It just so happens I was thinking about spatial org just yesterday, that it would be so nice if I can have 'villages' of tabs on a (geographical) Map. Amazing co-incidence that I woke up to bonsai browser notification!…
Could tap strap[^1] be a viable solution to this? It does have some learning curve but I didn't found it too bad (was able to memorize all alphabets in a weekend). Though being as fast and accurate as keyboard will take…
someone compared mobile and web (with data from study) as Web, easier to attract, difficult to retain and vice versa for mobile. Could be the reason why web to app migration practices are followed. best of both worlds.
Indirectly related - you can try https://web.hypothes.is. You can annotate web pages (public, private, group) and have page notes.
Some people are saying self-hosting content is the way to go. People interested pursuing that way can look into "IPFS". There's lot of tools to make the "hosting" part easy (static websites are easy on bare IPFS it…
It just so happens I was thinking about spatial org just yesterday, that it would be so nice if I can have 'villages' of tabs on a (geographical) Map. Amazing co-incidence that I woke up to bonsai browser notification!…
Could tap strap[^1] be a viable solution to this? It does have some learning curve but I didn't found it too bad (was able to memorize all alphabets in a weekend). Though being as fast and accurate as keyboard will take…
someone compared mobile and web (with data from study) as Web, easier to attract, difficult to retain and vice versa for mobile. Could be the reason why web to app migration practices are followed. best of both worlds.
Indirectly related - you can try https://web.hypothes.is. You can annotate web pages (public, private, group) and have page notes.
Some people are saying self-hosting content is the way to go. People interested pursuing that way can look into "IPFS". There's lot of tools to make the "hosting" part easy (static websites are easy on bare IPFS it…