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beoberha 5 days ago

Agreed, but paper fails at organizing. My brain loves folder structures and hyper specific note files. Remarkable seemed like the perfect device for me.

I’ve settled on markdown in vscode and a todo list app.

rtpg 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

My experience has been that it's very easy to flip through a pile of papers, and I tend to "know" where the info is.

The beauty of physical interfaces like for paper is that you really can just flip through a stack while talking to someone and find what you need.

The big thing that I think works well in paper world is simply having things organized chronologically. I often remember around when I collected a piece of info.

freilanzer 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The RM2 also fails at organizing: no text search in PDFs and not in notes, if you don't convert every handwritten note into text on a new page; only tags, which means if you don't add tags everywhere, you can't find anything by searching; etc. It's extremely expensive for the functionality it offers.

dotancohen 5 days ago | parent | prev [-]

You've probably heard of Org mode. Go look it up - md and a todo app is exactly poor man's Org mode.

volemo 5 days ago | parent | next [-]

I’m a big lover of the ecosystem and a heavy Emacs, but after several attempts I couldn’t get into Org mode: (1) it’s too complex and full featured, while my loose mind requires a strict and minimalistic system to be productive; (2) mobile support is quite lacking — yes, there’re beorg and Mobileorg, but they don’t do it for me for one reason or another.

So I’ve a custom GTD-like system build using iOS reminders, .md files, and a couple of scripts.

dotancohen 4 days ago | parent [-]

Yes, or Org mode can be quite complex if you let it be. I mostly only use the same features as markdown supports: headings and code fences.

For mobile (Android) I use Orgro.

jimsimmons 5 days ago | parent | prev [-]

does not have paper ergonomics

dotancohen 4 days ago | parent [-]

Right, I replied to the guy who holds the stance that "paper fails at organizing".