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my methods have been:
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use trilium for any detailed notes and documentation
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memos for random thoughts especially if shorter
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pen and paper when offline or on mobile because mobile trilium and moememos both suck
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zotero for citation and bibliography manager
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backed up to nextcloud
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i have paperless-ngx but found it randomly errors a ton of things and zotero is fine.
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considering if it’s worth it to have so many different spread out methods
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theyre fun to use but it creates more chaos then needed
Replace trillium with hedgedoc and it’s near the same way I go with.
Plus: I started AI generated blog posts around my configs just to memorise them, i don’t care if someone reads them, too.
What do you like about hedgedoc?
The markdown preview feature.
Hedgedoc is fantastic. If you’re okay with your notes app being web-only (without an app or even a PWA) and you don’t need canvas notes or multi-note queries, you should check it out.
First, every note is Markdown, but it supports a ton of things natively. It has native Vim, Emacs, and Sublime (the default) editors and it’s built to be great for collaboration (if you want).
It also has
- syntax highlighting for a ton of languages
- Mermaid.js support
- LaTeX support
- easy drag and drop image uploads
- a solid mobile interface (for a webapp in your browser, at least)
- built in revision history
- support for other diagram tools, like graphviz, flowchart.js
- a bunch of other little Markdown enhancements that make using it feel oddly intuitive
And best of all, they have a Hedgehog for the icon! (I may be biased.)
Obsidian with self hosted sync
So your methodology is just to put it all in one place for ease of use?
I mainly use git to have good version control