Great summary Christoph. I'd add a category of tool for capturing web 
content for research, reference, read later etc - and for this category I 
think Evernote is still a strong frontrunner. I've settled on Obsidian too 
- for note taking where I'm creating, commenting on, or linking, notes. The 
Obsidian graphing  capabilitites are creating a whole new area of 
visualising ideas and thoughts and how they connect. It will be interesting 
to see where it leads.

On Saturday, 6 March 2021 at 10:57:30 UTC Christoph wrote:

> On 06.03.2021 02:11, c.k. lester wrote:
> > I saw that book mentioned on YouTube when I was researching Obsidian
> > and Dynalist. I think Obsidian, especially, is all about that
> > Zettelkasten... which I don't know what that is yet. :D
>
> Obsidian is very flexible, it can be used as a Zettelkasten, but it's 
> not specially designed for it. Similar to how MLO can be used to 
> implement GTD, but was not specially designed for that purpose only.
>
> If you enjoy the Zettelkasten method, Zettlr may be even more 
> appropriate. Both follow the approach that your notes stay on your local 
> computer and are under your control and can be edited with any text or 
> Markdown editor. On the other end are tools where your notes are in the 
> cloud in a proprietary format, like Roam. I don't like becoming too much 
> dependent on the cloud, a particular service provider and network 
> access. And putting your private notes in the cloud always raises data 
> privacy concerns. That's why I don't use Evernote any more - in the 
> latest version they removed the possibility of having local notebooks, 
> among other degredations. When tools become "mainstream", make profit 
> and new managers are hired, they often get worse because they want to 
> appeal to the masses and create maximum revenue, and being useful to us 
> power users is of little concern.
>
> You should ask first whether you want a cloud based service or files 
> under local control, whether you need mobile aps and sync, and which 
> kind of sync (against a central server, or via your LAN with the desktop 
> as server - MLO offers both, or using a separate cloud service like 
> Dropbox), whether end-to-end encryption is important for you or not. 
> There are many note-taking apps, but asking these questions first will 
> reduce the awailable choices significantly.
>
> Also, narrow down which category of tools best fits your needs:
>
> - Outliner (strictly hierarchical trees)
> - Graph-based with backlinks (more free linking)
> - Personal Wiki (similar, old style)
> - Zettelkasten (special method)
> - Spaced Repetition (for learning stuff)
> - Journaling tools (daily notes, chronological ordering)
> - Bibliographic database (archiving articles from the Web)
>
> Personally, I found that outliners (like OneNote) are too strict to map 
> my real life and knowledge where everything is connected with everything 
> else and things don't fall into single categories, but multiple, and 
> categories and interests are always changing. I want to be able to 
> categorize more freely and to sometimes just jot down daily notes (the 
> chronological entry of notes was what I liked most about Evernote). 
> Currently I settled with Obsidian because it allows free linking, but is 
> also flexible enough to also support journaling and hierarchical 
> indexes. You can still create a hierarchy of knowledge like in an 
> outliner by storing your notes in a hierarchical folder tree and/or 
> adding Markdown index pages pointing to other nodes. But you are not 
> forced to put everything in a single outline.
>
> -- Christoph
>

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