ERRATA - 7:32 I say "Notion" but I meant "Obsidian" - woops! - YES I am aware of Logseq - it's not up to my requirements yet, but I have been very impressed by the pace of development. The reason I'm so happy about using Obsidian, despite it being closed-source software, is that my data is in plain text, and I can move to another tool (perhaps Logseq) when they become mature enough for my needs! - [[double square brackets]] are not in the original markdown spec, but have been adopted by nearly everyone (including github) - The bold example is also italic, the nesting required to get this working from *within markdown* bamboozled me!
@MichaelMantion Жыл бұрын
I'm to tried to try this now, but will definitely use this. TY. Really makes me wonder how many other awesome tools I am not using.
@SynthSoundscapes Жыл бұрын
At 7:32 you say Notion but I think you meant Obsidian.
@devanmcgeer9973 Жыл бұрын
@NoBoilerplate What do you think about using a rote memorisation app like Anki to store your notes in? My thinking is that Anki will manage your memory for you with the SRS algorithm it uses. While actively improving your memory.
@@devanmcgeer9973 Love Anki, I used it when learning Chinese. OBSIDIAN HAS ANKI PLUGINS!!!
@blazingblast Жыл бұрын
I'm busy developing note-taking software myself, this comes just in time to procrastinate doing that
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Plenty of space for everyone! Steal all the good ideas, but don't reimplement logseq
@nerd_abroad Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate What’s wrong with logseq?
@RobJess Жыл бұрын
If someone made an open-source equivalent to obsidian I would switch in a heartbeat
@FlorianLinscheid Жыл бұрын
@@RobJess Dendron for VSCode. I didn't love it but at the core it's pretty similar. Probably less extensions though.
@w01dnick Жыл бұрын
If it would be open source - clear advantage for some people (like myself).
@McDonaldsCalifornia Жыл бұрын
For real this is how all content on the web that isn't social media or straight up entertainment should work
@Goozeeeee Жыл бұрын
Back links are definitely a gamechanger
@invictuz4803 Жыл бұрын
The only Obsidian video to actually convert me. The video itself was actually so engaging that the 12 minutes passed by in a second, perfectly paced and insanely informative!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@mmanfrin Жыл бұрын
Agreed. I want a part 2 going through typical workflows now.
@RobJPhillips Жыл бұрын
I’m keenly interested but for this newbie there was a key piece of info I could not find. How do I get Obsidian on my iPhone. I downloaded what I thought was it but it’s asking me to login and no option to create a login. What info am I missing please?
@RobJPhillips Жыл бұрын
Also, thank you for this video. It may be a sanity saver. Being ADD and bipolar, I need a place to store thoughts and it would be great to see and access them in a relational manner.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@RobJPhillips Make sure you've got the right one, obsidian should not require a login or an account apps.apple.com/us/app/obsidian-connected-notes/id1557175442
@viiririiv Жыл бұрын
Everyone using Obsidian should also know that is has native support for Mermaid graphs. Just write a code block starting with ```mermaid and it will render as a graph. Very handy!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
SO GOOD RIGHT The reason I don't use them as much is that Advanced Slides doesn't work with mermaid as well as it should. But maybe it'll be fixed soon!
@chrismayer8098 Жыл бұрын
This comment sent me down a rabbithole. Holy cow Mermaid is amazing. I'm using Bing GPT-4 to generate timelines / flowcharts in mermaid. Thank you!
@jawad9757 Жыл бұрын
Mermaid is weird as shit
@muhwyndham Жыл бұрын
okay now you sold me. I have so much Mermaid graph that makes me unable to move on to anything other than VSCode right now for note taking (and yes, I do version control my notes, WTF right).
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@muhwyndham LOVE mermaid!
@JhonIdrovo-the-human Жыл бұрын
The video is as useful and streamlined as the app. As a developer I was thinking about its flaws and what could be improved and I got shut up by the fact you can modify it as you want. This app is just insane. THANK YOU for the productivity boost
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
My pleasure, I couldn't do what I do without it!
@AlistairKarim Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love Obsidian! I've been using it for a year now. It's absurd how long it took the industry to finally deliver a good note-taking app to us.
@jensenraylight8011 Жыл бұрын
yes exactly, i don't know why it was so hard for the industry to actually make a functional note app like Obsidian. using Obsidian, i realized the vision of the creator, his obsession with speed and blazing fast access. i realized that he actually an avid notes taker himself, it was reflected in the Obsidian Feature and implementation and obsess about things that actually improve the experiences, the guy had an ideal of what note taking should be. that's what the other note taking app miss. all of them just want to cash in all other notes app are more concerned about bloating their app with the latest bloatware trend as possible, who cares about the user, who cares if the notes was slow, took 1 minutes to load, laggy, and took 20Mb per notes. just look at logseq, Obsidian closest competitor, even though they're attacking the same market, their vision and implementation was really bad, slow, buggy, glitchy. Logseq look like they didn't even know what note taking really mean, they didn't had any principle in mind, just throw a random feature and implement it haphazardly.
@priapulida Жыл бұрын
@@jensenraylight8011 they learned a lot with dynalist which is great too, just not offline-first
@DarkSwordsman Жыл бұрын
@@jensenraylight8011 I think up until this point, it was mostly people making quick apps for fun or companies acuiring them for profit (Trello + Atlassin). It is clear that the devs of Obsidian probably needed it themselves and saw no point in hoarding it or making profit, since having an incredibly useful tool supported by an open source community just ensures that everyone benefits.
@UberBossPure Жыл бұрын
I Just wondering, iam currently a computer science student, so could I use Obsidian to learn? I mean It feels like I would not do much higher order learning and wasting my time instead of making a Mindmap with just relevant information instead of whole text parts. Maybe in future in my Job I could use this for note taking, but for learning it looks suboptimal.
@priapulida Жыл бұрын
@@UberBossPure you might want to take a deeper look at ways to mindmap in Obsidian, canvas, or look here how other people use it for learning
@jacobpetersen4038 Жыл бұрын
Watching your videos feels like scraping layers of plaque off of my brain. Such a refreshing change from the needlessly padded and empty videos I’m used to
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
I'm so pleased, this is an intentional choice on my part. Low animation is an accessibility feature. Things I don't keep you engaged with: animations, memes, cutaways to unrelated video, screaming, lolrandom bits. Things I try to keep you engaged with: A fast, well-polished script.
@ItsVasl Жыл бұрын
He's so much positive energy!
@MadLadsAnonymous Жыл бұрын
Wow, what a beautiful line!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@ItsVasl you're too kind, have you listened to Lost Terminal? (kzbin.info/www/bejne/pmTFdXhvoNitg8U) I bring that energy there too - the little ai narrator that I play is a happy guy! 😁
@ItsVasl Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate yes I listen to lost terminal, its so underrated, I love it so much!
@jordanfry2899 Жыл бұрын
The way you talk about things you like is addictive.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
I'm like this in real life, my friends all think I've got stocks in everything I like!
@TheTubejunky Жыл бұрын
Drugs are bad Emm khay.
