After a quick preview of “Obsidian Publish” by @obsdmd I snap-purchased a year’s subscription.

Here’s my plan...
Roam = messy, rough, explorative thought

Obsidian = polish & publish
As ideas and thoughts “mature” in @RoamResearch, I formalize them by writing about them in Obsidian — and use that as my public digital garden.
By removing the noise & simplifying the presentation, the notes become more “permanent”.

While I *could* do this in Roam, using @obsdmd has a few advantages in this use-case.
1) The creative psychology context switching.

Different tools = different thought-spaces.

Roam = expansive divergence
Obsidian = critical convergence
2) Longevity & idea-insurance

Obsidian uses basic markdown, and local file-structure.

I see this as insurance for my best ideas.

Within Roam, there is a lotttt of Roam-specific markdown, making the eventual export less universally compatible.

This mitigates risk.
3) Enhanced graph-view

This works well with polished ideas.

Adding a malleable graph perspective for exploring my network of ideas allows me to think differently.

New angles = new ideas

The @obsdmd graph-view is moving in the direction I hope @RoamResearch eventually goes.
4) Publish.

This was the clincher.

I’ve been “on the hunt” for an easy way to make a site similar in style to @andy_matuschak, @azlenelza, and @RobertHaisfield.

Obsidian seems to have done it with “Obsidian Publish”. It’s beautiful.

Some related thoughts & desires here ⬇️
Here’s a beautiful sample.

such polish — such functionality

publish.obsidian.md/lyt-kit/_START…

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More from @brandontoner

6 Oct
Ok, so here’s a really good example on how I get hung up on *language* specificity…

In exploring @obsdmd’s LYT Kit (which I love), I noticed their MOC notation (Map of Concepts).

BUT — Are all the maps they are mapping really of *concepts*??

See image Image
Examples:

Interest MOC = a map of INTEREST
People MOC = a map of PEOPLE
Projects MOC = a map of PROJECTS

These are *maps* but no longer maps of *concepts*
But then my inside voice goes:

Me: “But you get the point… stop nitpicking”

Me: “It’s important. I’m not nitpicking. Language matters”

Me: “Yes, language matters, but this is just notation that identifies the main maps of things — a personal directory”
Read 7 tweets
5 Oct
First line of my pretending assignment for one of my classes this week:

“The connectedness of things is the most important goal of education”
- Mark VanDoren

... it’s like this degree is tailor made for me.
The article then goes on to give me this lovely model with vocabulary.

I’m gonna be able to use this in a very meaningful way.
This stems from the design of continuing medical education — but I’m thinking how powerful it could be to create a “reflective knowledge practice”, managed in my @RoamResearch + tracked using this vocabulary.
Read 4 tweets
25 Aug
Messing around with the idea of *atomic journaling* today.

... There are so many journaling/reflection prompts that I love.

And they often come as a *set* of questions...

— 5 minute journal
— Gratitude journal
— Morning journal

1/
And I’ve heard so many great questions or prompts to reflect on over the years.

But I find when I take one and focus on it routinely... it grows stale, and I don’t resonate the same with the prompt.

So I mix it up, but then I lose the thread, the consistency.

2/
What if love is a *library* of prompts.

And each day I peruse the library for ones that *resonate*... that I’m pulled to reflect on.

And to be able to see which ones I use more than others, and responses to the same question and how they change.

A time machine of reflection.
Read 7 tweets

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