Comment by BeetleB
3 years ago
> But it's not magic, please STOP TELLING ME IT'S MAGIC. It's not better than what's out there.
While Bear has some cool features, so does Org mode. I personally like that I can author blog posts in it, put in some code in SageMath within my org document, and whenever I export the org file for publishing, it will execute that code.
I like that I can make a note and simultaneously link to an email I have, link to some code in a .cpp file, and link to a Jira ID.
I like that I can log how many minutes I spent on a writing project, and have it automatically enter that data into Beeminder.[1]
And so much more that I'm sure Bear doesn't do.
Again, you are living in the past.
- I can share a note with my wife and kids and they can live edit together.
- I can encrypt my notes and share them across the cloud.
- I can send my notes in an email, I can embed photos, videos, emails, messages in my notes.
- I can send my notes directly to my reminders and attach them to a reminder.
- I can can documents and sketches directly from my notes.
- My notes automatically look for keywords to turn into dates and reminders.
- My notes can add tags and have automatic backups and recovery.
You can also put code blocks within a note, export it, and then run it through a code executor, which is way safer than having some sort of editor automation that will slurp up a random note and hack your computer and steal all your credit card info.
Have you considered some people just don't use the same features as you?
I have tried a couple of these SaaS note-taking apps and I've immediately hated them. Too much fluff, too much bullshit only put in to justify charging a price for what is effectively notepad running in a cloud. No, I don't need to sync or share anything. I don't need integration with 50 other useless cloud products. I have very little use for software which is proprietary and can't be arbitrarily beaten into submission to do what I want, and only what I want. I have no interest in software which is mobile first and has no decent native app. And no, electron doesn't count.
Acting as though you have the superior taste and everyone who disagrees with you is just out touch only weakens your argument.
If you want to smash rocks, go smash rocks. I'm not against people who want to use emacs, or org mode, or ed and keep it to themselves. I am against people making bold faced claims to outsiders in order to entice them into an ecosystem that is solidly last century. I am against perpetuating myths and ignoring the terrible UX and learning curve of emacs+org mode. And I find it appalling how emacs drones flock to every emacs or org mode post on hacker news and spout off a bunch of nonsense about how org mode is basically nirvana.
I'm not interested in hearing about how you hate the cloud, or you need a terminal based mail editor because "bells and whistles don't appeal to you", or you need to control every aspect of your system down to the ROM to get anything done. Most of us just want to get stuff done and focus on our actual problems, and that's easy to see - big corpos aren't building out your dream world because no one wants it, that's capitalism baby. Most of us want a secure cloud. Most of us want nice, modern, easy to use features and the advances that have come with decades of UX and AI research.
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I find it amusing how you so want to tout what your favorite tool can do, and then simultaneously dismiss what other tools can do that yours can't.
Do you comprehend the basic fact that there can be more than one good tool?
> which is way safer than having some sort of editor automation that will slurp up a random note and hack your computer and steal all your credit card info.
It sounds like you have no idea about Org mode and Emacs.
What apps are you currently using?