![]() Like, I have a big nested folder of notes spanning years, and migrating them to a newly started decimal system, it’s giving all notes a canonical place, with a defined schema/model/taxonomy.Īs I wrote in the parent comment, I have a few aliases for shell commands, like find by file/folder name, grep to search notes, a shortcut to add a note. Interestingly, I felt that the system builds on how people already keep folders and notes in ad-hoc categories – and giving it a few organizational concepts to standardize the structure. I like that it has no dependencies on service/platform or language, it’s generic in the best sense of the term.Īs I was reading, I immediately started creating a folder structure, and took notes (in area “00 System” :). I found your system brilliant, how simple you kept it, with consistent, easy-to-remember rules. I recently learned about the Johnny Decimal System, while doing some “research” following links on Zettelkasten and other systems. The personal computer, as an augmentation of the human intellect, has creative potential yet to be explored.Įdit: A recent one I found delightful is the Johnny Decimal System. In some ways I think the past decade took a step forward and a couple steps back. Since the days of index cards, through Vannevar Bush’s Memex, Ted Nelson’s Xanadu, Englebart’s mother of all demos, HyperCard. I love seeing new systems, open-source projects, applications, SaaS (though not as much) taking on this problem space. I also join the chorus, that we ought to welcome more exploration in the area of knowledge management. Not necessary, but I like having a “personal dashboard” of sorts, with calendar and whatever feature/widgets I want to add. I have a few aliases defined for quickly adding new single-line notes, current date/time, paste a link and title, etc.Īs a higher-level interface, I wrote a little React app / Node.js server that renders the Markdown files, with hot reload on changes. ![]() In the terminal, `find` and `grep` are perfect for searching notes. My text editor, also VS Code, has extensions for Markdown live preview, to-do lists, and other conveniences – everything I need to manage the “knowledge database”. Some folders are prefixed with YYYY or YYYY-MM, when needed. I could probably say the same about Plottr and Ulysses (albeit would miss out on the integration that is present between Ulysses and Aeon Timeline).I’m in the same camp, all my notes are in Markdown files, organized as a tree of folders. I think Ulysses and Aeon Timeline would make a wonderful team. CSS files for different themes? or how would you do the theming aspect at this point in time? I noticed that in Zettlr there is an option to use a custom. file and use the information to set up notes and make connections in Obsidian. Now, I am considering using Obsidian in conjunction with Zettlr, and to utilize the planning aspect in Bibisco(I can use the Snowflake method in order to plan out everything through Bibisco, and then export it into a. I use Mac, Linux and Windows, and I was initially looking at paid options to create my vision, which were Ulysses and Aeon Timeline or Plotter. I have found Zettlr during my search, and so far, I find it quite impressive. I am looking for the best tool that I can write articles and novels on.
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