I almost never add salt to most things I cook, and with the amount of salt in frozen pizzas, bread, and whatnot it's basically fine. The lack of added iodine might actually be the biggest issue.
I stopped adding salt in my cooking when I had to cook for a young baby. Pleasantly surprised to find I didn't miss it much, and pretty soon my tastebuds reset and when I eat out everything tastes wayyy too salty.
What is the point of that? Sodium is vital for your body so he is just risking hyponatremia for no good reason. Plus the body is really good at getting rid of excess sodium.
I started using "low sodium" salt, which basically is Sodium + Potasium, which both are electrolytes needed for the body. I grew up eating without salt (mom cooked with no salt at all) and using this low-Na-salt was amazing .
I know the parent said zero salt but ... that's hard to believe. In the modern world if you just breath you get salt in your diet. I bet if you try with all your might to get zero you probably up at the RDA.
DeepNotes is an open source, realtime collaborative, end-to-end encrypted visual note-taking tool with deep bidirectional page navigation.
I'm making my note universe public in this link to showcase the possibilities with DeepNotes and show how I use it, and maybe help other people learn some stuff as well: https://deepnotes.app/pages/euYw8Xg1JJ1I1BOpWkuA5
In my mind the apps most similar to DeepNotes are Heptabase, Obsidian, Roam Research, and Notion. Maybe put Miro, Whimsical and Clover in that list.
Comparing against these I would say the main differences are security, user-designed navigation, spatiality and simplicity:
- Security (and privacy): As far as I know, none of the apps above have end-to-end encryption like DeepNotes. DeepNotes is more fitting for you if you value security and privacy.
- User-designed navigation: As far as I know, all these apps lock your pages into a tree index structure for page navigation. In DeepNotes the user creates their own page navigation by placing links to pages in 2D instead of organizing their pages in a tree structure.
- Spatiality: This is the ability to move notes in 2D. This is one important defining feature which some of these apps don't have. At least the most popular, Notion, doesn't. Obsidian recently added a canvas feature though.
- Simplicity: DeepNotes is just notes and arrows inside linkable pages. Looking at Heptabase and Notion, for example, they keep adding features like databases, PDF file reading, and AI integration that make the app more complex, and the app becomes bloated.
Clean interface. Interesting approach. The demo account helps alot for a quick experimentation. Just the dark mode already makes this 10 times better than trello for me. Had a little bug when entering the settings screen where everything suddenly switched to russian.