7/12/2023 0 Comments Manual thebrain 9ImportError: No module named html2markdownĬan you help me work through this? Thanks, and no worries if I’m asking too much. I’ve set up GitHub Desktop, installed CodeRunner, and downloaded your file, and updated the file paths. I could use some help getting started with your python script. In Obsidian, my notes get center stage while I can still use the graph view for thinking about connections. TheBrain’s Plex feels like it’s focal point, rather than my content. Obsidian flipped me by creating such a frictionless way to stay in my content. I’ve also been a TheBrain User since around 2008 (I think). Since TheBrain has historically been unique in its class, with a rich, versatile and customizable feature set, I do hope the long-term development of TheBrain 9 will follow in this tradition - and I do hope reconsideration will be given to the merits of providing more detailed documentation for those users who want to take full advantage of all the great tools and features TheBrain has to offer.Thanks, Sander. However, if this particular assumption has been the guiding principle for the development of TB9, then this may actually confirm concerns that have been shared elsewhere in this forum that too much simplification of the user interface may actually run the risk of " dumbing down" the entire application. I understand there are benefits to having a clean and streamlined user interface. ![]() In addition, since individual users have already attempted to provide "user guide" documentation for TB8 in their own web brains, this suggests to me there may be more than a few users would find an online "brain" manual to be of value of TB9:įinally, I confess I'm also concerned about the fundamental design assumption Sean mentioned: ![]() ![]() However, in it's current form, the Quick Start Brain does not include a detailed index, and it cannot be dynamically updated if it is provided as a downloadable template rather than as an online web brain resource. I hasten to add, I understand the intention now may be for TheBrain 9 Quick Start brain to serve as this "User Guide" - and I personally do like the videos provided in this brain. In fact, I thought TheBrain was already moving in this direction with the creation of this online knowledgebase for TheBrain 8: However, in this context, it seems like one (obvious?) solution to keeping the manual updated would to put the user guide documentation online in a brain where it could be maintained as a living document and regularly updated as the software evolves. I do realize that creating documentation is a demanding and exacting challenge. I'm also confused by Sean's comment: " The software evolves too quickly for us to keep it up to date easily." > Conversely, if creating a manual really is a beastly task, then how could the tips ever adequately capture everything that otherwise would have been included in a manual? > If the "less discoverable" features in TB9 can be adequately documented in the tips, then why would creating a manual (with an index) be such a "beast" of a task? In fact, the more I've thought about this, the more the logic here eludes me: (If nothing else, the tips don't include a search function or an index.) Thanks for taking time to share your feedback on this issue.Įven with the more "streamlined" interface in TB9, there are still so many "hidden" features and functions in software that I'm not sure documentation in the "tips" will be adequate. Call me old-fashioned, but TB is no Cand圜rush for relaxing but an not-too-cheap-software to be used as a tool, and I like to know my tools well to put them to best use. Maybe today a lot of people need YouTube-Explaining-Videos like from sesame-street, but I prefer also some documetation to read an in which I am able to look things up, search and have an index. I work in software testing myself and I know that developers hate writing documentation, but I think you should at least have something that explains the concepts and functionalities. (I thought it just adds arrows to the links so you could visualise some relations with it and I don't expected it to hide thoughts if you are looking from a special direction) Not only discovered I this button somewhat late, it also tricked me the first time after it seemed to do nothing at first and later, when I came back from the other thought, I just could not find the first thought. I don't even think that new users would know what features are available, for example the one-way-button in said dialog. I'm sorry, maybe I am a special kind of stupid, but I don't think that for example the dialog you get when you click on a link is all self-explanatory. ![]() PersonalBrain 4.3 Experimental Release Archive TheBrain for iOS 1.0 Beta - Password required
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