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[1002.56 --> 1004.10] I have cracked a couple of them open.
[1004.56 --> 1006.64] And this one is actually pretty neat.
[1007.76 --> 1013.60] It's just the problem is I feel like Z-Wave's going away because matter's becoming more and more of a thing.
[1014.26 --> 1015.06] It uses Zigbee.
[1015.84 --> 1017.18] I feel like Z-Wave's just getting abandoned.
[1017.52 --> 1021.50] But I think it's 900 MHz, I think, is the superior radio for this kind of stuff.
[1021.86 --> 1023.78] Because you want it to be reliable like a rock, right?
[1023.78 --> 1027.82] You flip a switch, and you want it to immediately turn that light on.
[1028.88 --> 1030.02] That's what you get with Z-Wave.
[1030.02 --> 1030.38] Hmm.
[1030.78 --> 1031.30] You get real.
[1031.38 --> 1037.80] Because it takes it off your TCP IP network, takes it off of the Wi-Fi, moves it off of 2.4 GHz,
[1038.00 --> 1042.12] and puts it down on this super efficient 915 MHz radio network.
[1042.64 --> 1044.12] Just a gosh darn thing of beauty.
[1045.06 --> 1048.58] So anyways, I'll put a link to my multi-sensor that I really like in the show notes.
[1049.26 --> 1051.80] Now, you weren't ever an Evernote user by any chance, were you?
[1052.28 --> 1052.64] No.
[1053.18 --> 1053.74] You lucked out.
[1054.08 --> 1060.00] I'm more of a kind of SSH into my server and just nano a text file kind of guy, to be honest.
[1060.62 --> 1065.30] I started using Evernote way a long time ago when, like, the iPhone was new.
[1065.56 --> 1066.78] And then kind of faded on it.
[1067.42 --> 1071.46] Because they just did all these different permutations of UI and technology.
[1071.84 --> 1073.64] But my wife stuck with it.
[1073.68 --> 1074.80] She really likes it.
[1075.22 --> 1079.62] It's one of the few apps where you can throw a bunch of different kinds of data,
[1079.72 --> 1083.60] from pictures to PDFs to website clippings to notes.
[1083.84 --> 1086.98] And it will index and OCR and tag it for you.
[1087.44 --> 1091.54] And then years later, you can search for, like, RV exhaust, right?
[1091.58 --> 1095.24] It'll show the PDF from the manufacturer that we put in there that talks about our exhaust system.
[1096.16 --> 1097.84] It's really handy for that kind of stuff.
[1097.86 --> 1101.76] Or you could take a picture of a business card and search that person's name.
[1102.24 --> 1103.26] And it'll find it, right?
[1103.28 --> 1106.00] Because it does the optical character recognition stuff.
[1106.00 --> 1110.52] But they've been sold to a company called Bending Spoons.
[1111.48 --> 1114.68] And Evernote says the acquisition should be completed in early 2023.
[1115.04 --> 1116.44] And you'll love this one, Joe.
[1117.22 --> 1118.80] They say nothing's going to change.
[1119.18 --> 1120.16] It's going to be a good investment.
[1120.16 --> 1122.22] That's always what happens with acquisitions, right?
[1122.80 --> 1123.00] Yeah.
[1123.28 --> 1126.08] Yeah, it's usually actually a warning sign these days when they say that.
[1126.44 --> 1127.08] I start to worry.
[1129.00 --> 1129.50] Uh-oh.
[1129.98 --> 1131.36] They say nothing's going to change.
[1131.68 --> 1131.96] Uh-oh.
[1133.16 --> 1137.42] Yeah, so I feel like this is probably something we should look into on the show.
[1137.50 --> 1138.90] So I kind of wanted to put a call out there.
[1138.90 --> 1145.92] I'm curious if anybody has a self-hosted solution for something that kind of worked like Evernote.
[1146.02 --> 1147.40] You know, a textual data store.
[1147.54 --> 1148.30] You can index it.
[1148.38 --> 1149.10] You can search it.
[1149.16 --> 1152.34] It'll do the OCR of a PDF or a picture you throw in there.
