Not quite the same, but you can save the Web app (https://logseq.com) to you phone’s home screen and use the GitHub integration. While not perfect, it works far better than expected. You can jot down a note or two quickly when you’re on the go and organize later when you get to your desktop.
You could try Syncthing (which I personally use). It FOSS for file syncing (think rsync but with a nice GUI and more features). No servers required and you can configure it to backup to a Pi.
There has been desktop app for quite some time. For best logseq experience you should probably use it (download from https://logseq.com/). I think they are slowly giving up on the browser version and working on desktop and mobile apps. So your problems should probably disappear if you switch up.
They should make documentation page more visible...
Don't know if that's possible. But one method that would work is.
logseq.com, click the demo button and you can sign in with GitHub. It's the closest thing currently available.
They are parts of org mode which Logseq was originally written for. Not sure how Logseq uses them exactly, but in org mode, they have the following roles:
I feel you. I've been building an open-source time-tracking app for the last 5 years which (so far) has been able to avoid Electron (we still use a web UI, just run in your normal web browser).
However, I almost regret not going the Electron route, due to all the headaches of packaging an app for cross-platform (among other inconveniences). I can really sympathize with devs choosing Electron, despite its issues.
I'm curious, if Electron is a deal-breaker for you, which alternatives do you really have?