
Syncs your Readwise documents, highlights and annotations to Raindrop. automatically adds new highlights and annotations. Set up the config using the tokens from readwise and raindrop, and leave LA...

From the commonplace book to the zettelkasten to the personal wiki, and everything in between. Technology-focused content and practice-based content both welcome. While we're still small, screenshots of your notes that you're particularly proud of are also welcome!
I wrote a script to sync Readwise to Raindrop
Syncs your Readwise documents, highlights and annotations to Raindrop. automatically adds new highlights and annotations. Set up the config using the tokens from readwise and raindrop, and leave LA...
cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/3451107
Check the comment of the gist for instructions on how to use. You can set this up to run every few minutes, keeping your readwise items, highlights, and annotations synced with Raindrop! I didn't see anything that accomplished this, even with the multitude of paid automation solutions. I was tempted to sign up for a free one when I realized they were all very flawed, so I just wrote one up for free!
Hope you enjoy! Suggestions and contributions more than welcome :)
Personal knowledge base by nikitavoloboev
N. Voloboev is a developer and coder that has worked on several projects, and right now is creating a full wiki dedicated to the things he has learned during his time on them.
How Lionel Davoust writes fiction books using the LYT Frameworks (Obsidian)
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When I search in my archive for the tag #diet I get really annoying results. I don’t only get notes on diet. I get notes on carbohydrates, insulin sensitivity and many other. “Why is that a problem?”, you might ask. “All the above topics are relevant for diet, aren’t they?” No, and here is why.
Bi-directional linking is all you need, and Bear has it
Andy Matuschak recorded a note-taking session
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22120 is an archival project that lets you rebrowse your browser history as you saw it
💾 dn - offline full-text search and archiving for your Chromium-based browser. - GitHub - dosyago/dn: 💾 dn - offline full-text search and archiving for your Chromium-based browser.
You gotta appreciate the commitment to getting a usable thing in place: being able to actually just... replay the requests--it's an impressive thing.
I wonder if the project's purism impairs its ability to be repurposed, though? One of the cool things about web archival projects is how through content-hashing / IPFS type nonsense, we might be able to build systems that let us have a shared memory of the internet. This seems important for images/media where duplicating that content is a heavy lift. (I'm thinking a bit of Jortage here, which makes it so a single-user Mastodon instance does not incur separate storage of every image it comes across...) It's hard for me to picture this project fitting into a shared archive -- but then, that's only my angle on web archival, and I haven't picked through the tech here.
mind mapping but cute
Create spaces to mindmap, moodboard, research, whiteboard, brainstorm, plan, and take notes
If I hadn't put a ton of effort into making my personal wiki lovely I would be all over this. I love how the notes can have "frames" to add little images at the edges -- that took me forever to figure out how to do in Tiddlywiki! I wonder if this could be a useful Trello replacement for a teenager? It has aesthetic bullet journal vibes, but much lower entry barrier to start using / making pretty.
promnesia: browser extensions to enrich browsing history and provide you your data
If you're interested in knowledgebase stuff I highly recommend going through the other projects on this site. I suppose I should bookmark as a permanent recommendation....
outliner as snazzy as Roam, but stored locally!
A privacy-first, open-source platform for knowledge management and collaboration.
via ryan rix
I'm really impressed by this; they're explicitly calling out Tiddlywiki as an influence, which is a project I think has a really great sensibility... but this fully keeps up with the (far more contemporary) UI patterns of Obsidian or Roam.
It's not open source properly yet, but they say they're going to do that in the next couple months. Maybe worth bookmarking and coming back to?
chris aldrich on roam's VC round
Roam Research should really be going the Zebra route and not the VC funding route. If the 11 person company is truly self-supporting with its current user base and there's so much upside for growth, they'd be far better off to keep that value internally. The only reason for VC funding is if they're ...
Oof, oof, oof. Strong agree on this being a bad fit for VC funding.
It seems like if they're trying to get into the corporate wiki space (which is the only place I can imagine there being VC-money-type return), that's going to necessitate different focus on features from what makes sense for the personal brain-backup user.
I've enjoyed the new blood Roam has brought into the personal knowledgebase community, and it's even indirectly responsible for getting me back into Tiddlywiki after years of absence--but this can only skew people's expectations about what notetaking can be.
An opinionated approach to TiddlyWiki (my blog post)
TiddlyWiki (TW) has been coming up in the Matrix channel that hosts discussion for the Malleable Systems Collective. It was correctly obs...
tiddlyroam - FOSS Roam alternative made with Tiddlywiki
tiddlyroam is a free, open source alternative to Roam. It is a notetaking app that works the way your brain does: networked, personal and infinitely customisable.
tiddlyroam is a free, open source alternative to Roam. It is a notetaking app that works the way your brain does: networked, personal and infinitely customisable: https://tiddlyroam.org/