@@AnarchySaneIt is, these are note taking apps and since the code isn't open you may never know how private it is. While logseq you are 100% sure your data isn't going to be leaked.
Have used both. See more power in Logseq's block referencing and that makes the daily journal capable of capturing most everything. But, I don't see plugins coming over to Logseq on mobile which greatly limits it. Obsidian supports plugins on all platforms. I just wish it were block based as well.
Syncthing is also a good way to keep your documents synced -- it is a peer-to-peer way of doing so. It's a bit futsy to set up, but once you have, it's great. I use Obsidian to write and read notes, and sync them across devices using Syncthing (on all major computer and mobile platforms -- it even worked on an ancient Fire 7 tab which wouldn't run Obsidian).
@@mks-mobile its on Fdroid, since the app its open source, developers decided to release the app on an open source platform for android, which sadly is not an option with ios devices, also official logseq page allows you to download an apk file.
Tana is very good! But I have an update lol. I switched to linux as main OS and tana has no native linux app yet, so switched back to logseq. Plus logseq is markdown and more customizable, open source and is free (tana will incur a cost in future)@@mks-mobile
tana is really great but i went back to logseq as its a markdown editor now i am mostly using obsidian lol. I have pointed my logseq to a folder in my obsidian so its structured like logseq, and i have my periodic notes plugin pointing to the journals page. it works for the most part as long as i dont use dataview, still trying to find the perfedct way to blend the two. tana is extremely good but its kind of one or the other atm and its not local and not markdown@@mks-mobile
Logseq is not only "free", it is open source, which makes a big difference.
Yes, it is and it does.
This is not big difference. 😂
Open AI used to be open. But they kept the name anyway. Like a McDonalds with green walls.😂
and obsidian is not free for commercial use
@@AnarchySaneIt is, these are note taking apps and since the code isn't open you may never know how private it is. While logseq you are 100% sure your data isn't going to be leaked.
Have used both. See more power in Logseq's block referencing and that makes the daily journal capable of capturing most everything. But, I don't see plugins coming over to Logseq on mobile which greatly limits it. Obsidian supports plugins on all platforms. I just wish it were block based as well.
The block-based Obsidian would be great. Logseq's daily journal is one of the best things in the productivity world.
Syncthing is also a good way to keep your documents synced -- it is a peer-to-peer way of doing so. It's a bit futsy to set up, but once you have, it's great. I use Obsidian to write and read notes, and sync them across devices using Syncthing (on all major computer and mobile platforms -- it even worked on an ancient Fire 7 tab which wouldn't run Obsidian).
Do you do like this instead of subscribing to Obsidian?
Logseq is on Android as well, just not in the play store
Is it the official Logseq app? If it is, why not on Google Play then?
@@mks-mobile its on Fdroid, since the app its open source, developers decided to release the app on an open source platform for android, which sadly is not an option with ios devices, also official logseq page allows you to download an apk file.
Finally someone made this video, thank you!
No problem!
Thank you!
No worries. Thank you for your feedback.
logseq is great for daily journaling but i using tana now
Is Tana good?
Tana is very good! But I have an update lol. I switched to linux as main OS and tana has no native linux app yet, so switched back to logseq. Plus logseq is markdown and more customizable, open source and is free (tana will incur a cost in future)@@mks-mobile
*I use logseq as like an online bullet journal but i use obsidian for most note taking
tana is really great but i went back to logseq as its a markdown editor now i am mostly using obsidian lol. I have pointed my logseq to a folder in my obsidian so its structured like logseq, and i have my periodic notes plugin pointing to the journals page. it works for the most part as long as i dont use dataview, still trying to find the perfedct way to blend the two. tana is extremely good but its kind of one or the other atm and its not local and not markdown@@mks-mobile