443 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
443 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
#[1]Notes from your friend Chris
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[2]Notes from your friend Chris
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[3]Home [4]Archives [5]Search [6]Feed
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Digital Notetaking Stack
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So I use a paper notebook. To be more specific, I use a notebook binder
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with three separate notebooks in it. Each notebook serves a specific
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purpose. The first one is for tasks and to-dos. The second one is just
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a scratch pad for absolutely anything under the sun: drawings,
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thoughts, somebody’s phone number, anything. The last one is a very
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regimented journal where I reflect on personal experiences.
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Sure, I could just use a single notebook for all of these purposes.
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Hell, I could use a stack of printer paper for all these purposes; but
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it would be clunky, it would be difficult, and I wouldn’t really want
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to use it because it wouldn’t be very satisfying.
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So, I’ve developed a system that works for taking paper notes. It’s
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custom tailored to my goals and how my brain works. And as a cherry on
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top, I picked a notebook binder and pen that I really enjoy touching
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and looking at, which makes the whole system just that much better.
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Similarly, I use a set of different apps for different purposes when
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I’m taking notes in my digital world.
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Yes, I could probably stick to just using the default notes app on my
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phone, but it would be clunky, there would be friction, it would not
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adapt to the way my brain works, and I would end up using it less. Plus
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it isn’t really that satisfying to look at… but that’s just my opinion.
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So instead, after nearly a decade of trial and error, I’ve developed a
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system and way of working with my notes in my digital world that brings
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me immense satisfaction and works well with the way my brain works and
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the way my lifestyle is currently set up.
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DISCLAIMERS:
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* This is not me trying to convince you to use the apps that I use.
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This is what works for me, and is very tailored to my brain and
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life. I’m not here to tell you what to use. But if hearing about my
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setup gives you ideas, that’s great!
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* This is something I will continue to change and improve. It’s been
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a long evolution to land on this setup. Trial and error was
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involved, and will continue to be. I think there’s an ebb and flow
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to changing your setup. If you do it too often, you lose
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productivity. If you don’t do it enough, your setup may stagnate
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and fail to match your lifestyle.
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* This is a values-based notetaking setup. I believe in owning my own
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data, having an easily exportable format (markdown), and using
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tools that are extensible & hackable. For someone who doesn’t share
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these values, this may seem overbuilt or convoluted or not native
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enough or something.
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* This is not written for the PKM enthusiast community. It’s a basic,
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balanced setup using tools that are widely known. If you’re a
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longtime Personal Knowledge Management guru, there won’t be
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anything new for you here. This is written for the layman who is
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dissatisfied with their current setup and looking for inspiration.
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Anyway, if digital notetaking is something that never really clicked
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for you, or if you currently have a workflow that you’re not pleased
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with, this might be a blog article for you. Let me know on [7]Mastodon!
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Overview
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i. Intake / Short-term notes
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ii. Long-term notes
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iii. Shared / Published notes
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iv. Collaborative notes
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v. Closing thoughts
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Intake / Short-term notes
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One of the most important parts of my setup is my intake app. I hope
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you’ve never had to experience this feeling:
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Your friend names a cool restaurant or book for you to look up
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later. You hastily pull up your notes app to write it down. But
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wait. Where should you make the note? Does restaurant fall under
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your travel folder? Or your food folder? What should you title it?
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Do you need to make a new folder? While you’re fiddling with your
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app your friend has already started talking about that other boba
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place you should explore. Should that go in a whole other note? Oh
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god.
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I feel like a lot of people give up after going through this a couple
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times and their notes app just ends up being a hodge-podge of
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unorganized, random shit that they dread looking back at later.
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This is exactly why I use an intake app, and my app of choice for this
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incredibly important role is, of course, Drafts.
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[8]✨Drafts✨
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Drafts is made for this exact purpose. By default, it opens to a blank
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new note. Whatever you type as the first line is considered the title.
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And it has this insane concept called Actions that lets you quickly
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process your notes by moving them elsewhere through deep interactions
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with your other existing apps.
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Let’s look at some pictures:
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[723b4f53-202a-41b6-981c-d1e2710d6e47.png]
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[896a49c3-ec20-4dff-89ac-33f9cf1e6120.png]
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[78912a4e-95cc-463f-af64-5e55f4ddb395.png]
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In the leftmost image, you can see where I keep Drafts. Front and
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center, only app in my bottom drawer.
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Middle image, you have the first thing you see when the app opens: a
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blank note to write that restaurant / song / boba place.
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Rightmost image, you have the actions pane.
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The actions in this pane are customized to my workflow. You are able to
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configure multiple pages, but I’m content with just one for now.
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Drafting a text to your mom? Send it as a text message after you’ve
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perfected it. Shopping list? Export straight into wherever you keep
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that (for me it’s Things). Deep thought that’s perhaps a little too
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deep? File it away in Day One where it will never see the light of day.
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Basic tagging, shortcuts integration, and an archive folder really tie
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everything together. Process a ton of drafts at once by selecting them
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in the app and then doing a batch operation.
