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How do you take notes?

Ok basically what the title ask. There are so many note taking apps available and also the good old notepad, but, how do you take notes? What do you actually take-keep notes on? Is it like complicated things or simple ones?

All time times that I started using an app or a pen and paper intended up just using a simple reminder for things. Others I just remember.

59 comments
  • the good old notepad,

    That's my preference.

    Is it like complicated things or simple ones?

    It is both. I take very detailed and heavily linked notes (through my own PKMS based on index cards) and I also use notebooks for quick notes on the go notes. Have been doing so for years. BTW, there is a community related to Note-taking/Personal Knowledge Management: !pkms@lemmy.blahaj.zone

    I don't use it to remember things (well, yes it helps with that too, but it's not the main purpose) I use it to help me think and create new ideas/associations between existing ideas, infos, whatever.

    More info on 'my' note-taking system (it's not mine by any mean): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zettelkasten

    Edit: published too early an unfinished post, sorry ;)

  • More important. Than taking notes is what are you gonna do with them. This conditions how, where, and with what you take notes.

    If you're never gonna look at them again and just generally use it to think, brainstorm, or remember things better. Then it doesn't matter where, just use whatever is immediately available to you.

    If it needs to be later referenced, shared, archived or processed into finished products for personal projects or work, there are several options. Note taking apps, text editing software, plugins for different editors. Each will do things different and will link differently to different work pipelines.

    My current pipeline is notes either on the phone or on a notepad. Then I clean and process said notes on OneNote (don't judge, work pays for it and it is the only one available). Where they are more structured, tagged, detailed, hyperlinked or whatever else it takes. That's where I also take notes for meetings or training and study sessions.

    Finally, I use those notes for writing reports, minutes, and presentations. Which are then sent to the actual institutional archive.

    Me and all my colleagues erase old notes once they're no longer relevant for data protection, so we don't use the archive features of ONote. But the encrypted sharing and sync is very useful for collaboration and to save your work in case of hardware failure.

    On my personal life I have permanent places of data storage, and take notes with whatever I happen to have at hand. Samsung notes, paper, notepads, whatever. Data always end up either being deleted or sent to a more permanent place. Just like with cameras, the best tool is the one you have at hand when you need it.

  • Usually just remember stuff. I'm terrible at taking notes - I either forget to take any paper/pen or I don't know what's important and don't make any notes.

    If I get an action item I'll write it down or stick it somewhere on my work phone. It probably won't make much sense so I'll need to remember what it was about anyway - it just serves as a reminder that I need to do something.

    At my first job somebody showed me a system that I needed to use, step by step, for a task that I needed to do to cover them the next week. I took no notes (didn't even occur to me), she was surprised that I took no notes, but I remembered it all and did the task.

    I'm not sure my memory is quite good enough to trust these days, but back then it worked fine.

  • Which application or software one uses is far less important than which note system to use. Mainly, the best note system is the one you actually use. Bear in mind, the system used depends on context.

    Academically I rely heavily on Cornell Note Taking System, and recently I’ve dabbled with atomic style notes using Obsidian. There are plenty of trade offs on those two systems, but I found tremendous value in being able to back reference the same note over and over again.

    For one-off reminders, I just message myself. Long term reminders end up either on my calendar, or more recently on Trello.

    Keep experimenting. Keep what works, dump the rest; avoid being dogmatic to a note system, application, or software.

  • It's been years since I was in school... but yes, on a notepad with different emphasis for different things.

    1. In general, summarize what the prof. is saying.
    2. If they're talking about something from the book, note it with a ⭐
    3. If they say "this is important" mark it with an ❕
    4. If they write it on the board or project it, undeine that.
  • Couple different kinds of notes, but I think this covers most of my use cases

    I use google keep for small reminders, things I want to look up later, grocery lists to share with my wife, etc.

    I keep a couple field notes notebooks around in my car and bag for things I want to make a physical note of, especially things I need to sketch out (I am no artist by any stretch of the imagination but I'm a capable DIYer and I sometimes need to sketch out the thing I'm building/fixing) while I'm out and about before I forget about them. I like the size of them, and the dot grid lends itself well to the kind of notes and sketches I use them for.

    I also have some sketches of the rooms in my house in those books, list of some furniture dimensions, so when I'm out shopping with my wife and she asks "do you think this will fit in our dining room?" I can tell her definitively yes or no.

    It also has a list of the bulbs, tires, wiper blades, air filters, etc. that our cars use, so I can reference them quickly while out shopping, it's quicker to just flip to the back page of my little notebook than to try to look it up on my phone from the aisle at AutoZone or Walmart.

