Post APavUmgnmo9chFThdw by potato_lisper@nixnet.social
 (DIR) More posts by potato_lisper@nixnet.social
 (DIR) Post #APavUmgnmo9chFThdw by potato_lisper@nixnet.social
       2022-11-14T12:39:07.935983Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       I hate my indecisiveness. Org-roam works nicely (to some degree) with Logseq. Giving me nice mobile interface and power of advanced features of org-mode when I'm at laptop (and lightweight interface). At the same time what works for me, in terms of task management, is simple Bullet Journal. Here is the problem - with that combination of apps, I could easily move from paper to digital and have a lot more stuff in my daily notes (most of my reading is digital and all my notes are digital).Should I do it? It's almost end of the year. Would give me enough time to check digital version and with beginning of new year, I could decide if I'm sticking with mix of paper and digital or going all digital.Know that I wrote all of this I think that this is a good idea and will keep you all updated on how it's all going.#emacs #org-roam #logseq
       
 (DIR) Post #APaw2TpCQl7Q2ETPG4 by sachac@emacs.ch
       2022-11-14T12:43:08Z
       
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       @potato_lisper paper+digital is fine. If a paper bullet journal works well with your brain, go for it! :) You can use Org Roam for notes that accumulate over time.
       
 (DIR) Post #APaw2UMWQrm1ha41CK by potato_lisper@nixnet.social
       2022-11-14T12:45:13.071061Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @sachac that's what I have right now - org-roam for notes and Bullet Journal for task management. Just the org-roams dailies are so tempting, and it's easier to search in text documents or do more advanced stuff, like how long I was slacking on this one task.
       
 (DIR) Post #APaw8DKKgLxObalmZU by tacosandlinux@emacs.ch
       2022-11-14T12:44:02Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @potato_lisper I'm struggling with this as well! Currently taking a break from going all digital. I found that I retain information better when I go paper -> digital. So I'm playing with systems to make going paper -> digital smoother.
       
 (DIR) Post #APawBip02gQR9Xmq00 by potato_lisper@nixnet.social
       2022-11-14T12:46:54.428878Z
       
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       @tacosandlinux tried that so many times. Tell me if you find any good solution :meowSmileSweat:
       
 (DIR) Post #APaxINkwrRcTnjdDCi by tacosandlinux@emacs.ch
       2022-11-14T12:55:19Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @potato_lisper for now I've found that whatever data I write on paper shouldn't follow the same conventions that I use to organize it digitally. I freestyle my paper notes. But I add as much context as I can to my paper notes.When I transfer my notes to a digital format I neatly structure them. The beauty of doing a freestyle note taking system on paper is that I can always restructure them in a digital format. BuJo is great, love it, used it for years. But it's a analog system not digital.
       
 (DIR) Post #APb1w0fuUme7cFQUgy by brab@framapiaf.org
       2022-11-14T13:49:19Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @potato_lisper I use a little bit of paper (a tiny notebook I always have with me), and do simple journaling on paper as well. For the rest, it’s org + denote all the way
       
 (DIR) Post #APb6cisWwCHogpx4im by structuregeek@mastodon.social
       2022-11-14T14:29:35Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @potato_lisper Personally I hate the limitations and slowness of physical paper task systems but reluctantly find the friction to be helpful. The context switch (since everything else I do is digital) provides a mental cue to adjust mindset and the constraints force useful choices up front.(Just realized I'm basically evangelizing the benefits of a modal, intentionally non-unified ecosystem to a self-identified Emacs person, so I'll stop there.)