![]() ![]() ![]() I think it would be pretty cool if Obsidian could add DB functionality. RemNote also has the idea of user-defined fields, which is a great idea, but doesn’t do much with it. I really like the idea of RemNote, but it doesn’t seem stable enough, so I’d be fine with Obsidian, and copy/pasting to Anki. Few tools would require so relatively little training to be able to deliver so very much functionality Seems best when you want to rapidly add structure beyond text (diagrams, columns, etc.).And the fact that Notion knows what dates are and can do things with them is pretty cool. But you could also filter and see summary items based on projects … show all meeting minutes related to project “Build 8th wonder of the world” along with summary statistics.However, not hard to a have a markdown file as a template in Obsidian which does the same thing.Let’s you create templates with key items pretty easily.If I wanted to use it for meeting minutes.However, for knowledge growth, it really isn’t quite as natural to (for example) summarize a book by having many smaller embedded atomic ideas, which can independently evolve.Seems like the key benefit is searching (which Obsidian does well enough), Exporting summarized information (Maybe I want to send friends all my quotes),.Then each quote could have a page with my reflections as I work to embody that quote I could have quotes, with person who made quote, quote type, quote itself.I might have tags of (Author, Category, Reference Link, Date Reviewed), it is nice to see all of that at once. If I had a large list of content that I had summarized (Books, Articles, Videos).I’m curious about how each of these is best for certain kinds of tasks. Flashcards done almost right (needs to be prettier).Notes + Personal Knowledgebase + Flashcards.(Not all of roams features, but markdown on your own computer, styleable CSS, are pretty awesome)
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