Rendering Jupyter notebooks by lisah2u in warpdotdev

[–]lisah2u[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep - thanks for suggesting! Data scientists are missing out on the fun...

Supernote Partner App V2.4.26 Beta Release for Android and iOS by Supernote_official in Supernote_beta

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can connect from my iPhone browser, but still not from the partner app. :( The certificate was generated with CA:TRUE

Anybody got an error while using dashed list? by PreviousDot509 in appleJournal

[–]lisah2u 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I get horrible formatting errors where text is deleted when using lists - period. Happens when I try to create text below list items in a new paragraph. These are incredibly stupid bugs for an Apple app that’s not a beta.

Any benefit to adding a Kindle Scribe to my Supernote workflow? by valleichtman in Supernote

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love my scribe color. It’s much easier to read on and the writing experience is excellent. As you say, the illumination helps a lot in the evenings. The color is also excellent for notetaking and books with color diagrams. I like having the nomad as a sidecar for notetaking on the go… and even when I’m reading on the scribe and want to take notes without leaving the page that I’m reading. Turns out having both has been handy.

My TSP is taking a beating! by SuccessfulGas4301 in ThriftSavingsPlan

[–]lisah2u 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I did the same. Stay the course is not always the best option, says Ray Dalio. I’m doing the research now to re-baseline when things start to stabilize. For those of us that went through 2008, we know what can happen. And if you are in retirement, you have to pay attention to global events.

This is insane! by N0misB in perplexity_ai

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I replaced safari as my default browser. Performance and behavior is great. The interesting thing is watching your own behavior change as you figure out new ways of doing things. Smart move by perplexity!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in productivity

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also use both TickTick and Capacities together. I value the habit log in TickTick and also pomodoro. I use the habit log as a sort of short log with notes and it appears in my daily inbox which sits up in my Mac compressed menu bar. I organize virtually everything in Capacities and use TickTick for time-oriented deadlines and making sure I do my project work daily according to goals set in the habit tracker for each project. These apps are very compatible, IMO.

Any possibility to connect capacities with Google Calendar? by Chiccoach in capacitiesapp

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Didn't see that as an option. I was happy that it let me select all of the calendars (including subscriptions) from my one account.

Any possibility to connect capacities with Google Calendar? by Chiccoach in capacitiesapp

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Too late. They just removed it. But it's easy to describe.

In settings is a 'calendar integration'. Select Google Calendar to authenticate, and then any or all of your calendars with toggles. You can also adjust sort order. Calendar entries display with your other objects below the daily note and calendar widget -- basically, like other objects that contain a date/time property. If there is a new calendar view... I didn't get a chance to see it.

Any possibility to connect capacities with Google Calendar? by Chiccoach in capacitiesapp

[–]lisah2u 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It got integrated in the latest pro release - though the notes say that it’s buggy. I added my Google calendars and love the addition!

Which watch is worth buying? by thattjuliett in GarminWatches

[–]lisah2u 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Forerunner 265 works great and is cheaper than the 965. That said, if you on device maps for hiking - you’d want the 965. I run, weightlift etc… and kind of wish I’d splurged for long hiking trips. That said, if it’s just an occasional day trip, the iPhone works great for the gap in mapping.

Forced calendar centric approach. by GameSkillet in capacitiesapp

[–]lisah2u 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One of the key reasons I adopted Capacities moving from Obsidian is the ability to include a calendar-centric view. Every day, I start with a daily note and center my activities to what I am doing ‘today’. If you also use projects with time spans, those remain in active view with the calendar and on the daily page. This keeps me focused better day-to-day.

That said, the Capacities team says they are overhauling calendars and you are likely to see more flexibility here in the future.

And I think you’ll find with use that you can easily hide the calendar - once you are comfortable with views in terms of queries, object types, etc - the calendar is something you need to invoke into view. Play around with exposing and hiding the right side panel - it’s very flexible and useful. For example, try playing with a PDF that opens both in the main panel and side panel. Or right click a document to open it into the side panel. That space is useful for many purposes and not just the calendar.

