Software such as Obsidian lets you take notes that are linked together in a web-like way. It's then possible to visualize those notes as a graph, with graph edges supposedly representing connexions between the ideas expressed in the notes. However, in such systems the focus is principally on the note, while the connexion is a second-order consideration. I want to write software which lets you take notes, but where the focus is on the connexion between other notes first and foremost. Notes would be:- kept small and simple by design;- probably rendered by leveraging existing typesetting systems such as latex or typst;- easily connectable to other notes.The purpose of such a system would be to allow notetaking or capturing thoughts in a graph-oriented way. By having easily (dis)connectable notes, this kind of system would solve the tension between notes being documents and thus fundamentally linear, and thinking being seemingly.. hmm.. not linear.Would you be interested to try such software if it was available?Would you be interested in paying for such software if it proved convincingly useful for organizing your thoughts?If you are already using similar software, what pain points would you like addressed?
>>62175977Buy an ad
>>62175981Nigger read the post I'm not selling anything.
>>62175977an LLM that automatically asks management to fuck themselvesit should have lots of em dashes in the email too and gay little emojis when discussing serious shit like layoffs that would be fire fr fr
org mode solves this
>>62176149Normals cannot use Emacs.
>>62175977>connexions
>>62176177real men only use vi
>>62175977no one wants to buy your faggynigger SaaS scam. get a real job you deadbeat asshole.
>>62175977It sounds really interesting. I would try it. I'm just not sure of the use case of it for the average person desu. Right now it feels like a cool idea but one that probably only very few people stick to using.Like if you had to sell this to your average normie in a sentence, what would you say? Why do they need it? What's the elevator pitch?
No one will ever pay for software again now that they can vibe code whatever they need
>>62178009Vi is for people with small, weak computers.
>>62175977>Would you be interested in paying for such software if it proved convincingly useful for organizing your thoughts?I would pay for it if it was more useful than an Obsidian plugin.There's a collection of Obsidian plugins that might do what your design is