Features for the note taking app detailed in this guide include:

  • Self-hosted
  • Private
  • Built to last
  • Low maintenance
  • Access in one place & from any device (Obsidian charges for this feature)
  • Versioning
  • Zero vendor lock-in
  • Extendable (eg. passing text-embedded notes to AI)
  • non_burglar@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Really? You think it’s the “last note taking app” comment in the description?

    You don’t think maybe it’s the shoehorned AI into a project that has no real plan for how it is implemented?

    Or maybe it’s not the ai implementation, maybe it’s the fact that “respects your privacy” is incompatible with openai’s terms of use (openai can train on your notes if you supply them)?

    • moonpiedumplings@programming.dev
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      2 days ago

      I’m not spotting it. “AI” is only mentioned once.

      The key and secret in the docker compose don’t seem to be API keys, but keys for directus itself (which upon a careful reread of the article, I realize is not FOSS, which might be anpther reason people don’t like it").

      Directus does seem to have some integration with openai, but it requires at least an api key and this blog post doesn’t mention any of that.

      The current setup they are using doesn’t seem to actually connect to openai at all.