Comment by charlie0
2 months ago
The odd part here is why take it to 100%+ when you can just build a plugin on Obsidian rather than re-building the whole thing? Seems a bit extreme.
2 months ago
The odd part here is why take it to 100%+ when you can just build a plugin on Obsidian rather than re-building the whole thing? Seems a bit extreme.
In 20 years will that plugin work? I doubt it.
You can’t even compile stuff from 20 years ago without some extensive archeological efforts. I doubt this is your largest problem by then.
???
I have dozens of projects from 20 years ago that I can compile today.
6 replies →
This is why I didn't like Obsidian, half the plugins I tried didn't work despite them being in the top 20 downloaded ones. Meanwhile I'll use like 15 year old emacs plugins that haven't been updated in like 5 years and they'll work fine (I think org-diary or something along those lines was what I tried).
In 20 years you might be dead.
Directus is not eternal either. They are OSS, but you can't support it yourself forever. For a such a long run this looks like a controversial choice for me.
your ai will straight up write you the plugin if it hadnt already done that seamlessly when you requested it render your file.
Some people just enjoy the process, and you'll always learn something new