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Drafts comes with a pretty comprehensive set of actions right out of
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the box, but the true power here comes from tapping into the [9]Drafts
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Directory: a massive repository of actions sourced from the Drafts
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community (as well as many written by the creator).
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Every app you could imagine is in this directory.
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And the best part: if your app isn’t in there you can write your own
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action!
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Drafts could honestly take up a whole series of blog posts so I’ll stop
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there for now. I haven’t even scratched the surface of what it can do,
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but you really don’t need to dive very deep to reap the benefits.
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Let’s table Drafts for now. It’ll come up later with how it pipes into
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my other systems.
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Long-term notes
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So you may have picked up on the fact that notes don’t stay in Drafts
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long. They either get exported or archived.
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Not every note is worthy of a permanent place in your note-taking
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kingdom. Embracing this concept was a huge step in cleaning up my
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digital world and starting to build a meaningful notes database for my
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life.
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As I continued to acclimate to digital notes, I noticed that certain
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note categories began to make themselves known.
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[11b85744-48ac-4c2d-a817-6e813929b837.png]
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The middle 3 folders are the important ones to note here.
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Core
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My core folder is where deeply personal stuff goes. Longterm goals,
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journal entries, guiding principles and personal mantras. I wouldn’t
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expect you to understand mine, but I’d encourage anyone to explore this
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category of notes for themselves.
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The notes in this folder don’t change much. But I recently started
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recording a daily voice note diary of my day that I then transcribe and
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summarize with AI.
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I also do yearly, quarterly, monthly, and weekly planning sessions, and
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the artifacts from these sessions often end up in here.
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Projects
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Projects is my favorite folder in my long-term notes.
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For me, this is a place for all kinds of things. Packing lists +
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itineraries + other details for an upcoming trip, startup ideas,
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potential blog posts, plans and details for my numerous hobbies.
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Notes in here often originate in Drafts and get quickly exported to my
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projects folder via Drafts actions.
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Projects are usually temporary, and get moved to my archive folder when
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they’re completed (or when I get bored and move onto the next hobby).
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Reference
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This is for lists and information that I will want to keep as
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reference. Quotes, wishlists, movie bucket list, books to read, etc.
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I used to maintain a personal wiki of information on different topics.
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Zettelkasten-esque, my knowledge wiki is currently in need of cleanup
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and will likely be featured in its own blog post if I continue to work
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on it.
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Other folders
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Archive is self-explanatory. Old notes go in here.
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Templates is for fill-in-the-blank templates for notes that I take
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often. Like those yearly/quarterly/etc check-ins and certain types of
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projects. There’s an Obsidian plugin that has some functionality to
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take advantage of these, but right now I just duplicate and move
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markdown files manually as-needed. Nothing fancy.
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__________________________________________________________________
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I find this setup to be just enough. My main folders allow plenty of
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flexibility within them for me to develop all kinds of systems to match
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how my brain works.
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Apps and stuff
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Yes, yes, we’ll talk about the app I use, but that’s much less
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important than the underlying foundation.
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My long-term note-taking system is really just two things:
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* A collection of markdown files
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* A syncing service that circulates these files between my devices
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If you commit to using the first, you can choose whatever you want for
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the second and migrate between syncing providers at-will with minimal
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headache. I’m not going to say much more on that, since others have
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covered it very well ([10]File over App from one of the people
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responsible for Obsidian).
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And as long as you have these two, you can access all of your notes on
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all of your devices with whatever Markdown tools you’d like. Ultimate
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freedom, extensibility, and hackability.
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That said, I use Obsidian.
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[11]✨Obsidian✨
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My go-to sync tool was Dropbox for a long time, but after committing
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fully to Obsidian as my default app across Mac / iPad / iPhone I’ve
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switched over to Obsidian Sync for the E2E encryption, longer note
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history, and seamless integration with Obsidian.
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It basically works like Dropbox used to before the weird Apple OS
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integration stuff. Obsidian Sync downloads all the files onto your
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device, so you still can access them with any markdown editor that has
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access to the filesystem.
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Drafts can export to my longterm notes via both the OS filesystem and
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Obsidian app urls. Same for Shortcuts, which I’ll get to later.
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Obsidian also plays nicely with iCloud, and supports Dropbox / Google
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Drive / S3 through its community plugins. I have it connected to my
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Dropbox for publishing / sharing notes, which I’ll get into in a bit.
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My main reasons for using Obsidian are:
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* It has command palette
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* It has quick open
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* It’s hackable & has community plugins
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Honestly, the specific app here doesn’t really matter as much as the
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underlying system. I could switch to using Ulysses or 1Writer or Byword
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or nvAlt or something else entirely if I wanted.
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I will say, like Drafts, Obsidian is a product of thoughtful design.
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You don’t need to dive to deep to reap the benefits. But if you want to
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be a power user, there’s a LOT it can do. For me, the important thing
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is that I can open files and do stuff with them easily, and I can hack
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it to accommodate to pretty much any use case my weird brain comes up
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with.
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Obsidian really knocks it out of the park for me, so I use it almost
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exclusively right now (for long-term notes).
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Published / shared notes
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I’m not going to shit on Notion in this post (not much, at least), but
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one thing I really missed from migrating from it was the
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ease-of-sharing.
