I stopped using out of the box solutions and made my own system, perhaps you would want something similar? Made a blog post about it: https://thesloth.me/posts/6/
I hack in an obsidian sync by putting the vault on google drive lol
The thought mapping is actually its greatest strength and main reason for existing but everyone uses it as an Evernote alternative.
To me, app access is #1 feature because that's where I use my notes. Only Evernote and Obsidian have done this fine on Android. Obsidian is still quite janky with the markdown. Bear is perfect, but they don't do Android.
Hi, in which context are you referring to the 'hashes'?
If you're asking about the hashes for required packages in 'Chapter 3. Packages and Patched', the hashes should match if you're downloading from the provided mirror - https://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/mirrors.html#files
Downloading from these mirrors ensures that you have the exact version needed for the build, in any other cases you run the risk of the system not working as expected / documented in the book.
Yeah i totally agree with your comment. Just to clarify for anyone reading this - it was not my intention to downgrade the value of building an LFS, but rather i wanted to set a realistic expectations on what you can expect to learn, so that you don't do it for the wrong reasons.
Great article! thx for sharing. I'm currently contributing to Dagger(https://dagger.io) and this looks like a great idea to generalize as a Dagger library. By any chance did you think about it?