That's what I like about Siyuan and Affine. I can have journal-like daily notes to quickly dump thoughts, but I can then re-arrange or cross-reference individual blocks in(to) other pages, that in turn can be in a nested folder structure and/or tagged. I can quite flexibly mix and match organization structures.
aksdb
That, on the other hand, is only viable, if you are sure, data never needs to expire. Dedicated backup solutions work with retention policies.
Where I could see an LLM being useful is categorizing entries and maybe proposing sanitization (for example when the payment provider uppercases or abbreviates stuff)
The cheat developers, yes. Because there is demand. The question though was, why there is demand.
From maybe to definitely not.
SiYuan or Affine. Both have daily notes and normal notes. You can move and reference blocks between documents. That way I can start unstructured (just bullet points in a daily note) and then later either add cross references or start moving it into structured notes directly.
If you like Lord of the Rings: Lord of the Rings Online is extremely nice story wise. It's an old school MMO, but that shouldn't shock you when you only know old school ones anyway.
If a low initial fee is fine, wait for Elder Scrolls Online sale. You can regularly get the base game for $5 or so. It has no forced monthly cost so those $5 are worth hundreds of hours or quest content.
It's really sad. I truly believe that Yves (or rather the Guillemots in general) were passionate about game development once. Now it feels mostly corporate, even though they still claim to be pro-gamer and innovative and fun. It's double sad because they acquired quite some good studios that have to be shaped into their corp structure and ultimately lose their innovation. It's not as bad as old-school EA, but it's still subjectively bad.
Just to clarify: OwnCloud or OwnCloud Infinite Scale (OCIS)?
Probably some fastboot shit. I like the idea of fastboot... if only it wasn't so tied to Windows.
The ONLY thing I don't like about it is having to finish the install of windows before you can wipe the ssd.
Why? Can't you get to the bios, change to usb boot loader, boot linux and wipe the disk?
I use Kopia to perform incremental encrypted backups (with some retention policy of up to two years) and store them on Backblaze B2, which is reasonably cheap.