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I would put together an itinerary, packing list, cost breakdown, and
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car-pooling plan for group camping trips in minutes, hit the share
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button, and fire it off to my group chat of friends with no hiccups.
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I had been craving that functionality in my new note-taking system, so
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I built it. Kind of.
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Before we get to that, let’s talk about my workflow for posting blog
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articles.
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Publishing blog posts
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Remember how I said I use Dropbox still for sharing / publishing?
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I do that with help from a service called Blot.
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[12]✨Blot✨
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Blot turns a folder in your Dropbox account into a fully functioning
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blog.
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Their website explains it all, but basically to publish this article I
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literally just dropped it into a folder in my Dropbox, which I can do
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without leaving Obsidian.
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I wouldn’t say this is anything groundbreaking, but I find it immensely
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satisfying.
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Sharing notes
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Okay, back to Notion-esque sharing.
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Let’s say I put together a travel itinerary for a camping trip in my
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Projects folder. It has a list of everyone attending, cost breakdown,
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directions, packing list, and pictures of the campsite to drum up hype.
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It’s all ready to go, but I need to share it out to my friends.
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Enter Blot. Same service, different folder. This time, instead of
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having Blot publish to chrisnotes.io, I have a separate domain I use
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only for this purpose. I move the note to the shared folder and shoot
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my friends the link.
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The end. No fuss, no need for them to have an account, it’s just
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published to a non-indexed domain that I use as an external
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file/note-share.
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”But it’s not collaborative!” Yeah, and it’s not meant to be.
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Collaborative notes
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Okay, so once in a blue moon I have a valid reason to collaborate on a
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note with someone. It’s incredibly rare, and usually a very niche
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use-case.
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If it’s like a Resume or something, I use Google Drive, because the
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output artifact is a document.
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If it’s for brainstorming or something, Figma.
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If it’s project tracking, Notion.
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These aren’t really notes anymore. This is a one-off collaboration with
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a specific outcome in mind, so it doesn’t really fall into the purview
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of this post.
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To be honest, I don’t think my personal notes database is something
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that would ever require collaboration. My notes are deeply personal,
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and I like it that way. I can publish if I need to, and there are
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plenty of collaborative tools that work for other tasks. But I have yet
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to need real-time collaboration on my actual notes.
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My gripe with Notion
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Okay fine, quick note on Notion. While it’s a powerful tool that sparks
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creativity in a very attractive interface, it goes against my core
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values. You don’t own your data, it’s on their servers the entire time.
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Offline mode barely works. Exporting is a mess because while they
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present themselves as Markdown-esque, their stuff is so custom it’s a
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mess to port to other apps.
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You get punished as soon as you try to leave.
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Best of luck to anyone entangled in that system. It took some work to
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get my notes out of Notion, and I will not be going back.
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Closing thoughts
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You made it to the end!
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Personally, after having tried a lot of tools with varying levels of
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depth and complexity, I find this setup very balanced.
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It does just enough. I haven’t gone too deep into any of the tools.
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It’s still portable. I could still switch stuff around with very little
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overhead if I wanted to.
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Being candid, my sync system is the one thing I am considering
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changing. I don’t like that Obsidian Sync has no way to run headless,
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and has no API access for other apps to tap into. If I wanted to change
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editor, I’d need to switch back to Dropbox. It wouldn’t take much to
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make the switch: maybe 5 minutes to update the config across all my
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devices.
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But that’s the only thing I’m really not happy with right now. I find
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this system pretty seamless to work with. It has structure and
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organization, without being so confined that it limits creativity.
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Bonus goodies
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If you made it this far, you’re either really into notetaking systems
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or you’re friends with me. Either way, you might get a kick out of some
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of the cool functionality that comes from a system like this.
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Custom share sheet actions
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Any time I’m browsing the web and come across something I want to buy
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later, I can instantly append it to my Wishlist note using a share
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sheet action that uses Obsidian’s deep-linking.
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I could easily replicate this functionality using the OS filesystem in
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shortcuts.
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Or, if I was using Dropbox, I could do it with Dropbox’s shortcut
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integrations.
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I have a similar shortcut action for prepending selected text to my
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Quotes note.
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If I wanted, I could have an automation that downloads the current
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weather and top news stories to a daily note for me to review when I
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start my morning.
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With a little scripting, you can really bend any of these tools / files
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to do whatever you want because of the format.
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Anyway, thanks so much for reading this far. I hope you got something
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from it. And if you have any input, please let me know. I’m not going
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to pretend I’m any kind of guru, and I love learning new things. If you
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have suggestions or ideas or feedback, please send them my way on
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[13]Mastodon!
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__________________________________________________________________
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Date
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September 4, 2023
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References
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1. https://chrisnotes.io/feed.rss
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2. file:///
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3. file:///
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4. file:///archives
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5. file:///search
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6. file:///feed.rss
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7. https://mastodon.social/@chrisnotes
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8. https://getdrafts.com/
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9. https://directory.getdrafts.com/
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10. https://stephanango.com/file-over-app
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11. http://obsidian.md/
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12. https://blot.im/
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13. https://mastodon.social/@chrisnotes
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