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my methods have been:
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use trilium for any detailed notes and documentation
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memos for random thoughts especially if shorter
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pen and paper when offline or on mobile because mobile trilium and moememos both suck
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zotero for citation and bibliography manager
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backed up to nextcloud
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i have paperless-ngx but found it randomly errors a ton of things and zotero is fine.
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considering if it’s worth it to have so many different spread out methods
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theyre fun to use but it creates more chaos then needed
I primarily use Standard Notes. It’s a fantastic tool and I can use it anywhere, online or offline. It’s not great for collaboration, though, and it doesn’t have a canvas option. But I use it for scratch pads, for todo lists, for project tracking, for ideas, plans, plotting for my tabletop (Monster of the Week) game, software design and architecture, for drafting comments, etc…
Standard Notes also has a ton of options for automated backups. I get a daily email with a backup of my notes; I can host my notes on my home server and the corporate one; I can also set up automated backups on any desktop.
I don’t use it for saving links. I’m still using Raindrop.io for that, even though I’m self-hosting both Linkding and Linkwarden.
For sharing and collaboration, I either publish to Listed with Standard Notes or use Hedgedoc, which is great for collaboration and does a great job presenting nodes, too.
For canvas notes, I use GoodNotes on a tablet or the Onyx Boox’s default Notes app. I’d love a better FOSS, self-hosted option, especially for the Boox, but my experiences thus far have been negative (especially on the Boox).
I’ve been trying out SilverBullet lately, since I want to try out cross-note querying and all that, but I’m too stuck in my habits and keep going back to Standard Notes. I think I’ll have better luck if I choose one app and go with it.
I also have a collection of Mnemosyne notebooks that I use with fountain pens (mostly the Lamy 2000, but also quite commonly a Platinum 3776 or a Twsbi). Side note: the Lamy 2000 was my first fountain pen and after getting it I went deep into fountain pens. I explored a ton of different options, found a lot of nice pens across a number of brands… and yet how I still haven’t found something that I consistently like more. The Pilot VP is great but deceptive; a fancy clicky pen that only holds 30 minutes of ink (in a converter, at least) is decidedly inconvenient.
I’ve also been checking out Obsidian on my work computer. So far I haven’t seen anything that makes me prefer it over my existing set of tools.
Obsidian with self hosted sync
So your methodology is just to put it all in one place for ease of use?
I mainly use git to have good version control
Replace trillium with hedgedoc and it’s near the same way I go with.
Plus: I started AI generated blog posts around my configs just to memorise them, i don’t care if someone reads them, too.
What do you like about hedgedoc?
Hedgedoc is fantastic. If you’re okay with your notes app being web-only (without an app or even a PWA) and you don’t need canvas notes or multi-note queries, you should check it out.
First, every note is Markdown, but it supports a ton of things natively. It has native Vim, Emacs, and Sublime (the default) editors and it’s built to be great for collaboration (if you want).
It also has
- syntax highlighting for a ton of languages
- Mermaid.js support
- LaTeX support
- easy drag and drop image uploads
- a solid mobile interface (for a webapp in your browser, at least)
- built in revision history
- support for other diagram tools, like graphviz, flowchart.js
- a bunch of other little Markdown enhancements that make using it feel oddly intuitive
And best of all, they have a Hedgehog for the icon! (I may be biased.)
The markdown preview feature.