@AntonioSpatalinoАй бұрын
it’s ai generated
@alinaqirizvi144128 күн бұрын
@AntonioSpatalino doesn't sound AI generated to me?
@drewerd15 Жыл бұрын
For anyone thinking about switching to obsidian one of my favorite features is how easy it is to add new features as you need them. You don't have to start out using every feature you can pick them up and introduce them as you go.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, It's truly whatever you make of it. I feel like I am only just scratching the surface!
@VaanDiablo Жыл бұрын
Been using it about 2 years. For creative writing it's phenomenal. Coming to and from personal projects that will never see the light of day but exist literally just as a creative outlet you can get back on board with anything really fast using the map. Truly game changing for my notes. It was sort of like how big zim wiki was for me prior to that.
@augustday94839 ай бұрын
Just wanted to drop in and say, THANK YOU for this video! I watched it a few months ago and decided to try out Obsidian. I can confidently say this software has made a huge positive impact on my productivity and effectiveness at work. It sounds corny, but having a personal wiki of information on topics relevant to my job (such as procedure lists, meeting notes, How-Tos, daily note files) has saved me a lot of time and made it much easier to get things done.
@samuelzinidasilveira4542 Жыл бұрын
I can't express how much i appreciate your videos. High quality information compressed into a objective and straight to the point manner. Nothing left to desire.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
You're too kind, thank you!
@Galaxzier Жыл бұрын
As a person with ADHD, I installed Obsidian 6 months ago but still haven't used it
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Obsidian is a big part of my ADHD coping mechanisms, here's my video about that: kzbin.info/www/bejne/joa9aol3icp5lZY
@Robin-ps9wq Жыл бұрын
I tried using notion for a while and it just didn't work for me. im gonna try out obsidian after this video but it's always hard to convert to a new software. I personally use apple notes. its surprisingly well organized
@mandradon Жыл бұрын
Fellow ADHDer and this appealed to me for a lot of reasons. If I have stuff scattered about in a ton of places I forget to do it. I love the idea of automating a to-do list and whatnot. It's part of the reason why I've never really found a "system" to grasp with all my tasks and management of just stuff I have to do. This SEEMS like it may be an answer if I can wrap my brain around it. But that feels like a task in and of itself. I guess it's something new to hyperfocus on for a bit now that I finally got neovim set up again after having to migrate it way from null-ls.
@aeases- Жыл бұрын
@@mandradonI have ADHD and started using obsidian around a year ago now, going from not taking notes at all to the polar opposite has actually changed my life, When your giving it a shot for the first time **dont wrap your head around it**, just use it and discover all the different things you can do organically, it doesn't matter if old notes have some mistakes in them, my first time I used markdown tables for pretty much everything, honestly don't know why I didn't quit there tbh. (the upcoming visual markdown table editor should make them useable though) Plugins are amazing too, if theres something you want obsidian to do, I can guarrantee you can make obsidian do it, it's just that some things are easier to do than others.
@p1nstark Жыл бұрын
This
@devvy8343 Жыл бұрын
I start college in a week and will 100% give this a try. I think its genius how they implement new features without completely demolishing the markdown standard.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
That's the real trick, right? The "kanban" plugin is based on H1, h2 native markdown, it's so clever!
@jayyan5617 Жыл бұрын
can we just appreciate how pretty the Obsidian UI is.... it's the sleakies i've seen of all the note softwares/platforms
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
SO pretty, and they recently hired the author of the most popular theme, Minimal!
@FlorianLinscheid Жыл бұрын
I tried Obsidian because everyone loves it, but here is the problem I encountered with it and pretty much every other note taking app: I basically never look at any of the notes I have written ever again. I created quite a few notes and felt good in that moment about it, but now they just lay there and are completely irrelevant to me. And then it very quickly feels like a huge waste of time to take the time and write the notes if they won't be relevant later. Sure, you can never predict what will be relevant in the future and by writing everything down you are prepared, but the time investment feels too big. How do you handle that? How do you know what to write down? How are you keeping your brain alive?
@Rheinstahlglueck Жыл бұрын
Yeah I think this is the biggest hurdle for entry. The first Tip is really mundane but just use it as a scratchpad and fill it up with more notes. Someday the connections will emerge naturally. I mean you first brain does it all the time collecting seemingly unrelated Info and afterwards connecting it. Why should your second brain behave otherwise? The info is already stored but lays dormant it is still useful. Someday while writing a new Note you will get the itch and remember that you have Something relevant already written down and then you link it. Second Tip: Dont fuss about a specific system or framework. Do the notetaking mostly freestyle for a while. Your system is never set in stone and your vault should represent that too. Keep it moldable so you have always the possibility to come back to your own notes. However if you like overview pages or Wikis than take a look at the concept of "Maps of Content (MOC)" from Linking your Thinking. It helps to Sort your own thoughts and make them navigateable from Basic Overview to more Specialized thoughts. Helped me a lot. Tip 3: If you want to Journal then configure Obsidian in such way that the First Note upon start is the Journal entry for the current Date. Tip 4: In my opinion people have the most success If they dont feel like having to take notes but act rather like its a hobby. If you feel like you want to make a specific Note more usable or beautiful then Just so it. You're still interacting with your vault and your brain then. Its still useful. People say its their "Zen Garden" and calms them. I think thats a stretch but notetaking should not be a burden to you. Just dont think of it as Work. Tip 5: Set aside a small time just for processing your already written down notes. If you dont know where to start make a Challenge and use the official random plugin and roll a Note to process. The Community repository has already more advanced plugins for that If you fancy to just roll a Note based on different conditions (like without Tags or Backlinks) Thats some of my ways to deal with that hurdle. Hope if helps!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Here's the galaxy-brain take: Never create notes with ctrl+n - create notes with ctrl+o, the file open picker. This means you never accidentally create two documents with the same name, you'd see it in the list and you could open it again. Look up the "unlinked mentions" feature, for finding orphans.
@Anon.G Жыл бұрын
Yeah I'm struggling to find out when I would actually use this.
@TheFeljoy Жыл бұрын
I like to clear my head by writing notes when I have many concurrent thoughts. The act of actually expressing and writing it out once is usually enough to be useful to me even if i never go back and read it. Sometimes i do however :)
@anarchoyeasty3908 Жыл бұрын
@@Anon.G Start with making one for your work (assuming you are a developer?) Any project you work on, any client you have, make a note for them. Deadlines, requests, meeting notes, etc. all go into your note. Make a habit of reviewing them at the start of your day and write them all down at the end of your day. That way you know you won't forget anything and can stop thinking about your work after you leave work.
@okharev8114 Жыл бұрын
Just for people, if you want an open source alternative there is logseq, which i personaly use, it's basically like obsidian with a roam research / workflowy flavor
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Logseq is good, and perhaps if they continue development a possible alternative in the future, but it's not where I need it to be yet. The native sync is in alpha, which is a good start, but I need far far more features. The nice thing about all my data being in portable markdown is the moment logseq does what I want, I can switch trivially!
@shmendusel Жыл бұрын
and zettlr, no?
