Dump Evernote, embrace Tiddlywiki. Only emacs and nvim ever make me think otherwise (and they can be integrated into your workflow). Here's mine: https://philosopher.life/
I used to be an heavy TiddlyWiki user, and I went back to fiddle with it just this week, but even if my workflow feels better[^1] - well. Emacs and Org-mode have really, really spoiled me, and my dislike of browsers has only intensified over the last few years[^3], which is a shame.
> and they can be integrated into your workflow
How?
I was actually thinking of forcing Twine to fill that niche by using Twee and one of the Twee-to-Twine converters, but even if it's built on TW I don't think anyone would be happy with the result.
[^1] Put the info wherever using hierarchical tags which are also tiddlers, emphasis on small highly linked snippets of information versus the "decide which page this belongs to" of my current system[^2].
[^2] Basically Org-mode plus org-wiki plus quite a bit of custom Elisp, mostly to format the content of property drawers when exporting to HTML.
[^3] I still use machines with respectively 1 and 4 GB of RAM, and browsers are 1) huge memory hogs or without JS support and 2) not Emacs.
6 comments
[ 2.4 ms ] story [ 30.4 ms ] threadTiddlywiki is an awesome tool! It's fun and productive.
I used to be an heavy TiddlyWiki user, and I went back to fiddle with it just this week, but even if my workflow feels better[^1] - well. Emacs and Org-mode have really, really spoiled me, and my dislike of browsers has only intensified over the last few years[^3], which is a shame.
> and they can be integrated into your workflow
How?
I was actually thinking of forcing Twine to fill that niche by using Twee and one of the Twee-to-Twine converters, but even if it's built on TW I don't think anyone would be happy with the result.
[^1] Put the info wherever using hierarchical tags which are also tiddlers, emphasis on small highly linked snippets of information versus the "decide which page this belongs to" of my current system[^2].
[^2] Basically Org-mode plus org-wiki plus quite a bit of custom Elisp, mostly to format the content of property drawers when exporting to HTML.
[^3] I still use machines with respectively 1 and 4 GB of RAM, and browsers are 1) huge memory hogs or without JS support and 2) not Emacs.