![]() I use Typora to write my blog posts, and I absolutely love it for its way to handle text formatting so transparently. Links are first-class citizens in all programs that I’m showing here. The process of creating a collection of highly linked vault of notes can also be referred to as personal knowledge management, a second brain, or Zettelkasten. In this post I will talk about software that provide additional capabilities over just writing and highlighting Markdown. If you’re not comfortable with Git, then cloud storage services such as Dropbox or OneDrive will work just as well to keep a cloud copy of your notes. I can have my notes in a Git repository and keep a remote copy of the data on GitHub, so that I’m safe from hard drive failures. The text format has another great benefit too it works well with version control systems. This means that I own the information, and that I can switch to another tool if I need to. Markdown is a plaintext format that doesn’t bind me to a proprietary database or file format, so I can choose to open the files in my knowledge vault with any text editor.įrom a data standpoint the only difference between the editors are their additional capabilities to handle my notes and to display the content, even though some of them have extended syntax. That is why I find Markdown-based note taking the best way to store my thoughts and ideas. The problem with hosted services is that you don’t own the platform and the content there, so what do you do if they go out of service or increase their prices? Services like Roam Research or Notion have made note taking really trendy recently.
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