@_modiX Жыл бұрын
Does Logseq provide tags that are organized like folders?
@rashedulkabir6227 Жыл бұрын
Is obisidian free and opensource?
@okharev8114 Жыл бұрын
@@_modiX it provides tags, they act almost like traditional backlinks, the way they act changes if you install a specific plugin for tags, for hierarchical / folder organisation, you can use "namespaces"
@WannabeMarsanach Жыл бұрын
I started using Obsidian a few months ago. Id wanted to find a program like this _for years_ for my various hyperfixations and projects that pop into my mind. Usually some form of world building, story writing, or game development project that I'm totally 100% definitely gonna finish *eventually*. I'd wanted some form of wiki-esque way to store the data because my brain just seemed to like how wikis worked, having spend years trawling through various wikis for things like the Ender Scrolls, or even Wikipedia, just consuming knowledge. As soon as I discovered Obsidian, after a couple days getting to grips with it, it went form a program I, frankly, never imagined finding, to one I cant keep closed for more than an hour when I'm on my computer. I'm about to start a research degree in the near future aswell, and I can see it being an essentual tool I use all throughout my studies for organising my notes and working through my project. I'm not even using like 1% of its functionallity by the looks of it, but I've already found it incredible useful.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
oh PERFECT! just having obsidian installed makes me want to do a research degree!
@ugib8377 Жыл бұрын
Thanks a ton for this. Been teaching myself to code over the past 2 months now, and one of my biggest banes was handwriting my notes. This program allows me to type them out so much faster. If one of my pages gets too stuffed with info, I step back in the chain. Create a header note with a table of contents, and break my bloated note into several that branch from there. Which is something that is tricky to do with paper. I also love that using tab and then typing creates collapsable blocks that you can demo code in. Then minimize it to save space until you need to read it. Your channel is amazing and you are doing wonderful things for your community. Thanks so much from a guy with a dream to change careers and thus alter the course of his life. -G
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
I'm delighted to hear this. Keep watching obsidian videos, get inspired by the 1200+ plugins, and it'll get more and more useful as you use it more and more. That's what happened to me! I wouldn't have been able to change careers from programmer to KZbinr without running my life in Obsidian! You're in good hands :-)
@velandrii Жыл бұрын
I've been using Notion since I switched to software development. I did (and still do) basically the same - note taking on videos, interviews, organizing my knowledge in a tree-like structure and just for day-to-day work items (although here pen and paper sometimes wins). What I lack in Notion is some tag system. Nested tags look promising in obsidian. Another thing that I'm concerned is that it's not plain text. After several years of writing notes I feel that I don't wanna lose them and can spare some time into transferring to a new note-taking system, where I will host the data. Here I'm thinking of Google+Git+probably periodically duplicating to a separate hard drive. Anyhow, all the best with changing your career! I wasn't sure I could do it but now I regret that I never thought of it earlier. Not that it's frictionless or I love doing it 24/7 but I definitely enjoy programming. Hope you also find it inspiring and fascinating. Cheers!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@velandrii I too switched from Notion, their export zip of markdown files was good to import into obsidian, but showed me just how bad their export was, and how trapped my data was in their cloud! Google/git/hard drive - all possible thanks to the magic of plain text 😀
@pseudonymity0000 Жыл бұрын
I personally like tree sheets, as it is a bit of a hidden gem that describes itself as a free form hierarchical information organiser. Imagine an extremely flexible spreadsheet that starts with a single cell, that you can then expand out and nest tables within tables, each one with their own formatting and style. You then have different rendering options for your nest of tables to act like a flow diagram, bubbles or tables. You can even programme the sheet to perform certain actions allowing you to input data and get a desired output.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
That's fun! I wasn't aware of TreeSheets until now! The data is not stored in plain text, however, and honestly it's so nested I can't blame them - but I feel nervous about my brain being in such a format. TreeSheets also doesn't have anything like the features I need - there are many plugins for obsidian that build the features of TreeSheets, you could give it a go if you like!
@pseudonymity0000 Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate That's fair, and I'm trying out Obsidian now. Tree sheets was something I came across when I was trying to find good free mind map software, by laying out my ideas in a fluid manner. But other tools just seemed clunky or you had to pay. Then came Tree sheets as an obscure find buried a few pages back in my Google search. I tried it and thought it was a brilliant concept. It just jived with the way my brain works. Love the concept of how you can just slap in cells at any time at any point you want and have an infinitely deep nesting, that you can just drill down into further and further detail on an idea. When you're done on a concept you can return straight back out to the surface and see your entire sheet again. It to me is the digital equivalent of a mind palace. Every cell being a door that you can open into another table of cells, with many more doors. Each tailored just the way you need it for whatever the problem is that you're trying to tackle, or however you need to store the information. As for the plain text. I know that it can export into other formats such as HTML, XML, indented text and CSV. However, the main problem is, like you stated in your video, should the platform you use die, your mind will go with it. Not really much of a concern with Tree Sheets as the software is fully open source. It's one of those gems that really should get more love and attention then it has, thanks to a concept so simple, yet extraordinarily powerful. But thanks for bringing Obsidian to my attention, as it is something that never came up when I was looking for good free note taking and mind mapping software.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Try out Dynalist, Logseq, or org-mode itself for that infinite recusion feeling. There are plugins you can use to get this in obsidian of course!
@rivaldealer__ Жыл бұрын
Not even a coder myself but you’re seriously one of the best informational channels I’ve seen! Plus this got me to give Obsidian a try and now I’m in the process of porting all my notes over, thanks so much for the recommendation!
@matdzh7111 Жыл бұрын
As a Notion user who has previously tried Obsidian, your case for switching was way more eye-opening than I expected. It's amazing to see how a seemingly shallow note taking application can do when a user utilizes its features effectively.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
1000+ plugins vs Notion's zero isn't nothing either :-D Notion's great, I used it for years, but you can't beat community involvement!
@matdzh7111 Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate that's true but the community involvement in Notion seemed to be around the features rather than inline with the features. At Notion it was always about creating the most aesthetic and pleasant templates that does a million things at once so that you don't need any other program (having a timer, tracker for tasks, counter, etc). In Obsidian, templates seem to be more individually driven rather than community driven, where everyone seems to like the Zettelkasten method of note taking and having variations of that system.
@michaeljuarez8991 Жыл бұрын
So glad I came across this video! I struggled with note taking for my MS math classes (especially something like Statistics which has interlinked theorems, concepts that are referenced 3-4 'lectures' down the road). Started using Obsidian today and already see the power based on the demos you provided. Would love a deeper follow up!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Wonderful! Do note that Obsidian has perfect LaTeX support, for maths notation!
@sensorer Жыл бұрын
I want something like this, but not just as note-taking software, but a whole file system. I really want a file system with a graph structure
@gaius_enceladus Жыл бұрын
@sensorer - IIRC, Git (the version-control software) has a graph structure - it uses a directed acyclic graph (DAG). I think Plan 9's "Venti" archival filesystem may also use a similar approach.
