That's close to what I have (ipynb files). And for a while I used notational velocity. But it's really just a place where my ideas go to die.
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Replying to @generativist @Aelkus
Most important ideas get written down in my work journal with the marker I use for tasks (although I might use your
suggestion as a new notation for this to distinguish from task-tasks)
Other stuff ends up in a flat file. Rationale: dead-simple backup.0 replies 0 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @Aelkus @generativist
I think there's something to be said for storing ideas in a way that makes it easy* to review and prioritize, but yes, this.
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*an emacs evangelist friend has been trying to convert me for the sake of org-mode alone and I'm so conflicted
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I really liked nv for a while, http://notational.net/
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Not perfect, but I wrote a python script to create new plain text files. The script standardizes the file name scheme (usually category of idea (future research ideas, digital methods, etc), creates the header, and opens the file in
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Replying to @KelseyUtne @generativist and
So all I do when I have an idea I want to record is enter an intentionally very short file name in the command line, the number I assigned to the category, and get typing. I've started using adding tags (marked w @) in an attempt to help me search them later
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I do something like this with @ProjectJupyter notebooks and I use the Silver Searcher to find them later.
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