I do understand the frustration and the fact they’re now under new ownership isn’t helping. I do like Readwise Reader and Matter's Obsidian plugins which import highlights into Obsidian, but I just find lots of articles that just aren't complete once saved in these Read Later apps.If you hang out on this forum at all, you’ve no doubt seen some of my pro-Evernote posts. Clicking the link, Obsidian will bring up the web version of Onenote to the specific paragraph, page or notebook. I can copy links to a paragraph, a page or an entire notebook and place the link in Obsidian if I want to reference that article. Onenote provides plenty of organizational tools and even tags, albeit tags aren't wonderful in Onenote. Or I can just clip a Bookmark to the page. Full Page or Region give me an image of the page entire page, while Article does a pretty good job parsing the web page. So far I'm liking this as the Clipper gives me options on how I want to clip the web page. So I've been experimenting with using Onenote Clipper to clip web pages to Onenote and using Onenote as my Read-Later app. Seems they all have issues parsing different web pages so the experience is very inconsistent and parts of an article or some graphics in an article will just be flat out missing. ![]() I've actually been very disappointed in the various Read-Later apps currently available (Readwise Reader, Matter, Pocket, Instapaper). I hope I didn't confuse too much and got to give you some interesting tips! Ask me if you have any questions and I'll be happy to share more. Use your OneNote as a source and archive, for the sake of storing your old notes and source of content, and "treat" these notes with more care on Obsidian creating links, relating concepts, linking your knowledge. One Note, even if I haven't used it before, must be a great feature to organize content, but Obsidian is there to help us link our notes and ideas in a great way. A markdown transcription of that note, alongside my personal comments related to that topic, where I use Obsidian to create understandable and effective links to ease my studies The Microsoft Word notebook of the subject, the source of information I converted these word files to Markdown, and from there on, now I have two types of documents: So my solution is: I use Obsidian to write about all ideas, principles and concepts I studied in my classes and wrote in my notebooks. These Microsoft documents are truly rich in content, practically a good source of content.īut a good source of content needs its development as time passes through and we have to focus on other subjects. I used to take all my notes related to a university subject in a single Microsoft Word file. ![]() Hope I can give a personal example and give some tips, and hopefully other users can correct me to help you organize your notes. Not getting much writing or publishing done lies in the confusion of these Only if the notes of these three categories are kept separated it will be possible toīuild a critical mass of ideas within the slip-box. Kept within a project-specific folder and can be discarded or archived after the ![]() Project notes, which are only relevant to one particular project.Reference system or, written as if for print, in the slip-box. They are always stored in the same way in the same place, either in the Necessary information in themselves in a permanently understandable way. Permanent notes, which will never be thrown away and contain the.To achieve a critical mass, it is crucial to distinguish clearly between threeįleeting notes, which are only reminders of information, can be written inĪny kind of way and will end up in the trash within a day or two. Learning and Thinking – for Students, Academics and That would truly be the best of both worlds! There is currently a notetaking plugin available but I find it much less effective than OneNote and less intuitive in every way. ![]() My dream however would be to have the ability to open and include OneNote pages inside obsidian directly. The connections, the way information can be managed (you can literally turn and treat your entire note system into a queriable database with tags etc.), plus all the other features enabled by obsidian's plugins sadly doesn't leave much room for Onenote anymore imo. I tried using both in parallel and found myself drifting further and further away from Onenote as time went by. The true strength of OneNote is freeform notetaking, but it is different from obsidian in the sense that it still follows a more traditional organization scheme (similarly to a notebook), while obsidian allows for a radically different approach. The more information is gathered in one place, the better it can be pulled together.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |