’s a very basic open source e reader
I think their donations are handled by OpenCollective inc. rather than the OCF but I might be wrong
Oh wow how have I not heard of this before?! It looks incredible
I think you may be the first person I’ve come across that doesn’t like git. Can I ask what you think the issues with it are?