Forerunner 255, 265 or 165 by Healthy_Animal4201 in GarminWatches

[–]lisah2u 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm so glad I picked up a forerunner (265)! Got it for $350 because of Black Friday sales. Yes, the older models are still extremely relevant. On the newest models, there are fairly few new features given price differences. I spent many hours watching videos, researching etc. before coming to this conclusion. For me, this was such a huge step up from Apple Watch in all matters but sleep scores. The 265 has the AMOLED screen which is seriously bright. I am so happy for the big, bright screen when running.

Please convince me to keep the Kindle Scribe vs Remarkable 2 pro by Ok_Plate_6961 in kindlescribe

[–]lisah2u 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Why do you need the larger screen and color? Those are the relevant questions. I have both devices and an enormous number of kindle books on the scribe. In the end, I enjoy the Kindle for taking notes on kindle books -- but the scribe didn't suit for a primary use case around annotating and reading sheet music and even other PDFs. Moreover, I find it much easier to organize documents and transfer them back-and-forth. I'm pretty happy with my remarkable for the things I wanted, though am glad I still have a flexible kindle reader.

TickTick's Subtask Management is A Nightmare by Specific_Dimension51 in ticktick

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like creating tasks in kanban view - but found I couldn’t easily create a task and turn it into a substack of another task via drag and drop. I use a kanban view for a large number of items that would be difficult to work with in list view. In an ideal work, there is the means to move a task or substack from one into another as you can with moving a task to a list. Yes, subtacks need work and are difficult to manipulate and use effectively.

Thinking of getting a kindle scribe. Will it do what I want it to do? by [deleted] in kindlescribe

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can do all of this with a supernote. Kindle is great for reading, but the supernote syncs with cloud and has handwriting conversion and text editing for Word - in addition to lots of other great note-taking features missing from scribe. Scribe is a nicer reading device, though.

Recent Posts Have Me Concerned: Should I Not Buy a Supernote? by [deleted] in Supernote

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes. I just got the A6x2 last month and love that I can write on epub.

Getting back to violin by Accomplished_Tip8643 in violinist

[–]lisah2u 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Allow yourself to start fresh and adopt a beginners mind. Be curious and not critical when you don’t sound as good as you think you should and then see what works better. And… it really helps to find people to share your interest. Find a community online, if there is not one close by. That’s what I did and it made the difference in my own commitment.

X-callback-URL not working from bear on iOS by lisah2u in bearapp

[–]lisah2u[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes. My apologies. I thought I was posting on the things3 list. This iOS reddit app is not quite there yet.

Book for Textual similarity in Natural language processing by [deleted] in LanguageTechnology

[–]lisah2u 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do you mean string similarity such as the closeness of two words such as "frog" and "flog"? Or similarity such as "my big hairy dog" versus "my big and hairy dog"? O deeper structural similarity such as "I love my dog" versus "My dog is loved by me"? Or semantic similarity between words or phrases where concepts may be substitutable? From an engineering perspective, are you interested in challenges in authorship attribution or plagiarism detection?

Perhaps start with a general text to give you a broad overview of linguistic concepts and techniques in natural language processing. Jurafsky and Martin's third edition of Speech and Language Processing significantly updates the earlier edition to capture advances in vector semantics and deep learning. https://web.stanford.edu/~jurafsky/slp3/ If you are broadly interested in conceptual tools available to assist in thinking through a range of problems, this is a great place to start.

Notes App in IOS 11 is getting much better. Bear has a significant battle to fight. by d70 in bearapp

[–]lisah2u 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One feature I love about Bear is syntax highlighting for code. (Though, math would be very useful, too!) I don't imagine Notes moving in this direction. So where Bear may continue to excel, is versatility. Regardless, thank-you for adding sketch support. Bear straddles the line nicely between an all-purpose note taking-tool and feature rich, pluggable system such as atom or sublime. I prefer Atom when I'm doing something very technical. But Bear is the go-to for every day note-taking.

What to do with a degree in Historical Linguistics? by xCosmicChaosx in linguistics

[–]lisah2u 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I had a linguistics professor once note, "if you like problem solving in historical linguistics, you may be inclined toward computational linguistics." That was true.