@sensorer Жыл бұрын
@@gaius_enceladus I mean I need something like that to use instead of the default file system on Windows(or any OS for that matter), something I can just install and use with minimal friction. I want an ability to use the standard tree-like structure of a classic file system, but add different links if I want to(and an ability to view the graph in its full glory)
@heroslippy6666 Жыл бұрын
@@sensorer On windows and Linux distros (idk about Macintosh), you can create Shortcuts/links to different locations. You can link to folders or even files directly. It's been around for a very long time. I know that on windows these shortcuts can also be modified with commands on how to run a program, and also can link to webpages. Now viewing this on the other hand is gonna be a little harder. I am sure there are some free open source projects for this sort of thing. For example the program WinDirStat is a program that explores the file structure of the computer getting all the sizes of the various files. It will then have two displays. One is the basic folder view with there sizes. The other is a visual block diagram of blocks to represent the size and area of a file in the folder tree that they are located. I know that is not quite it but there is probably something out there that you are looking for.
@EdibleMushrooms Жыл бұрын
Look up Xanadu by Ted Nelson, would’ve been so cool if that took over instead of Word, Notepad etc.
@DocHogan Жыл бұрын
I mentioned TheBrain/PersonalBrain in another comment; it USED to do this, act as a replacement for file manager. It was *amazing*. Upon install, it would crawl entire storage and create a mindmap of all files. It as a hierarchical mindmap mirroring the original folder structure, but once generated it could be crosslinked and back-linked, incorporated into other 'brains', 'thoughts' added to it, etc, just like any other TB/PB 'brain'. New versions can still _kind of_ do this, but not nearly as gracefully or powerfully as it used to.
@xthebumpx Жыл бұрын
I think it is a bit confusing to talk up Obsidian's markdown compliance and the portability of the notes. All of that goes out the window when you start pulling in things like dataview and templater, not to mention embeds and references and even hashtag style tags. Other markdown tooks won't know what to do with those, and it makes publishing notes more difficult if you want to make your own website. Of course you can not use those features, but then Obsidian is not as ahead of the competition. I can't say I've really found a notes app I'm completely happy with. There are about five different ones I wish I could combine various features of.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
It's a valid concern, but you've taken it to unusual extremes. 99% of my data is markdown, and if my brain is 99% portable that's enough for me :-)
@tylerkropp4380 Жыл бұрын
I think it is worth mentioning, because the more proprietary the format, the harder it is to convert to another format or to make new software that renders that format. So, by being more standardized (comparatively), the risk is lower than other software. Then again, standardizing markdown itself is still in-progress. But every bit helps.
@scotthiland5521 Жыл бұрын
I've found Joplin pretty good overall and I'm able to sync with ALL my devices (phone, desktop, laptop, etc.). Joplin also has plugin that give it some similar functionality as Obsidian (maybe not the best implemented) but I suppose it comes down to how you organize your notes/thoughts. For me Obsidian just felt like a big hurdle to get to grips with, where as, Joplin just felt like it fit my style of note taking better.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@scotthiland5521 Joplin doesn't do it for me because the files are stored in a sqlite db, not plain-text markdown on disk. Having your life in plain text is HUGE for flexibility, and if joplin did it, I wouldn't need to use the bad joplin mobile app, I could choose to edit them in whatever program I liked, but alas.
@milindsharma8106 Жыл бұрын
I would love to see a video about your personal system for using Obsidian. I've just started using it, and I'm a bit tentative about how to organise my notes in folders given that many notes will eventually connect to each other with nodes. Would be awesome to understand how people use it successfully.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
come chat in #obsidian on my discord if you like, it's not a solved problem, and everyone uses it a little differently!
@ZekeTheMandolinMan Жыл бұрын
I've been passively looking for a markdown app for such a long time but it feels like all of them have annoying quirks, aren't actually markdown, or are behind a pretty steep paywall. I stumbled on this video a few days ago and I've been obsessed with this app ever since. Thank you SO MUCH for creating this video. This is exactly what I've been looking for.
@RR-hl6zi11 ай бұрын
I am in love with Obsidian. Your videos have informed quite a bit of my daily life (37 yo, ADHD flaring up like mad). Note taking tools have been the bane of my existence. But being able to organize my (plain text!) notes and sync them to all my devices is just amazing. It truly has become a second brain for me. I am scared to explore the plugins, though, as it feels like a bit of a rabbit hole waiting to pull me in. Thank you for your videos. They have changed my life in a very positive way.
@NoBoilerplate11 ай бұрын
Hey, I'm 37 too! I'm so glad 😁
@b130610 Жыл бұрын
I started using obsidian about a year ago with the thought that I'd use it like what you're describing - a knowledge database - but I found that trying to mold my usage to that didn't really work, and I wasn't getting that much value out of it. What I did find is that using it as a more flexible calendar and daily journal has been life changing. I'll occasionally take notes about projects, or ideas, but 90% or more of my notes are just daily notes with info about my schedule, my appointments, and my reflections on the day. It's been liberating, and immensely useful to have a flexible, but simple way to organize my day-to-day life that I'm not worried will spirit away all my data if the company goes under. The polish present in the editor (autocomplete is so useful), the sync, and the plugin ecosystem that cuts down on busy work necessary to match my work flow are just the cherry on top.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
nice! yes I always have my daily note on screen, with my schedule etc on!
@BenSycha Жыл бұрын
Cheers Tris, some very useful features there! Diagnosed ADHD a year or so ago (ASD because well why not) and I am trying to get the brain pings organised. Back links, pallets and network graph with hanging links looks fantastic for keeping things organised. Very much trying the externalising the brain (in one place), focusing on that concept has been very helpful. Love your videos, find them chilled, informative, interesting and useful!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Ah, a fellow autiehd! I'm excited for you to try out obsidian, it's been a game changer for organising my life!
@fish1r1 Жыл бұрын
just don't forget to use the damn tool. I started quite a few times and I keep forgetting.
@BenSycha Жыл бұрын
@@fish1r1 I have got into a good habit of using Wikimedia Server for technical reference and nextcloud notes for brain pings. Only had to go through one note, Google keep, random files 'organised' in unrelated areas of my file system etc to get there! Gives me some hope but I feel you! 😂
@minerscale Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate Found out I had ADHD last year, also found myself resonating with you a lot, recently started suspecting I had autism as well. Found out recently you had autism. Seemingly all my friends have autism. Perhaps I should find out more. Also obsidian seems really cool. I'm gonna try it out and see how it goes :)
@kikivoorburg Жыл бұрын
I’d also like to point out how flexible obsidian is regarding the workflow. I also use it frequently and enjoy it, yet nearly nothing I do matches what you showed in this video: I don’t use the graph view much, I never use daily notes, etc. Even still, obsidian easily handles the workflow I have! I highly highly recommend it even if you don’t follow the workflow shown in this video
@fexofenadinaGenerica Жыл бұрын
Me too! I never go to the graph view, I have even disabled it. Daily notes also don't work for me, neither creating a bunch of small notes with tiny subjects all linked up (I prefer accessing my subjects via the headings side panel). When the need to divide a note comes, obsidian gives us all the tools necessary. It is awesomely adaptable
@b130610 Жыл бұрын
It's funny you mention this, because my usage also differs, but I use it almost exclusively with Daily Notes, and the calendar plugin to replace my calendar/reminders, and to be a place where I can reflect on my daily life. I'll make "meta-notes" that exist with no content only to backlink to the daily notes that are related (for example, a "library" note that I will link to whenever I mention the local library in my daily notes). It's satisfying to see just how many ways a general purpose tool can be used by people who have different needs for it.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, I don't even use this simple workflow, I tried to explain the basic out of the box experience, and then invite folks to expand on that with extensions!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Same, that big graph seems to be entirely for getting people excited about obsidian! I think the 'local graph' might be handy, I've never used that before, and I've stuck it in the corner of my window for testing
@digi_dream Жыл бұрын
I have been looking for something like this for the past 2 years! Thank you for bringing it to our attention!!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Fantastic!
