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For many years, I wrote notes on paper using the bullet journal method. Now that my days are spent exclusively behind a computer, I’ve been searching for the right note-taking strategy. I recognize that note-taking is like pricing strategy: you never get it entirely right, so you’re always inclined to tinker.
Modern note-taking platforms go beyond documenting your thoughts. Whether that's turning a bunch of data into a live website or visualizing relationships between piles of notes, they've got you covered. Few do it better than Obsidian and Notion. I spent weeks testing Notion and Obsidian to see how they stack up.
On a lighter note, StrictlyVC reportedly used Visualping to know when startups fall out of favour and their logo is removed from VCs’ portfolio sites. See their blog post on multiples.). Deal makers are also monitoring changes on companies they are negotiating with, to know if a competitor has closed the deal before them.
Then, I explored the Cloudinary command-line-interface (CLI) for uploading images that I use in the blog. The last few weeks, I’ve been using Mutt as a terminal based email client, and vim to write blog posts and notes from meetings that end up in Obsidian. I’ve benefitted in a few ways from the journey.
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