There are tons of Notes app available in the playstore and f-droid. I have use my fair share of them these are my best 5 recommendations. All of these are free to use and have to pay extra if you want specific features.
P.S: Obsidian is also a great Note taking tool.
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I migrated from obsidian to logseq and it’s “alright”.
I miss the clean md files from obsidian, but other than that, logseq is pretty powerful.
I also like notion, except its cloud based.
How’s it for personal knowledge management and second brain kinda use?
I like the diary format, and how the links between notes work. And the filtering and querying features. But mostly, I just keep notes for the days, and use checklists to capture future tasks, and then filter by “tasks only”.
I also write drafts for work documents, but didn’t figure how to tag them, or use much of the linking functionality there.
I hate that everything in logseq is a bullet point. I just can’t understand why they do that. And it pollutes my markdown files too if I open them with other editor.
Logseq is block-based. Each bullet is a block. This is very powerful because it allows you to interlink concepts, ideas, at the level of the block vs page.
You can link to other paragraphs/blocks in Obsidian.md as well? You can literally link to a sentence…
I did a little research and found a Redditor who was able to answer better than me:
EDIT: I was really curious about the major differences and what is enabled by Logseq’s block-based architecture so I asked my network on Mastodon and got some great answers!
I don’t see any utility in doing that. I want to take normal notes. It was super annoying.
It sells itself as an “outliner”. Which is bullet pointing everything. That’s actually how I take notes.
I though about other ways to parse it, but I couldn’t come up with anything.
It would be nice to have another mode for non full outliner documents, if you just want a markdown file, instead of an indexable list of blocks.
Some folks may not know this but Logseq has a built-in whiteboard feature too that’s also FOSS. I use it all the time to mind-map new blogposts and newsletters.
In Logseq the starting page is always the journal page for the day. This allows you to build up content without worrying about where it should go. Once you have something you feel you can run with, then you can move it to its own page.
EDIT: more features enabled by Logseq’s block-based (bullets) architecture over on Mastodon.