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I was searching for FOSS note-taking apps that support markdown editing to make formatting easier. That’s because I’ve been using Standard Notes, but it’s really buggy and clunky (I appreciate any recommendations, by the way). While searching, I came across the term “second brain.”
I’ve heard this term years ago in several productivity and minimalism videos. In those videos, everything always looked super organized — endless connections, lists, calendars, and references — with notes cross-linked to the point of making the whole thing even more complex.
Personally, I’ve never been able to organize myself in that way. I couldn’t manage to create references to everything I read or planned to read, so I had to settle for just marking things down or referencing them in texts or stories I wanted to write. It simply didn’t work for me. It felt like too much work for too little return. Privacy concerns and the excessive use of AI were also big reasons why I stayed far away from these kinds of solutions.
The video I linked here brings an important reflection for anyone still using the “second brain” system:
When was the last time you actually produced something with the notes you created?
In the end, are you an accumulator or a producer? Are you actively creating something that strengthens your own wisdom, or are you just collecting fragments of references in digital form?
Look into obsidian.
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Is obsidian open source?
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30 sats \ 1 reply \ @klk 19 Jun
logseq is decent. Just as a journal where you throw stuff that might look for in the future. Ideas, commands, experiences, checklists, ...
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I took a look and liked it, I'm testing it now.
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21 sats \ 4 replies \ @398ja 19 Jun
I use readwise and their reader app for taking notes (highlighting). The connections are now done automatically with AI. After more than a decade of collecting highlights, I have accumulated quite a lot of them. I will often revisit them, when I need to structure my thoughts about a specific subject I've read a lot about.
Ideally, you want to use your spare time to work on your notes, editing, linking, tagging etc, but tbh I've never been able to develop and maintain a routine for it.
I'll watch your video later
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Did you watch it? Does keep this notes help you produce new things?
I ask because the argument in the video seems very real to me, ppl keep notes, but they are like hoarder.
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21 sats \ 2 replies \ @398ja 23 Jun
I watched, yes.
The value added is not in the notes but in the connections you establish between them. This is what makes a Zettelkasten useful, and why Niklas Luhmann was so productive.
I thought what the video missed, was exactly that symbiotic relationship between knowledge/notes and wisdom/connections. The latter being kind of an emerging property of the former. You can't have one without the other.
One other aspect is that the notes are not just highlights from other people's text. You have to own them by rewriting them in your own words, and this intellectual process is invaluable, when performed on a regular basis over a long period of time.
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So, if you allow yourself to assume, you derive value from the organization you make of your notes. Your production is in organizing and polishing everything you have accumulated. It is a way of seeing the whole and I respect that, but not everyone has this dedication to organizing the accumulation.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @398ja 1h
You got it right, and for the record, I lack the dedication as well, or rather, I haven't found a digital tool that can help me achieve the whole workflow, so I do it sporadically only.
This would be a good activity to do when commuting on public transportation, in the doctor's waiting room etc, instead of watching "stupid" shorts on YouTube...
One or two notes a day would suffice, to start with, the accumulated long-term benefits would be massive!
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