I tired a bunch, but current state of the art is text-generation-webui
, which can load multiple models and has a workflow similar to stable-diffusion-webui
.
I tired a bunch, but current state of the art is text-generation-webui
, which can load multiple models and has a workflow similar to stable-diffusion-webui
.
Actually the Ethereum blockchain was created from this very motivation https://www.polygon.com/22709126/ethereum-creator-world-of-warcraft-nerf-nft-vitalik-buterin
You mean like things the YouTube API, where the centralized owner can decide to not show downvote data anymore?
The whole point is that the certification of ownership will even surpass the death of the game. It still work in 3rd part apps and still can be traded.
It’s simillar to a banned magic card. You can’t use it in tournament play, but you can sell it on the secondary market.
Also someone can implement and host an alternative game client to the item ownership data.
Obviously you should only play decentralized open source games to prevent the scenario of shutdown.
A database is centralized, can be shut down and is not public.
I asked this a couple of weeks ago, there were many solid suggestions: https://lemm.ee/post/4593760
I ended up with Joplin and am very happy with it.
that would be only limited to one device though. screenshot looks good.
what about emacs?
For the record, I also found that turtl is FOSS and seems to have a decent UI. I will give it a try.
I guess it does a job, but will lack some features like tagging I am accustomed to from keep. Also I would need to maintain a whole nextcloud instance for it.
Oh, I didn’t realize it was open source from the look of the website. But it actually is! And it’s active. https://github.com/standardnotes/app
I will check it out.
Hmm, latest commit 7 years ago… It was also not easy to find the “upstream” repo, the link on the website 404s. https://github.com/cognirel/Quillpad-Server
Right, obsidian didn’t appeal to me since it’s proprietary.
I probably will look into setting up a Joplin server and maybe write a frontend for it. Also didn’t try frontend options on PC yet.
Until now I only tried the Android app and while it looked quite mature, I didn’t get quite the UX from it I was anticipating.
Some things that bothered me:
Creating a note requires 2 clicks, 1 should be fine.I want to start writing and decide whether its a todo later.
Tag management. In Keep #tags are parsed from text automatically. Although there is a conflict with markdown syntax, having to issue 3 clicks to add a tag seems bothersome
Tags are not shown in the main menu, but are another view.
Didn’t figure out what notebooks are supposed to be, but i guess some kind of directory system. Don’t see the point when having a tag system. In the end they are too prominent in the UI.
But the synchronization options and markdown capabilities are a big plus. mardown is actually a feature missing in keep.
I actually stumbled upon it, but even though they have an active github account and there is an Arch Linux package, the software is proprietary. So I would rather patch the FOSS alternatives to my desire.
Results from me asking this 1Y ago: https://lemm.ee/post/4593760
Went with Joplin and using it since.