![]() Here’s a good detailed video on how this guy set-up his second brain using Obsidian. (logsec has a mobile app as well, but still in alpha at the time of this writing). I decided to go with Obsidian primarily because it has a mobile application for my notes on-the-go. But since it’s new, there are very few community articles available. It is also open source (unlike Obsidian). logseq: Is a new comer which a lot of Obsidian users seem to be moving into.Roam: A pretty popular tool as well, but the data is in a proprietary format.Notion: A traditional heirarchical style note taking app, not good for Zettlekasten.It is mostly free with some premium add-ons. Obsidian: One of the most famous tools to date.Dendron: Open-source plugin using VS Code.Here are some of the Second Brain tools that I found: This is unlike my notes in EverNote and OneNote, which will most likely stay there indefinitely until I figure out a way to migrate those easily. Since Markdown is in plain text, I could easily port my notes to a different tool in the future and also version-control my notes in GitHub. I primarily focused on those that use markdown (.md) as the primary file format. Now there are many tools that you can use to build a second brain. Second Brain: Introduces you to the concept of second brain (same link at the beginning of this article).And how we now applied the same techniques using technology. ![]()
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