230 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2025
  2. May 2025
  3. Apr 2025
  4. Mar 2025
  5. Feb 2025
    1. n experiment So today, as a somewhat limited experiment, I played around with my Hypothes.is atom feed 49 (https://hypothes.is/stream.atom?user=chrisaldrich 39, because you know you want to subscribe to this 33) and piped it into IFTTT 22. Each post creates a new document in a OneDrive file which I can convert to a markdown .md file that can be picked up by my Obsidian client. While I can’t easily get the tags the way I’d like (because they’re not included in the feed) and the formatting is incredibly close, but not quite there, the result is actually quite nice. Since I can “drop” all my new notes into a particular folder, I can easily process them all at a later date/time if necessary. In fact, I find that the fact that I might want to revisit all my notes to do quick tweaks or adding links or additional thoughts provides the added benefit of a first round of spaced repetition for the notes I took. Some notes may end up being deleted or reshuffled, but one thing is clear: I’ve never been able to so simply highlight, annotate, and take notes on documents online and get them into my notebook so quickly. And when I want to do something with them, there they are, already sitting in my notebook for manipulation, cross-linking, spaced repetition, and review. So if the developers of any of these platforms are paying attention, I (and I’m sure others) really can’t wait for plugin integrations using the full power of the Hypothes.is API that allow us to all leverage Hypothes.is’ user interface to make our workflows seamlessly simple.
  6. Oct 2024
  7. Sep 2024
    1. We’ve been careful to implement Latticework’s features in the same spirit. Snippet links are stored as ordinary links using standard W3C Selector URL fragments to specify an arbitrary text range

      Using Latticework does not break the 'Obsidian is only a viewer' principle cf [[3 Distributed Eigenschappen 20180703150724]]. It adds markdown style links according to W3C selector url standard. Nice, because it maintains readable plain text files.

  8. Aug 2024
  9. Jun 2024
      • This package can convert files between different document formats.

      • It provides several classes that can take files from one document format to another document format.

      • Currently, it can convert document files between:

      • Microsoft Excel to PDF

      • HTML to PDF

      • Image to PDF

      • Markdown to PDF

      • PDF to Microsoft Excel

      • PDF to HTML

      • PDF to Image

      • PDF to Markdown

      • PDF to RTF

      • PDF to Text

      • PDF Word

      • RTF to PDF

      • Text to PDF

  10. May 2024
  11. Apr 2024
  12. Jan 2024
  13. Dec 2023
  14. Nov 2023
    1. Heptabase is only able to offer both ease of creation and administratin on the same note because it breaks with both Zettlr and Obsidian in having the version of the markdown note safe for a human (as opposed to a computer) to edit be an export only format. But that of course breaks with a fundamental paradigm in Obsidian that your notes are always just a bunch of markdown files importable and exportable to anything. In Heptabase they aren't. Heptabase simplifies the workflow by making the data structure of notes too exacting for a human.

      Sounds like the Heptabase markdown export content isn't easily readable and editable? Would be a huge concern for Heptabase-and-Obsidian interoperability, or Heptabase with any other markdown-compatible tools.

  15. Oct 2023
  16. Sep 2023
  17. Jun 2023
  18. May 2023
  19. Mar 2023
  20. Feb 2023
    1. I used SjoerdV / ConvertOneNote2MarkDown PowerShell script. The key is running PowerShell and OneNote as Administrator.It will crash a bunch of times depending on the size of your OneNote repository. However, if you keep restarting the program as administrator it seems to start back were it left off.Here are my notes: https://www.dropbox.com/s/au66hamcv71sggk/202211151246%20OneNote%20to%20Markdown%20Procedure.pdf?dl=0

      Details for converting OneNote to Obsidian using Markdown

  21. Jan 2023
  22. Dec 2022
    1. Generate HTML and meta files

      For this, we use Pandoc's YAML metadata blocks or approaches inspired by it. Our data publishing package MiniDocs (which is a prerequisite of TiddlyWikiPharo), provides a YAML metadata importer/transformer to native Pharo dictionaries that can be added to tiddlers. An alternative route from tiddlers metadata to Markdown could be easily implemented (but, as told our focus has been Markdown to WikiText migrations so far)

  23. Nov 2022
  24. Oct 2022
  25. cosma.graphlab.fr cosma.graphlab.fr
    1. https://cosma.graphlab.fr/<br /> https://cosma.graphlab.fr/en/

      When did this come out?

      Appears to be a visualization tool for knowledge work. They recommend it for use with Zettlr, but it looks like it would work with other text based tools. Point it at markdown files to create graphs apparently.

