Obsidian is a hypertext note-taking application. (My setup has been influenced by what I’ve seen other people doing - especially Andy Polaine and Kourosh Dini.) It’s a great combination because each app has strengths the other lacks, but both support Markdown text, so they can interoperate. Currently, I use DEVONthink as my primary storage/processing application, and Obsidian for taking notes. But ultimately, everything gets digitized. I also write and sketch a lot in paper notebooks. For example, physical books are an important part of my information store. Much of this happens in software, but not all. Includes notes to self, meeting minutes, outlines, blog posts, etc. Includes links to web pages I’ve read (or need to read), PDFs from academic papers, books, audio/video files, etc. Places to store and process information.(Other folks use the term digital garden, but I’m not keen on this usage, since my garden isn’t exclusively digital.) I collect and nurture ideas in an information garden. Whether it’s an article I’m writing or research for a design project, I’m always learning new stuff. This post is part of the series in which I share aspects of my personal information ecosystem.
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