Unless they’ve open-sourced it in the last year or so, Obsidian isn’t open source. That being said, it does have big vibes of open source. Like, there’s more to open source than simply the source code being available — it’s also about the general ethos of openness. When I was using Obsidian, I felt reassured that my notes were my own, and they would still function mostly the same if Obsidian went under. It’s a big part of why I switched to it from Notion
Yeah, but getting into org-mode low key feels like the tinkering equivalent of starting a heroin habit. I say this as someone who basically lives in org-mode nowadays. I am the weird kind of person who relishes the learning curve, and for me, getting to tinker with my tools helps keep me motivated to actually use my note taking systems. I think that people like me are outliers though.
That is to say that I don’t think “wannabe” is the right word, because Obsidian isn’t trying to be org-mode. I’d maybe call it “org-mode lite”, because of how it takes some of those features and repackages them to be more accessible to a wider audience. I don’t think that’s a bad thing though — indeed, Obsidian was my gateway drug to where I am now
Unless they’ve open-sourced it in the last year or so, Obsidian isn’t open source. That being said, it does have big vibes of open source. Like, there’s more to open source than simply the source code being available — it’s also about the general ethos of openness. When I was using Obsidian, I felt reassured that my notes were my own, and they would still function mostly the same if Obsidian went under. It’s a big part of why I switched to it from Notion
Obsidian is an org-mode/org-roam wannabe
Yeah, but getting into org-mode low key feels like the tinkering equivalent of starting a heroin habit. I say this as someone who basically lives in org-mode nowadays. I am the weird kind of person who relishes the learning curve, and for me, getting to tinker with my tools helps keep me motivated to actually use my note taking systems. I think that people like me are outliers though.
That is to say that I don’t think “wannabe” is the right word, because Obsidian isn’t trying to be org-mode. I’d maybe call it “org-mode lite”, because of how it takes some of those features and repackages them to be more accessible to a wider audience. I don’t think that’s a bad thing though — indeed, Obsidian was my gateway drug to where I am now