Not exactly, but this is something that we definitely want to build in as a future feature. Currently, its sells tokens that you hold, and does not buy. This is if you buy into a new project early enough, and find yourself on a much higher value as a result of the token success, you can sell down at a profit.
It happens when you click on a result, then hit the back button and want to click the next link. Then, just before you click, the suggested links appear.
Maybe they measured clicks and thought this must be a really useful feature.
I barely scratched the surface of what org mode can do, but tree structured todos were a game changer for me. When programming, researching a problem, being forced to go down a rabbit hole it helped me go as deep as necessary into a task without loosing track of what I actually want to achieve.
I wish there was a great hierarchical todo manager for native Mac, with the capability to paste images. Right now I use taskpaper, which lacks image functions. I tried notion, but its editing capabilities are really slow.
The Linux desktop is flexible and customizable. I wish mainstream apps would run on Linux as well, so we could experiment and further develop established UI paradigms.
Except it isn't. In order to deal with something as simple as unifying how keyboard shortcuts work across the UI (the desktop environment, intra-UI idioms for movement & selection, etc.) I'd have to unpack 30 years of legacy X11 decisions and idiosyncrasies, sort out how to reform numerous different UI toolkits, and often dig into the applications themselves on an application by application basis.
It's often impenetrable despite its being open source.
Thanks for your suggestions!