[1152.70 --> 1156.46] You know, maybe it'll even have an app on the phone that takes a picture of something and throws it in there.
[1156.56 --> 1158.70] Ideally, it has a phone app and a desktop app.
[1158.74 --> 1160.80] And ideally, it has sync and offline support.
[1161.66 --> 1164.52] Also, ideally, multi-user or some kind of sharing.
[1164.78 --> 1168.08] So the wife could create a note and then share it with me and vice versa.
[1168.08 --> 1170.52] And I know I hear Obsidian already.
[1170.72 --> 1171.48] People are writing Obsidian.
[1172.04 --> 1176.48] But I just don't think that's going to have high wife approval factor.
[1176.88 --> 1178.56] It sounds like you're looking for a unicorn here.
[1178.70 --> 1185.42] That does not sound like it's even possible without a huge company behind it to have all those features.
[1186.02 --> 1186.26] Yeah.
[1186.42 --> 1189.28] I know Notion's an idea that, you know, it's again, but you're right.
[1189.58 --> 1190.50] Company behind that.
[1190.66 --> 1192.44] There's a couple of other ones I've looked at recently.
[1192.88 --> 1193.12] But yeah.
[1193.44 --> 1194.60] Now, what you want to do is, right,
[1194.60 --> 1211.80] you want to have a horrible mess of Telegram messages that you send to yourself and some Google Docs and some, like I said, just text files on a server somewhere, maybe on your NAS that you can't even remember which directory you put it in.
[1211.80 --> 1213.30] And that's the best way to do it.
[1213.30 --> 1217.26] And then you just force yourself to remember things the hard way.
[1217.52 --> 1218.00] And it's more fun.
[1218.00 --> 1218.02] Yeah.
[1218.88 --> 1221.22] There's a little bit of that approach currently for myself.
[1221.74 --> 1227.56] The random documents on my server thing kind of hits home because I haven't restored.
[1227.56 --> 1233.32] Like I had this little web UI that would render the markdown files into like this web browser thing so I could view my notes.
[1233.76 --> 1237.72] But I haven't reinstalled that since my new server setup because I just don't use it that much.
[1238.08 --> 1240.76] But when I do need the notes, I got SSH in.
[1241.20 --> 1242.56] I got to look it up in Nano.
[1244.00 --> 1244.40] Yeah.
[1244.44 --> 1248.58] And then you can really top it off with some LibreOffice docs and some text files.
[1248.78 --> 1252.58] So depending on whether you're actually at your desktop or SSH in to somewhere.
[1252.96 --> 1254.62] Well, maybe somebody out there can save me.
[1254.62 --> 1257.08] I do not want to do OneNote.
[1257.56 --> 1259.52] I have heard that one quite a bit as well.
[1259.74 --> 1262.82] But just not particularly interested in that ecosystem.
[1263.08 --> 1266.66] And it would really be nice if it's something that I could self-host.
[1266.90 --> 1268.34] I actually kind of feel like that's a requirement.
[1268.52 --> 1271.98] Because otherwise, why not just stick with Evernote for a little bit longer until they really crash that ship.
[1272.68 --> 1273.64] So let us know.
[1274.16 --> 1275.54] Self-hosted.show slash contact.
[1277.66 --> 1283.64] Visit CrowdStrike.com slash LCE to ingest and view all of your logs in one place.
[1283.64 --> 1289.48] Yeah, CrowdStrike Falcon LogScale is CrowdStrike's new centralized log management and observability tool.
[1289.92 --> 1299.38] Formerly known as Humio, LogScale was developed as an alternative to legacy logging solutions that made it cost prohibitive to ingest and search the data that you just see in today's IT infrastructures.
[1299.80 --> 1303.98] And the real beauty of LogScale is that it can take logs from any source and make them usable.
[1304.30 --> 1307.30] You don't need to constantly massage the formats and tweak it.
[1307.48 --> 1308.40] It doesn't need a schema.
[1308.76 --> 1311.14] You just pump it all in there and you have it when you need it.
[1311.22 --> 1311.82] And the dashboard?
[1311.82 --> 1312.80] It's great.