cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/51403759
Ok basically what the title ask. There are so many note taking apps available and also the good old notepad, but, how do you take notes? What do you actually take-keep notes on? Is it like complicated things or simple ones?
All time times that I started using an app or a pen and paper intended up just using a simple reminder for things. Others I just remember.
Obsidian vault in my cloud storage. Does everything I need with no bells and whistles.
Obsidian sync’d with my desktop PC, usually. Though also experimenting with doing the same with Orgro. Both on my phone. If I happen to be in front of my PC, just org-mode in emacs.
I use obsidian for just text stuff I need to remember later. If I need to do math or need a diagram temporarily I prefer pencil and paper. If I want to save diagrams for later I have a drawing tablet that I use like a whiteboard so that I can save and use layers. If you don’t have a drawing tablet Autodesk sketchbook is a decent substitute that can be used on your phone.
Am I weird for just using a pen and paper? I recently upgraded my setup by buying a binder and ~1000 pages so I won’t have to burn through notebooks or money.
One thing that I know for sure is weird is that I use a fountain pen for it all…
Zim just works.
Currently, poorly. I’m trying to pick up some Zettelkasten habits. I started to, using Logseq, and now I’m trying to switch to Org-roam.
This is pretty much ditto to my status. I loved logseq’s paradigm of easy linking and transclusion from the journal dumps.
Are you trying to do something similar with org-roam? I still haven’t figured out my way around with the org (roam) ecosystem
If by transclusion you mean hyperlinks & copypasta, then yes. I’m looking at using Zotero as well. I still haven’t really gotten the hang of Emacs, never mind org-mode or org-roam. It’s a lot. Too bad I didn’t pick up Emacs decades ago instead of vi.
Yep, that’s what I meant. There’s an org-transclusion package aiming to reproduce logseq’s behaviour but editing from the embedded copy and updating the source isn’t as seamless.
I also use Zotero standalone for bibliography but I wanna move everything to emacs. There’s org-noter and bibliography support in org(roam).
But you’re absolutely right, it’s overwhelming, the amount of things one can do and the learning curve is steep
Notesnook at the moment. Excited that they’re started supporting self-hosting. It seems immature but working well for people. I’ll get round to hosting my own sync server when I have the time and maybe once self-hosting is more mature.
Vimwiki & syncthing
Lightweight, libre, synchs on all my devices. Links between notes. All I need.
Nextcloud notes finally got good enough to replace google keep a while ago.
Been happily using that since.
The good old notepad. One-time notes go in my pocket, anything even short-term get put in the bullet journal.
I use Logseq for work and it’s a godsend when trying to pull up old commands, code snippets, and when something happened.
Foxy Notes only one that I’ve stuck with
I used to keep a text file in each project, with todo items at the top and a ‘done’ section at the bottom. File gets too big, start a new file.
Now I use a note taking program that stores markdown notes with links in between them. Kind of the same idea, mostly, some notes are to-do items and others are lists. I have about 10000 notes in there.
email and notepadd++ are the most common but sometimes a calendar.
On my tablet I use xournal++, and on my computer I use vim.