this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2024
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For notes, commit to a consistent folder on each of your devices, and use Markdown.
You'll discover tons of utilities for various contexts are amazing for Markdown.
For Todo lists, look for support for the
todo.txt
format.I've been using Emacs org-mode a bit lately and it seems overall similar to markdown. Obsidian below also seems to be a markdown thing..
What do you personally use for organizing things with markdown?
Nice! I understand org mode is fantastic, and more feature complete than todo.txt.
Obsidian was too web-based, for me, but I've heard good things.
I've configured my text editor (VSCodium), to add files to a folder called Journal in my home directory.
Every note file gets named with a two digit prefix for the current month. So currently,
07-[name of note].md
. If I create the same note twice in the same month, my setup opens the existing note file. Sometimes I'll have a couple of months05-foo.md
,06-foo.md
that match. Sometimes I'll copy/paste to merge them, sometimes I'll leave it.Every nine months or so, I scoop all the files into a separate backup folder named after the current year. This helps my full text searches focus on more recent notes, by default.
When I need to send someone my notes, all formal-like, I'll use md2html and then an HTML to PDF converter.
I periodically sync my
~/Journal
folder to my home Network Attached Storage, which, itself, later backs up to a private AWS S3 bucket.Edit: Since you asked about version contol elsewhere. I used to religiously version control with
git
, but lately I've found that the version history provided by my NAS is enough.Cool setup you got there! I just tried Obsidian and some of its features are great but I have to admit it's too web-based for me. That file naming scheme seems quite good, I'll take that in mind. What NAS do you use that also handles version controlling by itself? It's a bit tedious to do a git commit every time after editing something so I was considering automating it but that wouldn't be so easy to access later.
I use a Synology NAS. It took me some time to get past the sticker price, but I'm very pleased with it.
It comes with backup clients for my phones and laptops, does local versioning of backed up files, has a photo backup app, and has software supporting stuff like home security cameras and various cloud backup solutions (for an additional off-site encrypted backup).