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Evernotecom
Evernotecom




evernotecom

if you were using markdown docs for online documentation (like the Joplin help website) then you could change all the subheaders from showing as black, 20pt, bold to blue, 18pt, italics without ever needing to change the content of the documentation itself. The only difference is that markdown is significantly easier to write and more importantly to read than something like html - a markdown document is just as easy to read in plain text as it is in its rendered form.Īlso because the real "formatting" is done by a rendering step rather than baked into the markdown code itself it allows you to display that rendered output differently depending on what you want. So in the same way that a web browser knows to read the text this will be bolded and display it as this will be bolded rather than including the tags, a markdown renderer knows it has to do the same thing when it sees **stars around some words** instead. In that sense it is no different from HTML (which is normally what markdown is converted into when displaying it). Slightly off topic but essentially its a markup language, it simply allows formatting of text without storing the formatting as metadata, instead it is just plain text. New to the world of markdown - and still can't figure out what it was invented for.): Probably like never, yet they often do have valid credit card information, shipping addresses, tax filings etc etc. Makes me think how often we change security questions on eBay, PayPal, other services that could have been around for a while.

evernotecom

My standards are always increasing in that regard but if an attacker finds my note archive from 2004, who knows, maybe there's some sensitive data that still holds true today. The only thing I fear is security breach that might leak some of the data I don't care about but for outsiders might be worth their time exploiting. To rephrase it into more general question I actually wonder if anyone has a good reason to clean this sort of stuff if it costs you nothing to keep it? The same way I never deleted emails from old Yahoo mail accounts or cleaned up abandoned clouds. I never deleted it mostly because of complacency rather than an actual wish to keep using it someday. My Evernote account is so old I don't remember even an email provider it's setup for, let alone username or password.įor me the data there is mostly unusable and irrelevant. I guess that depends on what you call "leaving".






Evernotecom