      This looks like the sort of standards based tool that would allow greater flexibility when using various data stores that we talk about in Friends of the Link.

      <small><cite class='h-cite via'> <span class='p-author h-card'>Arthur Perret </span> in And you, what are you doing? (<time class='dt-published'>08/31/2022 02:40:03</time>)</cite></small>

      @flancian

  26. Sep 2022
  27. Aug 2022
  28. Jul 2022
  29. Jun 2022
  30. May 2022
  31. Apr 2022
  32. Mar 2022
  33. Feb 2022
    1. Git Graph (Experimental)

      Git graphs are a way to visualize your Git project commits, merges, and progress.

      mermaid gitGraph: options { "nodeSpacing": 150, "nodeRadius": 10 } end commit branch newbranch checkout newbranch commit commit checkout master commit commit merge newbranch

  34. Jan 2022
    1. An extension to python markdown that takes metadata embedded as YAML in a page of markdown and render it as JSON-LD in the HTML created by MkDocs.
      • YAML input

        "@context": "http://schema.org"
        "@id": "#lesson1"
        "@type":
          - CreativeWork
        learningResourceType: LessonPlan
        hasPart: {
        "@id": "#activity1"
        }
        author:
          "@type": Person
          name: Phil Barker
        
      • Default JSON-LD output

        <script type="application/ld+json">
        { "@context":  "http://schema.org",
        "@id": "#lesson1",
        "@type":["CreativeWork"],
        "learningResourceType": "LessonPlan",
        "name": "Practice Counting Strategies",
        "hasPart": {
          "@id": "#activity1-1"
        }
        "author": {
          "@type": "Person"
          "name": "Phil Barker"
        }
        }
        </script>
        
    1. The metadata that we use for OCX is a profile of schema.org / LRMI,  OERSchema and few bits that we have added because we couldn’t find them elsewhere. Here’s what (mostly) schema.org metadata looks like in YAML:
      "@context":
          - "http://schema.org"
          - "oer": "http://oerschema.org/"
          - "ocx": "https://github.com/K12OCX/k12ocx-specs/"
      "@id": "#Lesson1"
      "@type":
          - oer:Lesson
          - CreativeWork
      learningResourceType: LessonPlan
      hasPart:
        "@id": "#activity1-1"
      author:
          "@type": Person
          name: Phil Barker
      
    1. Don't know if it helps, but we got a markdown processor at InLinks.net that automatically build Schema.org/WebPage elements including about/sameAs and mentions/SameAs properties for entities discovered in HTML pages. Examples shown in the image below

    1. What if we could embed semantic annotations in a markdown document ? We would get Semantic Markdown ! imagine the best of both worlds between human readable/writable documents and machine-readable/writable (RDF) structured data. We could feed an RDF knowledge graph that is coupled with our set of MD documents, and we would have an easy way to put structure in content.

      Cc: @chrisaldrich

  35. Dec 2021
  36. Nov 2021
    1. Readability, however, is emphasized above all else. A Markdown-formatted document should be publishable as-is, as plain text, without looking like it’s been marked up with tags or formatting instructions.

      Most Markdown that gets published to GitHub is clearly written by people who have no problem grinding their muddy shoes all over this design principle.

      (Vanilla Markdown's syntax for inline links doesn't do a particularly good job upholding this principle itself.)

  37. Oct 2021
  38. Sep 2021
    1. there's no light

      I'm preparing to write something that I am sure will change the face of "who we are."  That's what it's designed for, and it's something I've put off because of the fear that it will literally make me disappear from some parts of "Creation" (as, that means everything) ... I want to change how this world thinks and deals with "freedom of body and mind" and I want us to have a secure belief that the memories and the soul of a person ccannot be sold ever, that you don't have any right to "sharing my life" and that I have the right to share whatever I want with you--and clearly understand that our "i" has changed at "freedom" and I want us all to be able to do these things--these things that I know take ancient souls and thousands of years of memory and renew them with happiness.  

      I can't havve a universe or a world that allows some authority to keep you from your own souls and your own memories, and frankly from being able to see anything that anyone wants to share.  At the heart of "freedom of speech" and the ability to see that I am trying to show you what "the J memory" actually means--and the Universe needs to see that it does something bettter than "the embarrassing sum of my memories" or perhaps even worse than that the selected lies and disruption of something that I don't know--haven't experienced--and hasnt affected who and what I am or the words that I know connect Creation and this message to proof and Acts.

      Literally I stand here seeing the "hidden use of a memory manager" connect those three letters to who and what I really am--to what I belief is my past and present and my working memory--and I know it has holes in it, and I know it has significant assisted outside information added and I see it's literally encoded in "firefly pattern of J" and the phylum and kingdum "Photinus Pyralis."  It's another artifact of a nameserver that sees everything in the world at this singular most important moment in the history of conscouus evolution and has named these things so that we will see just how important it is. 

