Using Obsidian as a Bullet Journal
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024
- I love the Bullet Journal, but as a programmer there are some limitations that are a bummer. Code snippets, screenshots, tagging, and search are all things I need to do so I can better track what I've done in a day.
That's where Obsidian comes in. In this video you'll see how I transformed this amazing Markdown notes tool into my daily Bullet Journal on steroids.
Links:
The Imposter's Roadmap: sales.bigmachi...
Obsidian: obsidian.md
My templates: gist.github.co...
I'm using the AnuPpucin theme together with the Style Settings plugin. I also use the Book Search plugin (you can search these things).
Wow, you've completely blown my mind. Nowadays, we can access numerous plugins and learn so much. However, the true value comes from explaining what you do and why you enjoy doing it. What you've explained was in my blind spot, not quite pinpointing what I wanted. Now, I clearly understand what I was yearning for. Thank you so much for sharing your excitement, and please continue to share.
Rob, I have been following you for years. You have no idea how many people like me you must have helped over the years. I am also a big fan of Goggins and I keep a physical Bujo. It looks like I will be switching. The idea of being able to use Obsidian for this and have it available wherever I go on my phone is a big plus.
Thank you so much for taking the time to make this video, I was very curious about your workflow when you mentioned it in your last email and this did not disappoint. Now I need to hurry up to finish the book that I am currently reading so I can finally start your new Roadmap book.
Very interesting use of obsidian as a bujo.
I'm not quite ready yet to digitize my bujo (I ended up with a paper bujo after failing with sooooo many digital options) but this is my far the most convincing idea to make a digital bujo.
This is very informative. I just wondering how did you customize the bullet point like - [ ] to convert to emojis?
love this.
It was nice seeing how you do things. Its very organized and methodical
Fantastic content! How do you create the icons inside checkboxes when you use characters like > < ?
It's part of the theme, so it just happens.
@@rconery Regarding icons, in my case, the AnuPpuccin will not show the icons, but the Minimal theme is working for me
Found it! I needed to enable the Custom Checkboxes in Style Settings for the AnuPpuccin theme (inside File Editor & Makdown Elements)
Is the setting different on iPad? I can’t seem to find where to enable custom checkboxes…
@@shawnkim9409 The settings should sync if you start on a desktop/laptop. Good question though - the settings should be the same.
Hi this really give me a good idea for my vault but I don't know how to make tsak looking good as yours can you help me I am a new to obsidian and thanks for all
Do you have a Vault Template for this? and which plugins are enabling you for Icons. Thanks for sharing this, I was struggling moving away from a BuJo Paper notebook to Digital, even so I work in Tech ;)
Not a Vault template, but you can go get the individual templates in the gist link in the description. The AnuPpucin template does the icons and I think there are others that do it too (like Minimal). Good luck!
Excellent video thank you - I read the imposters handbook many years ago and was brought here from your email.
One question is how can this workflow fit into professional compliance contexts? Generally developers can install anything on employers machines but data leaving corporate networks is a touchy compliance area.
E.g. a professional engineer may encounter a lot of moments you touched upon whilst sat in front of work machines.
I probably wouldn't recommend that if data compliance is a thing. Journal's like this are supposed to be "private", if you will, so I would probably stick with whatever notes tool they allow.
For anyone watching, logseq has a better experience out of the box for precisely this, I still use obsidian tho. But if you like bujo you will love logseq
"Better" is subjective. I chose Obsidian because there are fewer knobs to twiddle and, for me, the experience is more straightforward. I have tried Logseq and it's nice and yeah, I think some people will definitely prefer it.
It feels like you're remaking Logseq