@ugabbel Жыл бұрын
I read "build your second brain" and started using notion for that, after this video I migrated all my notes to obsidian and now I finally have a backup on github and still a device sync for desktop and mobile. Thank you for this video!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
My exact path too! ENJOY!
@SNAKEPATR10T Жыл бұрын
Is that a book? Do you have a link?
@vincentpelletier1246 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: if you put your obsidian on your free 15gb google drive account and synch that account on your desktop, putting any obsidian notes in it will synch them over the network. Very useful if you switch machines.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
another plain text superpower! Works just the same with dropbox, icloud, git, nextcloud, etc etc - we all have at least one of these!
@BCBtheBeastlyBeast Жыл бұрын
I could see this being incredibly useful for visualizing the connections between Skyrim mods for newcomers--they could see exactly what they need for the most popular mods and what they might want in addition!
@ShockWave1911 Жыл бұрын
I would enjoy more videos from you about Obsidian! You have such an engaging style and pacing. I'm sold!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I've a mind to do a deep-dive into how I use Obsidian day-to-day, maybe in a month!
@mbunds Жыл бұрын
Thanks for another excellent production! Employed in the industrial/critical infrastructure sectors, I'm one of those who, after finding a solution either by scouring everything currently available to evaluate the "best", or after finding none by developing my own, will stay with the "tried-and-true" tools that I found to be vital or useful, often for decades. When I pull my head out of the sand to review solutions for replacement, either due to compatibility or security issues, or to support new tech, I usually discover that things have (duh) changed radically, usually improving on my old, comfortable tools significantly, similar to how cell phones improved on the telegraph. One of my favorite note taking tools has been Microsoft OneNote, an application that I believe to be underappreciated by most users, and to me the sole application keeping Microsoft relevant, since Windows is required to run it, which is also one of its shortcomings. Yes, there are "cloud" versions of OneNote which will run on non-Windows platforms, but these are poorly-mirrored parodies of the full "desktop" version, lacking many features in their current versions. Based on your recommendations, it sounds like Obsidian is more than a worthy replacement?
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
More than worthy - especially combined with the excellent Excalidraw plugin, for perfect pen input!
@Nathan-sh1re Жыл бұрын
If only all video guides/tutorials were presented like this. Concise, directed, dynamic pacing, plus energy in the voice!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! I'll probably do one or two more soonish!
@jacobydotwin Жыл бұрын
I use Obsidian as part of my diary and its fun decorating it and making the journal entries look pretty using the formatting syntax stuff.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
The PASTELS!
@StrewthFroogals Жыл бұрын
Nice to hear someone using it like that! At first this seemed really complicated. I really just want a place to throw all my past journal entries from different platforms I've tried. Is I possible to put them into chronological order in Obsidian?
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@StrewthFroogals Yes indeed, search for videos on "obsidian" and "journal" or "day planner"
@garth2356 Жыл бұрын
I've been using obsidian to take class notes for the past year and its tagging feature has made it so much simpler for me to look stuff when revising. That plug-in which allows you to use tags as folders seems like it'd really help me in the future, thanks a lot!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Fantastic!
@vinz3160 Жыл бұрын
I just recently stumbled upon obsidian after my OneNote just became way too cluttered and a mess to navigate. It takes a bit of work to get everything converted so it shows properly with the graph view, but it is so worth it. If you prefer a folder structure and want that structure to be reflected in the graph view, I can highly recommend the "Zoottelkeeper" Plugin. Great Video!
@tusharmahajan6833 Жыл бұрын
I've been using Obsidian for a few months now and I love it. I'm so happy you made this video!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it!
@sshado2 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for leaving the basic-syntax link on the screen for a while. It helps me type it out while listening!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
All my scripts and the slides are available on github, copy and paste! github.com/0atman/noboilerplate/tree/main/scripts
@RaymondPeckIII Жыл бұрын
This looks great! I have been writing a DS/ML book in Markdown, and this seems like exactly the right way to go about it. My hesitation was that I don't want my hands to leave emacs, but I see that there's at least one emacs mode for editing the files. Woo! Gonna give it a try!
@Plasmawiz Жыл бұрын
Obsidian is great 😃 Apart from using it in the obvious role of general planning, note-taking and journaling, I have begun a large experiment with the link and tag system. I am cataloguing places, people and most importantly childhood memories in a massive sprawling database to try and see what structures form from linking them. It is basically a huge reflective journal made of lots of little notes. Has been a very therapeutic experience so far. Don't know how long I will keep it up for but will be interesting to see if anything stands out as the database matures.
@htp8913 Жыл бұрын
This sounds interesting - what are the categories you are using?
@Plasmawiz Жыл бұрын
@@htp8913 My current system is mainly using tags for categorization, and then linking notes together. My main tag categories are currently: Memory - Anything related to the recollection of an event, and thoughts and feelings at the time Reflection - How I feel/felt about a topic Person - People present in things I record Location - Self explanatory Things - Objects, media etc
@fotnite_ Жыл бұрын
I've been using Obsidian for quite a bit now, nice to see it getting more attention. Also, as far as the git plugin, they have pretty easy to follow instructions on how to set it up for mobile. I've heard that some phones can have issues with it, but I personally haven't, and besides, I mix my notebooks with stuff like Rnote files that means relying on Obsidian sync would be a bit weird in my case.
@obit6380 Жыл бұрын
I'm amazed! This is exactly what I need! The past 3 months I've been crafting my perfect mind-dump-db, project-planner, daily to-do and 'keep-track-of-everything-in-a-sensible-way-tracker' within Notion. I loved it, but I soon came across it's limitations. This solves that! Great vid!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
NICE! Yes Notion is a very pretty toy, but obsidian is LEGO!
@jynne2490 Жыл бұрын
The video is almost 3 weeks old but im glad this was in my recommended page. I've always wanted to start looking for note-taking software and this is exactly what I have in mind. Just wanted to say I appreciate the video and thank you!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@nicolevdh Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the shout out! Happy to hear you like Obsidian!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Nicole! I love your videos, your tips have revolutionised my weekly D&D game, which I run from obsidian 😃
@JoLeaf Жыл бұрын
Obsidian is excellent, and the community plugins are fantastic. You can build your own Obsidian platform with those plugins that fit best for your personal requirements!
