[-] [email protected] 7 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

@solivine Same, and it just works better. Whenever I need a word processor or spreadsheet at home I don't need that much, and I need to be able to access it on all my devices, not just my home computer. So having the free alternative work faster, better, everywhere, then I don't even see Office as relevant anymore.

@billiam0202 @q47tx @wintermute_oregon @WeirdGoesPro @H2207

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submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I recently re-watched Future Diary, an anime relating to keeping a journal that then gets shifted forward into time which, depending on what you were documenting, could be to your advantage or disadvantage.

This inspired me to keep my own journal YEARS back, and I've been doing pretty good at keeping it alive. I've recently migrated to using Obsidian as my software (in fact, I use Obsidian for everything! From notes in class to quick to-do lists for the day) and it's made it pretty easy to look back on old notes. I used to be obsessed with minute-by-minute updates like in the anime, but took a more realistic approach to having a daily review. However recently I've found that I am losing track of more and more as my life gets more and more busy. I've tried some different note-taking methods but those work for some aspects, but not all aspects of what I need to remember.

I have (most likely, at best undiagnosed) ADHD to where I can't remember a conversation I just had as soon as I turn back around to continue what I was working on before getting interrupted in conversation. So I have tried writing EVERYTHING down. This works, as long as I remember all the details by the time it's written down. (I've been interrupted 5 times while writing this so forgive me if it's scattered) But notes can get lost in the sauce and I have to search forever to find bits of info.

The way I use Obsidian is by having the daily note set up with a template which is timestamped and asks loaded questions, with tags, to help me find what subject I want to look back on in certain dates. These tags can be relating to work, emotions, relationships, interactions, and ways to improve any of those.

These get stored in folders for each year, but I generally keep them open-ended with the file name being just the date with a quick summary after it.

I've tried to use it as a task tracker at work, but when it came for annual review time, I struggled to find a way to parse a lot of notes all at once to remember what I had done for the year. This made me want to migrate to Microsoft Lists but now I have to use two different software for close to the same thing, and I lose which one I used for information I need.

So, how do you use a journal? What software do you use? What works best for tracking your tasks for annuals? What works best for keeping you on task when ADHD gets the better of you? How do you keep track of everything?!

[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

@SuperRecording I've always been told the opposite. As long as you brush soon after you actually prevent stains. And to always make sure to at least rinse with water after coffee.

@zephyr

[-] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

@Squander Let us peel away your petty facades and reveal you for what your truly are!!!


fairly attractive 20-somethings, apparently.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago

@ananesiken "I can't adapt to change so therefore I refuse to, and will publicly announce it as I do so."

K bye, this content isn't helping the lack of good content.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago

@buycurious Nah nothing wrong with you, you're just curious to buy it.

@TheWaterGod

[-] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago

@Manticore

they require them to understand the concept of what a 'server' is to even get started.

I've known 5 year olds start minecraft servers. And understand that each "world" is an "instance". But that's aside the point, as you're right that even Help-Desk IT people struggle to understand the difference between computer and server.

It's not hard, it's just new.

The "new" part is what gets people. All of this is new. Even the implementation of all of this "fediverse" is new. It will come with time! People probably didn't understand email vs snailmail, and probably had an even harder time with SMS/IM vs email when all of that came about just over 20-30 years ago. Most of these "complications" are from people that grew up knowing that the "internet" is basically 5 or 6 social media sites for very specific uses, and those 5 or 6 sites are older than most of the people using them, so that's all they know. Even for a dude in IT, the fediverse was a new concept to understand, and even difficult to understand how it could best be implemented for the masses.

@metic

[-] [email protected] 24 points 2 years ago

@abff08f4813c The main thing about all this is that there were no alternatives to Reddit until now. We needed a good push and reason to leave but never had a tangible alternative with nothing even showing up in Search results worth checking out. Now we do, All these big corps are screwing themselves, and we now have a BETTER alternative than all of them. So keep screwing up, Reddit, we have a place to go now. Keep screwing up, Twitter, Google, StackOverflow, Tumblr, Imgur, and all others that will soon follow suit.

3
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

So I was thinking of a few ways to help create a bit of direction in the chaos... These are probably already in the works or intentionally NOT implemented, so I'd like to hear why or why not. These are just a few thoughts of mine.

