sursis
w2g
sursis | w2g | |
---|---|---|
2 | 2 | |
23 | 43 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 10.0 | |
about 2 years ago | over 3 years ago | |
Python | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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sursis
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The Fall of Roam
https://github.com/asemic-horizon/sursis
Working demo (used by like two close friends besides me; please don't vandalize it):
http://legibet.casino-rhizome.com:8501/
[There's lots of fun stuff where nodes have "weight" so we color them by the Gaussian gravity field. But the idea of notes without body is already novelty enough for one sitting, I guess]
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Show HN: Sursis, a Personal Notebook Network
This is Streamlit-based and running on a small DO droplet, so it's bound to crash if it gets any traffic. It'd be interesting nevertheless to see what happens to it if people start adding entries of their own accord, crowd pixel-drawn image style.
Source is available: https://github.com/asemic-horizon/sursis
w2g
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The Fall of Roam
A friend of Conor White-Sullivan (Roam's creator) propped up his own take on how to do a notetaking system that does support edges, and then he went a step further and opened it for everyone to edit, so it's just a single shared graph:
<https://github.com/w2g/w2g>
Mek works at the Internet Archive, and it clearly follows the same spirit of "we'll operate the service, feel free to bring your own frontend if you don't like ours". I wasn't happy with the way that one at graph.global tries to subvert/duplicate native browser features, so I put up a minimal "client" for browsing existing nodes that feels similar to the default one, sans annoyances on those specific axes:
<https://graph.5apps.com/LP/streamline>
I never got around to allowing editing, unfortunately. You'll have to use the default frontend for that (annoying, since it's buggy) or write a client of your own.
The key issue I see with the graph.global model is that you have to use triples. I've found that this results in big hurdles for throughput—i.e., the opposite of notational velocity. The ideal thing would probably be to allow a Roam-like system where you can start out by simply linking two related nodes, and then fill the edge details after the fact. You could sort of approximate this with w2g as it stands by just using a generic is-related-to connector and then reify the relation. This does mean you would lose the ability to query by relation unless you add further attributes or went back and edited the original connector to replace it with something more appropriate before reification. Stopping in your tracks to find the appropriate connector is something I found to have lots of overhead.
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Gains I'm Seeing from My Second Brain Tool
This is, in theory, what graph.global is supposed to be (by Mek from OpenLibrary / Internet Archive).
<https://github.com/w2g/w2g>
What are some alternatives?
GEM
orger - Tool to convert data into searchable and interactive org-mode views
eNMS - An enterprise-grade vendor-agnostic network automation platform.
promnesia - Another piece of your extended mind