I really enjoy the obsidian daily notes feature for this [1]. It's a dedicated button to create a new note with a title of your choosing. I typically do YYYY-MM-DD d, so 2024-12-1 mon.
I'm not sure about the time tracking though. Is this more for people working on contract for billing? I see the value in having the data but collecting the data seems difficult.
The task plugin for Obsidian allows tracking time to completion iirc. If you're billing hourly for clients or trying to use it as a stand-in for a stop-watch it could be useful. I personally don't use it though
It starts to become a burden to open these files to make entries, so you create a terminal alias to do it. Then writing the entries becomes tedious so you make a macro to write a timestamp and put you in edit mode so you can just start typing the entry. Then you move computers and it gets tiresome moving the files around.
I just use Logseq (+ syncthing for sync) with extensive tagging (thousands of tags added a year) + a random Pomodora app that keeps records and descriptions of each Pomadora. Simple and effective
How do you manage having thousands of tags? What is your use case? I quite quickly moved away from them because I couldn't have a strict/normalised system for it. E.g., I would end up with #a, #as, #<synonym of a>, #parent/as, etc. After a while of this, it would either reduce to nothing better than keyword search, or the effort of keeping track of existing tags and the "right" tags would prevent me from tagging at all.
The weird sync decisions on mobile have kept me away from LogSeq, Obsidian, and similar apps which otherwise seem very attractive. If an iOS app forces me to sync exclusively through iCloud or their proprietary sync, it isn't useful for me. I have a mix of Windows, Linux, iOS and Android, and prefer notes apps that work well between OSes.
Currently Joplin is my goto, since if fills all that plus encryption, and I'm eager to see what AnyType does in the future.
I do pretty much the same with a file that I called worklog.txt
Days separated with a blank line, and starting with date.
Then I use initial spaces to differentiate between task, comments on this task and what is needed to do to finish the task.
Pretty easy to keep it consistent, and the use of spaces allow to easily identify the order of importance in each subset.
Still using and paying for noteplan for a few years now. Works really well, and storage and syncing can be done anywhere (local, dropbox, icloud, whatever)
whytai|1 year ago
I'm not sure about the time tracking though. Is this more for people working on contract for billing? I see the value in having the data but collecting the data seems difficult.
[1] https://help.obsidian.md/Plugins/Daily+notes
packetlost|1 year ago
1970-01-01|1 year ago
https://www.howtogeek.com/258545/how-to-use-notepad-to-creat...
jdthedisciple|1 year ago
robertlagrant|1 year ago
grantc|1 year ago
TOGoS|1 year ago
douglee650|1 year ago
- The Wails of Sisyphus, author unknown
zelphirkalt|1 year ago
tiou|1 year ago
gexla|1 year ago
kreyenborgi|1 year ago
TechDebtDevin|1 year ago
jrrrp|1 year ago
Propelloni|1 year ago
ASalazarMX|1 year ago
Currently Joplin is my goto, since if fills all that plus encryption, and I'm eager to see what AnyType does in the future.
fbnlsr|1 year ago
I'd rather use Markdown though, for the formatting capabilities alone.
volemo|1 year ago
unfixed|1 year ago
Days separated with a blank line, and starting with date. Then I use initial spaces to differentiate between task, comments on this task and what is needed to do to finish the task.
Pretty easy to keep it consistent, and the use of spaces allow to easily identify the order of importance in each subset.
wiredfool|1 year ago
It’s always open in my editor, so it’s quick for notes of copy paste from the terminal
1oooqooq|1 year ago
with the extra advantage of recalling them with tabtab instead of never remembering to read said notes :)
ankit70|1 year ago
jbverschoor|1 year ago
a1o|1 year ago
gn0meavp|1 year ago
unknown|1 year ago
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