![]() ![]() Rather, I think it shows how eager folks are to hear out and encourage a diversity of use cases.Īnd with that, I’ll this thread… folks can message me if you have concerns or questions or favourite emoji to share. I don’t think the evidence supports the interpretation that this community is dismissive or hard to please. And that doesn’t include all the additional context, use cases, suggestions, and details found in the replies to those threads. 150+ previous requests were so well-received that they’re now in # feature-request-archive. There are 1000+ “sparks” in # feature-requests that have been well-received. Alas, maybe it is the Canadian superpower…) I almost locked the thread when I replied above, but I was hoping the OP would respond earlier, perhaps to clarify-or, maybe, apologize in some way shape or form… (As a Canadian, saying “sorry” is the opposite of shameful. I do think the “pile on” here is unnecessary. After that, I think the converted project will not open in the older version. Older projects should open in the latest version of Scrivener and convert it to the latest file Format automatically. If they differ, update the older to the newer version with the same license key for free. Integrating Microsoft OneDrive/Office/365 Files into ObsidianĪye. Check for the version of Scrivener in the Help > About menu.That being said, here are two related topics where the community has helped before: I would really recommend looking at other posts too and not take this post as the only picture of what the community does, because almost always the community is trying to help out. One of the best things about Obsidian is definitely the community, and I’m sorry the first impression we gave you/you got from us was a bad one. The initial content and tone of the post make it a little hard to offer any help, other than to point out how each of us is using it and maybe help OP see it from other people’s point of view (and this is what I got from both the harsh and non-harsh responses), or how some of the recently implemented features are actually useful for a lot of us. Welcome, I agree that some of the earlier comments sound a bit harsh on OP, but the latter posts read to me as examples of how people use Obsidian as a “serious” tool and not so much as piling on. ![]()
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