diff --git a/content/collections/posts/2024-09-02-1157.how-take-notes-my-obsidian-setup.md b/content/collections/posts/2024-09-02-1157.how-take-notes-my-obsidian-setup.md index 38fc6f4..8282702 100644 --- a/content/collections/posts/2024-09-02-1157.how-take-notes-my-obsidian-setup.md +++ b/content/collections/posts/2024-09-02-1157.how-take-notes-my-obsidian-setup.md @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ title: 'How take notes + my Obsidian setup' tags: - knowledge updated_by: 97c59bba-acb7-406d-9278-abc37e3f76a9 -updated_at: 1725275669 +updated_at: 1725865081 meta_image: obsidian-og.png meta_description: "For the past year, Obsidian has been my note-taking companion. I've slowly grown towards a more consistent way of taking and organizing notes: it's a system that can easily be ported to any other tool as long as you have something that resembles a filesystem." --- @@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ Having a log can serve as a motivation boost too. On days that feel like a rat r In a way, my project notes use a very similar structure as Now, Next, Notes: sorting things by actionability and keeping the important bits floating on top. -## Freeform writing with daily noyes +## Freeform writing with daily notes Sometimes I just want to write for myself. Not with the intent to publish, unrelated to a project, as a way to clear my mind. I do freeform writing in daily notes—auto generated files using the current date as the filename—which live in `00 Journal.md`.