Thanks for sharing your reflection on personal knowledge management/zettelkasten etc. Tijn. I've been using Tana for my knowledge gardening for 18 months, and Roam for a year before that. I'd strongly recommend having a look at Tana. The functionality - including AI functionality - is improving all the time and there's a great community of users. Tana moved to Beta, and paid subscriptions, just a couple of weeks ago. Here is their blurb about their Personal Knowledge Management capabilities. https://tana.inc/pkm
Helpful perspective Tijn. Thanks for sharing. I’ve been enjoying Obsidian on my desktop for just over a year now. Mural which is similar to Miro has been a daily tool for 4 years. Kumu when wanting to formalise and even loopy is helpful for playing with causal loop concepts (https://ncase.me/loopy/). Then lots of physical whiteboarding, paper and pen sketches, regular reflection while sitting in the garden and doing gardening helps with the somatic processing. Will eventually take the plunge and pay for Obsidian too so I can sync across devices.
Hi! Waving hello after someone else (Todd Youngblood or JP Parker possibly?) recently mentioned your name.
I took a lot of rough notes over the past few years in the various domains of 'regenerative' and ecosystem restoration space (notably in a space that was Earth Regenerators), hopping from tools like Roam Research to Athens Research to currently Logseq, and been debating how to bring people and group processes together to possibly attempt a more public-facing library project. Curious to hear what you dream about!
Obsidian is my favourite, and I use it for notes, to do lists, organisation, etc.
Although I spent hours looking for ways to better improve its looks, system and whatnot, most of the plugins I've installed are untouched - simple is always better.
I love Obsidian, but my problem has always been the infinite tinkering you can do with it and that leads me to procrastinate to set up the ultimate system. I've switched to Apple Notes for most of my daily stuff given the complete lack of ability to tinker. Still use Obsidian for more permanent stuff though.
Thanks for sharing your reflection on personal knowledge management/zettelkasten etc. Tijn. I've been using Tana for my knowledge gardening for 18 months, and Roam for a year before that. I'd strongly recommend having a look at Tana. The functionality - including AI functionality - is improving all the time and there's a great community of users. Tana moved to Beta, and paid subscriptions, just a couple of weeks ago. Here is their blurb about their Personal Knowledge Management capabilities. https://tana.inc/pkm
Thank you Alan! I'm currently on the waitlist for Tana 🤞
Ping me your email - maybe through LinkedIn - and I'll send you an invite. Happy to be connected.
Perhaps you saw my recent piece on knowledge gardening? https://www.linkedin.com/posts/alanhudson_complexity-emergence-knowledgegardening-activity-7216030947895320576-3H4C
Helpful perspective Tijn. Thanks for sharing. I’ve been enjoying Obsidian on my desktop for just over a year now. Mural which is similar to Miro has been a daily tool for 4 years. Kumu when wanting to formalise and even loopy is helpful for playing with causal loop concepts (https://ncase.me/loopy/). Then lots of physical whiteboarding, paper and pen sketches, regular reflection while sitting in the garden and doing gardening helps with the somatic processing. Will eventually take the plunge and pay for Obsidian too so I can sync across devices.
Awesome Matthew!
Look amazing how Obsidian mycelialized your notes it is absolutly stunning🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽😍
🕸️
Join the lively conversation on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/tijntjoelker_digitalgardening-networkednotes-tools-activity-7168477475545587712-8gJt?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop
Hi! Waving hello after someone else (Todd Youngblood or JP Parker possibly?) recently mentioned your name.
I took a lot of rough notes over the past few years in the various domains of 'regenerative' and ecosystem restoration space (notably in a space that was Earth Regenerators), hopping from tools like Roam Research to Athens Research to currently Logseq, and been debating how to bring people and group processes together to possibly attempt a more public-facing library project. Curious to hear what you dream about!
Obsidian is my favourite, and I use it for notes, to do lists, organisation, etc.
Although I spent hours looking for ways to better improve its looks, system and whatnot, most of the plugins I've installed are untouched - simple is always better.
Here is a list of over 70 PKM tools. (should be nearly complete; let me know if something is missing)
The majority of them are graph-based, at least conceptually.
https://www.strategicstructures.com/?p=2591
I love Obsidian, but my problem has always been the infinite tinkering you can do with it and that leads me to procrastinate to set up the ultimate system. I've switched to Apple Notes for most of my daily stuff given the complete lack of ability to tinker. Still use Obsidian for more permanent stuff though.