@klaymoon1 Жыл бұрын
This is new. I haven’t thought in this way, but you are right. Using Obsidian made a subtle but noticeable change in how I think.
@orterves Жыл бұрын
The link graph looks amazing for maintaining a cohesive collection of notes. Edit: omg the data view plugin. How have I not heard about this app before?
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Right!? It's INCREDIBLE. My life literally would not be as organised if it weren't for this amazing app, and I'm not even using it very well! Check Nicole's website (penultimate slide) and her yt channel, she's SO good with it!
@MichaelMantion Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate I think I will try anytype instead since its opensource. I am sure obsidian is great but prefer to support open source projects.
@Sub0x-x40 Жыл бұрын
its very powerful
@salmanban05 Жыл бұрын
The Data View plugin seems like a dream come true.
@laubblaeser_ Жыл бұрын
@@MichaelMantion As fascinating as this seems, I immediately see two problems with this: 1. The source code isn't published. 2. There's no mention of how they finance their team. This makes me wonder what this whole project is about, where they're coming from, how they'll keep the lights on, etc. I'll keep an eye on the project, that's for sure. But for now I think it's not a good call to draw people to it *just yet*. Almost everyone will be better off to stick to a well-established program like Obsidian for the time being. :)
@joshuapatterson5095 Жыл бұрын
Just tried Obsidian because of this video. I'm almost at the end of day one and I already love it! I have never been able to stick to a note-taking habit for various reasons, primarily friction and searchability. This addresses both of these and much more. Thankyou.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
You're in for a real treat :-)
@Dreancatger Жыл бұрын
I’ve tried using various tools for a second brain system in the past but could just never get it to work. Even with the Obsidian, I always just ended up with a bunch of random notes with very few links between them. It usually felt quite forced when I did try to add a link. However, Obsidian has been an absolutely fantastic program for my daily journaling. I love that I own my data rather than it being stored in the cloud on someone else’s computer, and as a markdown editor it’s just fantastic. At one point, when I still had aspirations of maintaining a second brain in digital format, I had a note for all the people I knew, and I would link each person’s note if I had something to mention about them in my daily journal. It was a nice little reference I could use to remind myself when I last spoke to someone in person and what we spoke about, but it ended up feeling like a bit of a chore so I stopped trying. Now I just it as my daily (or at least most days) brain dump and it’s great for that. I made myself a template that works for me and it feels great to do at the end of the day. I would love to actually be able to make the second brain thing work though and I envy anyone who has managed to do so. It honestly feels like the holy grail of digital note-taking and productivity, but perhaps it’s just not for everyone.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Ah I sympathise, it took me a few tries to start using obsidian well, and I'm still figuring things out! BTW look up the 'unlinked mentions' feature - you don't need to link to notes at the time, if that's a chore, you can retroactively link them in bulk!
@Mallchad Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate Does it support creating keyword links? org-mode radios I found to be partcularly useful
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@Mallchad aha, I didn't know about radios, that's cool. YES these are called "unlinked mentions" in obsidian. What are keyword links?
@Mallchad Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate Awesome, thanks :D Keyword links are my generic name for exactly that. A function that sweeps texts for keywords and automatically links them to the appropriate place. It's roughly what you'd call it in programming too since keywords and symbol names get auto-linked to their definition
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@Mallchad nice! Well it's got all that and a BUNCH more - try the MAKE.md plugin, plus add `omnisearch`, which is like c-x and ripgrep rolled into one!
@codetothemoon Жыл бұрын
Very cool! Been somewhat trying to stick with org-roam for awhile, but some of these Obsidian features are really nice!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Hi Ken! Yeah, if you can keep your brain in plain text, org-mode is LOVELY, I used it for 2 years and wrote seasons of my podcast on it. GORGEOUS. I especially love org-babel, with Rust! But there's SO MUCH you can do with obsidian
@thomasmitchell2514 Жыл бұрын
This is the best video I’ve seen on Obsidian so far, concise and informative. I’ve been using Obsidian for years now and love it, it’s grown a lot. And I learned a few things in this very short video, I’d be very keen to see more from you on the breakdowns of certain plugins and workflows. Now it’s time for me to go update my todo structure, your method is superior to my own! #todo Thanks!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I might do a follow-up in a month!
@Anonymous4045 Жыл бұрын
I was a bit turned off by the pricing for obsidian sync: it is just storing text files after all. But I then found the obsidian git extension. I simply made a private github repo where I can keep everything for free and with a service I already use. Once I set it up on my phone, laptop, and computer, it syncs everything quietly behind the scenes. I want to keep my notes private, but if I didn't, I could add github pages to the repo so anyone can see all my notes. Overall a very useful tool, thanks for sharing!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
love the git plugin! If you ever have difficulties with it, some have reported that Syncthing is even more streamlined, though you must run your own server with it...
@J.D-g8.1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Most informative, no BS, fast paced! Love it!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much, that's my video style in a nutshell!
@MoonPatel Жыл бұрын
Downloaded it just now. Sounds exactly like what I need. Very excited about this.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Oh I'm so excited for you! You're going to have a really good time, welcome to the rest of your life! Take it slow, I had a few tries to get into the swing of the app - and try out some plugins! kzbin.info/www/bejne/aYawn5Z9l9SWd7c
@dino0o0o0o2 Жыл бұрын
I really like mochi cards. It allows you to take notes and make flash cards with markdown , then study them using spaced repetition. Great for remembering a lot of information efficiently. It also has tags and two way references
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Cool! There's loads of spaced repetition plugins for obsidian!
@dino0o0o0o2 Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate I've just tried obsidian after watching this video and it is amazing, thanks!
@Terzom Жыл бұрын
Very good video, did not know about DataView. I've used Obsidian now for about 4 month and really love it. I only use it for work as of now since the calendar plugin is amazing that let you make notes connected to a date. Perfect for me as a developer with daily standup in the morning and I can make notes in the end of the day to know what i will do the next day or even weeks in advance. And as you say, perfect that it's only text files and you can store it in a cloud-provider so you'll always have a backup incase something happens to the computer. The mindmap I never really understood what the purpose was, but I don't work with connecting documents. I like the tags for that if I encounter the same subject several times and want to group them.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Oh you simply MUST try some of the community plugins! Dataview is the #2 most popular plugin, and I recommend seriously considering the top 10 in 'community plugins', and then scrolling the top 50, to see if any jump out at you.
@fourlokody Жыл бұрын
i'm going to transfer from one note to obsidian. thanks! would love to see more content about your workflow with obsidian
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
There's so much on youtube about Obsidian, really great stuff - I may do a follow-up with my own personal system, if that'd be interesting to folks.
@anonymous-anonymous-anonymous Жыл бұрын
I watched this video smugly as a die-hard TiddlyWiki user. Surprised I didn't see it along your path somewhere @ 2:51. The entire program is an open-source self-editing html file. Its flexibility has allowed me to tailor it as a playful "personal website" rather than a series of notes within a proprietary interface. Changed my life. I could ramble about it all day, but I'd suggest giving it a close look and checking out examples of what people have been able to do with it.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Oh I'm very familiar. Love it, and if only the mobile editing worked better I might have switched!
