Based on our record, GitJournal seems to be a lot more popular than Falcon. While we know about 23 links to GitJournal, we've tracked only 2 mentions of Falcon. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
It crossed my mind to do a daily Jupyter notebook but I typically don’t need them to be interactive code. The closest solution that I’ve found looks like: GitJournal does anyone have experience with this or other solutions? Source: over 1 year ago
See this gem too - https://gitjournal.io/. Source: over 1 year ago
If you are working with text files and git, gitjournal works well for me. It defaults to Markdown, but if you just edit in raw mode, you can do anything in the text file. Source: over 1 year ago
I've been searching for a while for something that would let me simply publish from my phone. I actually saw GitJournal in the Play store a couple of times, but I assumed it would only use GitHub to back up its own proprietary file format and so be useful. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
There are plenty of desktop/mobile apps for working with markdown. (I've been using Notable (desktop) and GitJournal (mobile ) for an Evernote-like experience.) And markdown is often extended with support for internal links like a wiki, attachments, diagramming (see Mermaid), and easy export to other formats like HTML. Source: almost 2 years ago
This is why you run one process per core, and you'll typically have something like nginx+uWSGI distribute requests across them. I use this combination with https://falconframework.org/ and boto3 to spool HTTP POST requests to S3 and SQS and am pretty happy with it. - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
Falcon is a Python Web framework for building large-scale app backends and microservices. It encourages the REST architectural style, and tries to do as little as possible while remaining highly effective. - Source: dev.to / about 3 years ago
Joplin - Joplin is a free, open source note taking and to-do application, which can handle a large number of notes organised into notebooks. The notes are searchable, tagged and modified either from the applications directly or from your own text editor.
Node.js - Node.js is a platform built on Chrome's JavaScript runtime for easily building fast, scalable network applications
Obsidian.md - A second brain, for you, forever. Obsidian is a powerful knowledge base that works on top of a local folder of plain text Markdown files.
Django - The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines
Logseq - Logseq is a local-first, non-linear, outliner notebook for organizing and sharing your personal knowledge base.
Ruby on Rails - Ruby on Rails is an open source full-stack web application framework for the Ruby programming...