LOL! Yeah, in my browser bookmarks! It...Is...A... MESS! I basically have it in typical outline form: I.A.1.a.i.,etc., without the I.A...headers, but rather, titles. I noticed the other day that I have 3 different Linux Main chapters, 4 Tutorials Main chapters...and suddenly, an epiphany. It reminded me of my brain: a lot of things in there, but a real pain to try and find. And those mind- mapping apps? Why? They don't have any semblance of order either! They looked like the web from a spider whose all 4 pairs of eyes are crossed. I am trying to brainstorm, but then my ears fill up with water from the storm, and those tiny lightning bolts are painful! I will figure something out. Oooh! Time to go play in traffic! Momma says it's good for building up my reflexes! K, bye!
~MJC
Hey hey. My name is Michael. So, just did a quick cut&paste of part of your comment that I wish to comment on:
"Luckily, Firefox, arguably among the most 'free from corporate greed' of the browsers, has now finally caught up to Chrome on stability and speed (in my experience),"
No, you're not alone. I will absolutely agree with you about Firefox quickly catching up to Chrome and at an alarming (but satisfying) rate. By that, I only mean that Google is no longer a sort of "underdog" like it was-at least when standing next to Microsoft-(and hasn't been for some time).And I have to agree with Reda's comment that Google has become the very thing that it was trying to stomp out in Microsoft: a sort of monopoly-just-short-enough-of-being-a-monopoly to escape the law's notice. What I fear is that Google will get so big and powerful that if they did get close enough to technically qualifying as being a monopoly that they could and quite possibly would be like, "SO?! WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?" And being able to because at that point, who COULD do anything? I never thought it possible for any one company until recently. It is too close for comfort.
Thanks,
Michael
ps- sorry it was so long. I actually am working on that.
I have to agree with you... but in a...an _expanded_ sort of way. I use Epsilon and you can do anything except maybe make an Omelet. That comes out in the next version. lol. No, seriously: Epsilon is an either/or/both kind of app. It is happy letting you use Markdown, or _just_ as happy if you decide on CommonMark (which is like Github-flavored Markdown and Multi-Markdown combined, then made easier to use than either of those). It has FontAwesome Icons, Tags, Indexing, YAML, MathJax, and CSS. You can find it on G+ if you are curious but not sure if you are interested in a full commit just yet. I don't even work for or have any vested interest in Epsilon Notes. I just Love it that much. Yeah Markdown IS here to stay. It's crazy-easy to learn and even more so on the fun and useful side of things. Ciao, and Happy Coding!
~MJC