@altrogeruvah Жыл бұрын
I'm a compulsive note-taker which also values UI/UX design, and so when I migrated from (now completely broken) Simplenote to Obsidian (and from macOS to Fedora Linux respectively), I immediately felt a tangible freedom. Coming from Simplenote, I thought "simple minimalist text is perfectly fine", but Obsidian's live preview text over markdown has helped and inspired me to create more detailed notes pertaining to my work and hobbies. The best part of Obsidian? Community plugins; local sync to all devices via Dropbox, contextual typography, native GNOME theme etc. Obsidian can be as simple and complex as you want it to be.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Welcome to your new life 🙂
@kireitonsi Жыл бұрын
I love obsidian, so happy to see a video on it!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
It's about time I did one!
@mr_clean575 Жыл бұрын
Love this! I’ve had Obsidian for awhile now, but I was unaware of the vast majority of these features. Really awesome stuff! I would enjoy more videos about Obsidian, as well as other software.
@galgrunfeld9954 Жыл бұрын
Beyond how freaking amazing it sounds to me for almost any human, from this, I think Obsidian *very* useful for me as someone with ADD, since my memory retention is worse than the average person. And for my future career as a mathematician. And now as a developer. And maybe in some product management I hope to be doing soon. It really seems to me there's SO much you can do with this. Thank you so much. I have never heard of Obsidian until this video, and I downloaded it while watching this (paused and re-watched parts multiple times). I have a feeling it's going change my life for the better, significantly. I guess I'll have to wait and see. Also, I instantly subscribed when the video ended. Thank you again for this introduction video! And I'm definitely gonna check your whole video library!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Start with "hacking your brain with elaborate coping mechanisms" you'll get a lot out of that one I think ☺️
@heroslippy6666 Жыл бұрын
Obsidian has the LaTeX format built in for mathematical purposes.
@BroodWar4Ever Жыл бұрын
I've heard people talk about Obsidian but none have sold me on it like you have. I'm an organized mess who is comfortable using OneNote but I've been itching to get off it. I'm going to give Obsidian a try, thank you for the wonderful and informative walkthrough.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
My pleasure! You're going to have a GREAT time!
@pancakedrivet Жыл бұрын
A friend recommended I try Obsidian a few years ago and it didn't quite stick. I ended up using Notion. I think I still prefer Notion for short term / quick notes that I want available on all devices (and can quickly share with people) but now that I'm trying to piece together large amounts of MD documentation at work, this video came out at the right time to make me choose Obsidian. The initial familiarity helped I think, but the topics covered here finally helped me to "get" how I should be using Obsidian. Thanks for the push!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Try the `make.md` extension, it gives you a load of Notion's polish!
@mfpears Жыл бұрын
Obsidian is amazing. I just started using it 2 months ago, and I finally feel like I can invest in content automation. I'm working on python scripts to concat note videos, reduce background noise, and basically automate content generation. It integrates with all my notes, making it super flexible and easy to work with. I feel like I'm just scratching the surface still.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
YES so excited, please let us know when you publish!
@Jechew Жыл бұрын
I started using Obsidian after watching a Ted Talk about mind maps and seeing Obsidian's catering towards that type of note-taking
@tbg750 Жыл бұрын
Which vid?
@illyasheshyn11 ай бұрын
Interesting how taking notes in Obsidian promotes breaking down concepts to independent elements, similarly how one might approach decoupling classes in OOP.
@NoBoilerplate11 ай бұрын
This kind of modelling fits my brain just right!
@locke1970 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making this video. I watched it just as it came out and got me to start using Obsidian. It's become my most important tool.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
So happy to spread the love, I basically run my life on obsidian!
@Lumosy Жыл бұрын
Thanks for recommending me Obsidian. I just started using it, and it has everything I want and is incredibly easy to use and understand. Will be a gamechanger for university and my job.
@jansalverda3832 Жыл бұрын
I've been using obsidian for a lot of different things, school notes, and DND. I just love all the backlinks, easy to sort notes, and easy to just start typing.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Love using it for DND - try Nicole's videos for her take on DMing with obsidian
@reb-ii Жыл бұрын
I watched this video when it came out, having already heard of Obsidian, and thought it seemed very useful. Did I actually use it? Of course not, that would be too sensible. I finally started using it in the past week and OH MY, it is every bit as useful as you said it was! Currently using it to plot out videos for the revival of my KZbin channel, while trying not to get distracted by all of the other potential uses!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Fantastic! I also had just the same problem when first starting out - I bounced back and forth between obsidian and my old tools for a month or so. Never looking back now!
@beebakrizzle Жыл бұрын
What I find really appealing with Notion is their databases system which allows to save structured data and operate on it. Seems like logseq and Obsidian don't provide something like this and it's definitely the feature I use most on Notion. Maybe Obsidian with structured frontmatters and dataview? But nothing is enforced and it looks tedious to maintain, not sure how to handle templates etc.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
You're part of the way there. Dataview is the number one plugin for obsidian for a reason! Frontmatter metada + built-in templateing and a few other plugins you can reacreate ANYTHING notion has. But better than that, with 1014 plugins, probably someone's already made a pretty plugin that does what you want! EDIT: found it: kzbin.info/www/bejne/b6DEdoJ8hd2Hb8k
@angelfishgod Жыл бұрын
This is exactly the same reason I chose Notion over Obsidian. The native database "widget". I like to use it to define a table for some abstract topic (e.g. programming languages) then i can create a field for each concrete instance of the abstraction (e.g. rust and C++). i can organize the topic into subtopics using nested items. This lets me have a quick way to search and compare features. Admittedly its probably a pretty specific use-case.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@angelfishgod I have great news, there's a great plugin to do this kzbin.info/www/bejne/b6DEdoJ8hd2Hb8k
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
I have great news, there's a great plugin to do this kzbin.info/www/bejne/b6DEdoJ8hd2Hb8k
@angelfishgod Жыл бұрын
@NoBoilerplate I literally just had KZbin recommend this video and was going to reply with it here! Eager to try it out and get the other benefits of Obsidian you mentioned! Thanks for the great video and recommendation, you're work is superb!
@xTwistCinema Жыл бұрын
Thanks to you, im now using this to develop my personal checklist for Penetration Testing. Been procrastinating it for a while but having something new to try out like Obsidian is my perfect footway to do so. Currently 2 pages in, it all looks SO pretty too :D
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Fantastic!
@teckzusferalupus5382 Жыл бұрын
As a student interested in many areas, this is EVERYTHING I've dreamed about! Specially the graph feature, I've imagined such concept before, but to know it exists in such a complete manner fills me with excitement. I'm downloading it now, hoping it's just as good as you showed it.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
OH you are in for a TREAT! the plugins, oh the plugins... 1300 and counting, to do anything you could imagine! If the graph makes you excited, try the ExcaliBrain plugin, which supercharges it!