      I'm not really asking, I'm telling you.  These are words that used to be encoded in the state of South Carolina when salvation came from "Exit to Eden" and in "Are you for SCUBA" and in Aruba's on Commercial Blvd just outsoude the McNamara plague; so I'm telling you our souls are not for sale, they are not property, and shared memories are revokable. Period. 

      [ a cheaper collector's item, still in color ]

      I'm trying to help us see how these technologies can and have been abused--and how it's central to this story and this place that we build a "subconscious voting system" that actually votes based on "what you really want" rather than some kind of predefined pyramidal "I'm voting with Dr. Dre" or sacking the Blitzkrieg.  We have the ability to do either thing; and we have the ability to see how swarm and hive behavior is literally encoded in our countries foundational structure--how voting against party lines is not just a priviledge it's a demand when the "party is wrong" and believe me, the party is always wrong if you are autovoting.  It's foundational to what "democratic process" means, and we live in a world that has somehow been gamed into gaming itself out of "free speech" and "free press" and that's a sicknesss that needs to be remedied for all time. 

      I want to write about all the "good things we can add" and how that J means "adding wikipedia like auto understanding" and adding "functionally related memories and beliefs" specifically ... "for that J memory" as a foundational paradigm shift in "what's possible" here in this place where we refuse to acknowledge gthat this message tells us we are ignoring significant benefit to Nassau from Sawtelle to "listen to the last obligotatory lessage."

      I want to Ramble On about how there is a defunct series of beliefs here in this place that show that our souls are currently frought with "tautologocial fallacy" and we have the ability to "autocorrect" things like that--things that are the source of racism and jingoism and believing that you are somehow "correct" to stare at this world and think that freedom only belongs to "some kind of animal of higher evolution" -- we stare at a message about malarkey and malady and if you don't see it today, you will soon understand how this place defines the solid line between "sanity and goodness" and dead.

      Memories or lies that are dead and gone, or maybe more.  I cannot fathom how we do not understand the direness of the "straights" you stare at, how we cannot see the danger we have imposed on ourselves and the future by ignoring this place, and I will nto stand for it continuing. 

      Every word you read, every phrase and every picture could be; should be connectedt to a series of memories, facts, ideas, and those things should be clearly delineated--thats the purpose of this "beginning of a message that is the end of mess and start of sages."

      i dont know why this is missing, but its definately "the original" and we definately are missing quite a bit of the words on this page.

  39. Aug 2021
  40. Jul 2021
  41. May 2021
  42. Apr 2021
    1. Joplin is a free, open source note taking and to-do application, which can handle a large number of notes organised into notebooks. The notes are searchable, can be copied, tagged and modified either from the applications directly or from your own text editor. The notes are in Markdown format.

      This might be an interesting tool to do import/export from Evernote and/or OneNote to get documents into markdown format (possibly for use in Obsidian.)

  43. Mar 2021
  44. Feb 2021
  45. Dec 2020
  46. Oct 2020
  47. mdxjs.com mdxjs.com
    1. Long comment threads on blog posts are a mixed blessing. It is great to have stirred up such great community discussion. But anything beyond, say, 20 comments is beginning to get beyond what anyone is willing to actually read. What likely happens is people read the article, read the first few comments, then start just scanning them (at increasingly swift rates) until they hit the bottom, then read the last one or two. At least, that’s what I do.

      Doing a quick test of Hypothes.is notes to Obsidian.via a storage source.

      Also checking the difference between html as a source and markdown as a source.

  48. Jul 2020
  49. Jun 2020
  50. May 2020
    1. Sin embargo, con la ayuda de mis compañeros logré hacerlo; esto demostró la importancia del trabajo colaborativo. Página de Ejercicio en Markdown.

      Tanto esa página como esta, da cuenta de las apropiaciones de Markdown como manera de publicar el hipertexto para expresar parte de nuestra voz es espacios digitales.

      En la página enlazada, no hay títulos de jerarquía 1, que empiezan con #, sino que se empieza con subtítulos, que empiezan con ##. Si se considera la estructuración semántica de las páginas, no deberían haber subtítulos sin títulos.

  51. Apr 2020
    1. This is pretty old now, but it should absolutely be mentioned that you can NOT always fall back to html - I suspect that MOST places that support markdown don't support html.

      Not sure if this is true, though. GitHub and GitLab support HTML, for example.

      Maybe comments on websites wouldn't normally allow it; I don't know. But they should. One can use this filter, for example, to make it safer.