Tags — Topic Summaries
AI-powered summaries of 15 videos about Tags.
15 summaries
My Free Note-taking Framework for Apple Notes
A single “Home” note is the keystone of a note-taking system built to end the constant scavenger hunt across Apple Notes. Instead of relying on...
3 ways I organize my PhD notes
A growing Zettelkasten in Obsidian can quickly become “mentally squeezed”—not because note-taking stops working, but because the sheer volume makes...
Obsidian - Front Matter, Tags and Aliases
Front matter in Obsidian turns plain notes into searchable, filterable data by attaching metadata—often written in YAML—directly to the top of each...
Logseq Zettelkasten ANTI-tutorial | You don't ACTUALLY need a zettelkasten
A “perfect” zettelkasten-style knowledge system isn’t necessary for most people; a flexible, tag-driven workflow in Logseq can be enough to retrieve...
Rethinking PKM Part 2: Links, Tags, and Filepaths
A key takeaway from this PKM deep-dive is that file organization has measurable performance limits—and that those limits help explain why many people...
Zettelkasten: 3 More Tips
A well-run Zettelkasten system depends less on adding more metadata and more on using a few structural tools with discipline. Three fixes stand out:...
Why Object Types are Better than Folders
Folders and files create a steady stream of small decisions that add up to real friction: every new note forces a choice about where it belongs, and...
How To Use Obsidian: Introduction To Search
Obsidian’s Search feature can turn a chaotic notes vault into something you can navigate instantly—especially when you combine keyword matching with...
Supertags vs Tags: Understanding Different Note-taking Paradigms (Logseq vs Tana)
Super tags in Tana are less about “labeling” and more about enforcing where information belongs—by attaching imported nodes to a predefined...
Amplenote Explained 3: What is the difference between a jot and a note?
Amplenote “jots mode” isn’t a special, separate kind of content—it’s a filtered view of ordinary notes. That’s why a note created via “link to note”...
Building a second brain (the easy way)
Building a second brain starts with one practical move: capture everything quickly, then let organization happen afterward. The system described...
Stop organizing your notes – Why and How
The core message is that heavy note organization creates “friction” that reduces what gets captured and makes later recall harder—not better. Instead...
How to use "folders" in Reflect
Reflect’s folder-style workflow can be recreated as a “hybrid” that lowers the learning curve for people used to Evernote, Apple Notes, or Google...
Mem Tutorial Best Practice Part 2: Organizing Your Notes
A simple “hierarchy of importance” can tame Mem’s otherwise self-organizing chaos: organize knowledge using note titles, bi-directional links, and...
When To Use Tags and Links
Mem’s core distinction is that notes function as nodes in a network, not entries in a hierarchy. That framing determines when to use bi-directional...