@andybrice2711 Жыл бұрын
I'm looking forward to training a LLM on every note I've ever written, and getting a model of my own brain which I can offload cognitive tasks into. Asking it stuff like "Would I enjoy this movie?" or "Explain this topic in a way I would understand."
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
There are already 10 plugins for obsidian that do that. I'm not even joking.
@ultimaxkom8728 Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate lol
@Blamzite Жыл бұрын
I think this video confirms my brain is too smooth for note programs
@coolkattcoder Жыл бұрын
Obsidian looks awesome! Too complex for me personally though lol! I spent a long time trying to get the tags folder plugin working and I just couldn't manage it lol. Somehow managed to disconnect every node in the graph using tags which was cool though unintended! I'm going to keep using notepad for now, but one day when I'm more clever I'll try obsidian again! Awesome video!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
I bounced off obsidian a few times too! It's ok, give it another go when you want a comprehensive system - my advice is to just use the basic features when you do!
@MerryMidlight Жыл бұрын
Spent all day setting up framework my brain. This video pushed me to dive further into this great app, thank you
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Fantastic!
@junechevalier10 ай бұрын
I'm an author and artist, and I use Obsidian for organizing information on the worldbuilding, outlining my plot, and using it as a repository of my characters and their relationships with one another. I also use the canvas as a moodboard. It's super great :D
@D33P-5H4D3 Жыл бұрын
I've been hesitant to switch to Obsidian, even though it seems great, the main reason being: it being closed source. I've been using Joplin for quite sometime now (which is open source), however it isn't as powerful as Obsidian. I guess what I'm trying to say is: If it's good enough for you, it's good enough for me. Excellent video as always 😊
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
As long as your data is in plain text, you can use what you like! Joplin doesn't do it for me because the files are stored in a sqlite db, not plain-text markdown on disk. Having your life in plain text is HUGE for flexibility, and if joplin did it, I wouldn't need to use the bad joplin mobile app, I could choose to edit them in whatever program I liked, but alas.
@D33P-5H4D3 Жыл бұрын
So true! I personally didn't mind the fact it wasn't stored as plain text because exporting was easy, but man is the app bad!
@Zedoy Жыл бұрын
I was just thinking of trying Obsidian, did you read my mind?
@tenclea Жыл бұрын
They probably hacked your brain too ;p
@RenderingUser Жыл бұрын
Bro hacked his brain AND your brain
@harrynewton6200 Жыл бұрын
He hacked your second brain
@ThePlayerOfGames Жыл бұрын
Did you do any research on the subject using popular search engines or discuss the subject matter out loud near any mobile devices connected to the internet?
@handsanitizer2457 Жыл бұрын
Thats how good Obsidian is
@schnow265 Жыл бұрын
Me: Finds the extension „Surfing“ Also me: Turns Obsidian into my Browser. Sadly I can’t set it as my default 😢
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
omg this has just improved my productivity 1000% thank you so much!
@elevationsickness8462 Жыл бұрын
Holy shit this is easily the best channel on KZbin. I hope you never start a cult or i would fall for it
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I promise to only use my powers for good :-)
@safegourd Жыл бұрын
I’m already an obsidian user and I LOVE it, but it’s one of those things I know I’ll never fully comprehend, so I appreciate every video made by someone who knows more about this stuff than I do. Despite my lack of technical skills, Obsidian has improved my brain both by giving me the tools to record my thoughts and by deepening my knowledge of technology. I’m an analog art/writing person, and let me tell you, Obsidian is worth understanding computers for!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this insight! Yes I completely agree - and trust me I also think I have so much to learn too!
@kreendurron Жыл бұрын
open source LLMs and Obsidian are going to be amazing when we can finally get a bit bigger token limits or easier more effient ways of creating embeddings with our obsidian notes etc. can't wait.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
We live in extraordinary times!
@mattforgione9994 Жыл бұрын
Finally started tackling DS&A with this. So easy to just pick up and keep really organized markdown files for topics/subtopics. It's basically VSCode for note taking.
@fengardice Жыл бұрын
5:40 I'm sold.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
COMPELLING right!? Check out the plugins though, there's over 1300, anything you can imagine is here!
@aravindvinayakan Жыл бұрын
Thank you for bringing this to my attention! I've been wanting to get serious about a note taking app and was going to go with Notion until this video!
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Notion is fine, caveats notwithstanding, and is dramatically better for simultaneous editing for a team, but there's still space in my life for a personal second brain that only inam allowed to see!
@FutileGrief Жыл бұрын
Finally a no nonsense explanation for beginners. Thank you so much!!!
@AlanFalloon Жыл бұрын
Yes tris, I use Obsidian but what notes should I take and how do I make them. I.e. How to you build your vault? Is it Para, link your thinking, how to take smart notes, GTD? What do you do?
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
For tasks I use GTD, and a few dataview scripts. but As for notes, I'm still learning too - lots of advice here on youtube of course!
@galgrunfeld9954 Жыл бұрын
I'd absolutely love more hack-your-brain videos! Suggestion for a video: training an advanced LLM/AI (a.g BabyAGI, MemoryGPT, etc.) on your own ways of viewing things, so you basically "clone" your brain. So you can have "internal" debates/conversations, give "yourself" tasks to do, etc., with an AI version of you. And it would learn from your training data, whatever you can provide it, and the input from you, and improve over time. I'd appreciate combining/connecting HuggingFace models for a simpler video, too.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Obsidian already has many gpt plugins that are trying to do this!
@nzt29 Жыл бұрын
I was planning on doing the same thing too, but also have a voice to text thing to communicate with a clone of me.
@BTTRSWYT Жыл бұрын
Dude this insane. I just switched majors to computer science and this is going to make my life so much easier. Especially since I’m probably going to pursue an advanced degree in ai. Thanks for making a video on this. I can’t wait to get it into my process.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
oh PERFECT! I wish I had this at uni!
@BTTRSWYT Жыл бұрын
@@NoBoilerplate bro it’s gonna be so nice. Also going to use it to plan a dungeons and dragons campaign. Reskinning it to be sci-fi, but that mean I have to homebrew a ridiculous amount of shit and this will make it so much easier to manage
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
@@BTTRSWYT I run my D&D games on obsidian too! Nicolevdh has some AMAZING videos explaining the cool ttrpg plugins kzbin.info/www/bejne/aaHXZ5Kpp7qNbbc
@ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked Жыл бұрын
I love it. I've gotten into it in recent weeks from a hacking teacher recommending it. It's great! I wish the image import was better, and that it, by default, showed images in editing mode, but the plug-in for that is fine.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
Which plug in do you use for image editing? I often just throw an image into Excalidraw for markup, but editing would be good. I right-click and 'open in default app' to open the image in my normal image editor. Image import is either drag and drop, or ctrl+p "insert attachment". I do it all the time for these videos, it's pretty nice!
@AnthonyLoPrimo Жыл бұрын
I envisioned a system like this not too long ago. Never got to do any research but it's awesome seeing something like this existing.
@NoBoilerplate Жыл бұрын
I love it when I think I have a great idea and the universe gifts it to me by having someone else do the work! XD