Half a year ago I stumbled upon two notetaking tools of which one improved my life’s quality, so I thought I share my experience with the community. I’m not sponsored by either of these projects.

Both of these tools are powerful extendable markdown editors with a daily journal, calender function, TODO list and a knowledge base similar to a Wiki. Every page or block can be crosslinked, referenced or embedded. That way, I can keep an overview over my daily tasks with all necessary information directly accessible.

The one tool I use daily now, is Logseq. I synchronize my notes among all my devices via git. Works great under Linux, but I needed to install termux on Android. They are working on a sync service for logseq, which should make it more interesting for most users. There is one caveat though: It’s not on Google’s PlayStore, nor on f-droid.

The other similar tool, which I can recommend because it is more easily available, is Obsidian. The company also offers a sync service for premium users. I found one missing feature which is more a niche, but still a bummer: Code blocks cannot be indented.

What do you think? Do you use similar - maybe even better - note taking tools?

  • downhomechunk@midwest.social
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    1 year ago

    I wish I could stick with something like this. I used to get in trouble as a kid for not keeping track of stuff better. What good is a notebook when you forget to check it, or even write down stuff in the first place?

    I most recently installed Joplin and thought it would be life changing. I gave up pretty quick because I suck.

  • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    This one is less featured by Workflowy is where I’ve been keeping notes for about five years.

    It’s basically just a huge infinitely nested bullet list. They’re adding more features now but I don’t use them.

    It’s good for:

    • Making a plan to reach an objective. Each node can have an infinite tree of subnodes, so tasks you’re unsure how to complete can be broken down again and again until it’s all five-minute chunks.
    • recording knowledge. For me at least the tree structure works well for writing down details, then caveats and exceptions on the details, etc.
    • interlinking the knowledge. You can type (( then it opens up search for any node text with autocomplete. Once you pick the other node, that node is hyperlinked to your current spot and the whole subtree exists there. One thing that’s useful for is if I have a list like “my tasks today” and then each item is a task that exists as a sub task of a sub task somewhere else.
    • retrieving information. The search is fast. I’m good at standardizing my own language so I often know what exact wording I would use. So if I have a product idea I can search “product idea: waffles made of …” and it will find that exact idea from the last time I had that idea and forgot