For everyone wanting a list of communities, and preventing duplicate communities on multiple instances:

  1. Create the culture that instances ARE the communities. The only thing this limits is duplicating/migrating accounts accross instannces so you aren't locked in to one instance/community if you're like me and like multiple things.
  2. Create the topics within these instances that relate to the community's topics. Then have a federated page where you subscribe to other instances and this is your feed.

For everyone wanting the largest federation possible even on small instances, have a central fed site that is JUST a center point of federation and a dynamic list of instances

  1. Make Fediverse.party or the like a central point that every new instance has to federate to once made. This makes it so all the other instances can see this new site too.
  2. This can help moderation where on Fediverse.party there can be a ranking/voting system on whether an instance should be defederated to the central hub, and can be individually federated if admins want.
  3. This also makes it so people can see the rank/review of an instance before joining, and get a good idea of the culture and ideals of that instance.

For everyone wanting more instances, but fewer duplicate communities on each, encourage instances to focus on the subject they discuss. Like Forums.

  1. For instance: You want to join an instance relating to Honda Cars, so you joinHondaCarForums.com. There is a general discussion on everything and this is where you will find the federated feeds of everything. Then there are topics like "Machanical help" or "Galleries", as well as "Training Videos" and this can be federation of other instances that are like PeerTube and PixelFed instances.
  2. You can then subscribe to other topics as well and this can be your "Subscription feed" that you only see your front page of your topics you want to see. This makes it so you aren't "constricted" by your specific topic on your instance.

For everyone not sure what the fediverse is or how to make a site federate, make federation the standard for ALL sites.

  1. Make current community sites federate using the protocol. Developers can make a plugin or some third-party app (think like Disqus) that makes it so current sites can be a part of the fediverse too.
  2. That way people know that "oh I can see HondaCarForums.com while I'm on KawasakiBikeForums.com, so that's how federation works!! Cool!" And have it easy to understand for new people. Honestly this is how I think the web should work but hasn't yet. Users with WordPress accounts can comment across WordPress hosted sites, which is how I think these sites can solve the issue of feeling locked in to a single instance. Have a third party app be where you make your federated account and can then be a part of any site.

These are easy to implement, can increase moderation abilities, and can encourage more instances be made as well as increase the simplicity of all of this "new-concept" complications with new users. This is all probably in the works but I wanted to see if anyone had any counter-points to be made to any of these ideas. What do you think?

[-] [email protected] 6 points 2 years ago

@Cipher I think of it more of an instructional issue specifically rather than learning issue. People explain "it's like email" but fail to deliver the fact that it should be more like "It's how the internet should work". Where people think Lemmy is THE SITE and can communicate with kbin THE SITE.

It should be mentioned that if anyone has built a website, that Lemmy is the software. You install Google Chrome on your computer, you install lemmy on your computer. You are now able to ACCESS all the other websites like you would in Chrome.

People think "oh it's like email, well I know Gmail is pretty good so I'll make an account there. Whatever decisions Google makes is by extension my decision." The average user doesn't know what email actually is. They don't know that you can make your own email service. They don't know you can even just buy a domain and have your own email address.

The only thing that bugs me about the fediverse as a whole is that these threadiverse concepts shouldn't have communities. If it was implemented as intended, you'd have to make a community by making a new instance. The community should be federated, and then duplicate communities would get individually federated or defederated.

I think the ambiguity of the fediverse is muddied by how each software is trying to implement it. And it's almost hard to incentivize making your own instance.

@trachemys

[-] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

I've found Cloudflare is cheaper than Google Domains, and allows for more flexibility of setups. A $12 domain on google can be $9 or less on Cloudflare. (this is a per-year price. So the cheaper you get the domain, will exponentially be cheaper over 10+ years)

Cloudflare is also a layer of protection to your pihole. You shouldn't run in to that many issues by buying a domain but I'm not sure what you're trying to do. Just buying a domain is like buying a username, it doesn't do much until you point it somewhere. So if you're pointing it to your pi-hole to host something then I'd look in to hosting services to save yourself a bit of a security issue.

What is it you're trying to do?

Packopus

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