    I also have a rite in the rain notebook I keep with my tools, it's fairly rugged and waterproof, mostly ends up getting used for scribbling down a list of stuff I need to get from the hardware store in the middle of a project. Went with that one because I'm pretty likely to be using it when I'm wet or dirty, outside in the mud, under a leaking sink, etc. while I'm halfway through a project.

    I keep another one of those with my camping supplies.

    I have a pad of graph paper at my workbench, I like it for sketching things out, same as I like the dot grid in the field notes books, but this one doesn't have to travel around with me or pull double duty for written notes, so I could go bigger and cheaper

    We also did our kitchen cabinets in blackboard paint, so my wife and I can leave notes to each other on there, mostly reminders to empty the dishwasher and such.

  • Google Keep, because it works on my Pixel Watch, which is the only way (so far) I can use it at the exact moment when I actually need it and not have my ADHD brain forget it halfway through.

    • shopping list: Nextcloud Notes
    • small things which just came to mind and need processing later: Nextcloud Notes
    • lesson notes; planning for projects: Orgmode documents with (deep) multilevel bullet lists
    • planning for longterm projects: Nextcloud Deck
  • If I just need a quick note to remind me of something or like to help do a puzzle in a game, I just use Notes (the google app).

    If I am taking a class or something, I use an audio recorder and then transcribe it later.

  • If you don't feel like you need to take notes, then I wouldn't worry about it. Once you leave school, there's not necessarily a need for it. For me they are generally just reminders, like you stated.

    The majority of my notes are placed in Google Keep. I know that Lemmy hates Google, but it's really convenient for me...since they are online I can access them from any device. And the app version sometimes comes pre-installed on my devices anyway.

    If I only need to remember one simple, time sensitive item...then yes I often use a reminder app to notify me like you do too.

    But here are some scenarios where I take notes in my notes app:

    1. Grocery lists. I can't tell you how many times I've gone to the store for only like 1 or 2 items and completely forgot to buy what I came in for lol
    2. Requests at work. Often, a task that is requested of me will be done over a landline phone. So I pull out my cell phone and take a quick note of the task to help me remember and make sure it is done correctly
    3. Semi-ordered lists of multiple tasks I intend to do. For example, suppose I am expecting family to come over one weekend. I'll have various notes that help remind me what I need to do and when. Things like different types of cleaning tasks, getting snacks, etc.

    In my home, I also have a handwritten notepad of passwords to my accounts written in a cryptic partially pictogram cypher lol. If someone manages to find and figure them out, have fun with those accounts lol.

    At work, I also often write notes directly onto my workbench itself in pencil! My workbench is a contaminated space, so I don't necessarily have my phone out. I use my phone to take notes while talking on the nom-conatimated landline. But at my workbench itself I write directly onto my workspace lmao. It probably looks a bit unprofessional, but I don't think it stands out too much and is easy to erase when done! The first time someone showed me that you could easily do this, my mind was blown lol. At work, I write workbench notes all the time lmao.

  • I mostly take notes in markdown on Obsidian. There's a bunch of nice plugins too that can add to your workflow. I don't really use the linking functionality much cause I don't find myself using it a lot even when I do it (and my notes aren't that complicated). I always try to do only point form notes since any longer and I find that it becomes hard to read.

    For personal notes I mostly make use of the Kanban plugin. You can make each card an individual note file and then jot stuff down in those to keep track of relevant information.

    I mostly use the quick switcher plugin to navigate by he name of the .md file. So everything is only "roughly" organized in folders with minimal nesting.

  • Obsidian is what I use. I used Joplin and Simplenote in the past.

    I'm using Obsidian on Android and on Linux and sync my notes with Nextcloud. Nextcloud also has its on note taking app but I prefer Obsidian. I also love the canvas feature. I also love the fact that the files in Obsidian are Markdown files. You can still edit them with any text editor if needed.

  • On my phone: Miminote. Just been using it for years now. It's pretty basic but I just put, like, grocery lists and reminders in there.

    Other: I have a cheap dollar store notebook that I just use for random craft ideas that I'll likely never get around to. I also try to keep W.I.P notes in there, like "You were using # size needle, ### yarn, on ### row."

  • depends:

    research projects: there's one folder on disk, dump everything there (including notes.txt file) and make regular backups (via git).

    for regular, mundane tasks: either write it on a text file on my android device's file explorer, or write myself a message in telegram.

  • I keep envelopes from mail I received and write notes on the empty side. On the rare occasion where I want to actually retain the note, I retype it into one of several txt documents I have open in my Notepad++.

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