Bookmarked: DataCore: The Game-Changing Successor to Obsidians Dataview Plugin

PKM
Bookmarked: How to Build an Artificially Intelligent Second Brain
replete/obsidian-minimal-theme-css-snippets: A repo of CSS snippets I've written to harmonize various plugins with the 'minimal theme' theme on Obsidian. (currently tested with MacOS/Desktop)
Liked on YouTube: Zettelkasten Obsidian Tutorial (Simplest way)
Liked on YouTube: How To Use VIM Bindings in Obsidian | Beginners Guide
Bookmarked: How To Take Useful Notes. Understand Zettelkasten
Centering images in Obsidian
GitHub - nguyenvanduocit/obsidian-open-gate: Help to open a gate from Obsidian to internet. allow you to embed any website to your Obsidian.
GitHub - blacksmithgu/datacore: Work-in-progress successor to Dataview with a focus on UX and speed.
Bookmarked: New: Frictionless knowledge capture for your second brain
Bookmarked: How to Create a Life Progress Dashboard in Obsidian
15 Easy Templater Commands For Obsidian — Red Gregory
Introduction - Templater
Bookmarked: Writing in Obsidian: A Comprehensive Guide
Bookmarked: My Ultra-Minimalist Obsidian Daily Note Gets Some Hidden Nav Power
Bookmarked: Obsidian: How I Use Dataview to Index my Notes
🌠 More LLM Integrations & Sample Notes for Cooking, Workouts, etc.
Mermaid Tools: improved Mermaid.js experience in Obsidian
Bookmarked: An Ultimate Guide For Your Weekly Review
kepano/obsidian-minimal: A distraction-free and highly customizable theme for Obsidian
DataviewJS Snippet Showcase
Quick navigation between periodic notes
Home - Willemstad
Bookmarked: From Chaos to Clarity: The Essential Guide to Personal Knowledge Management
Bookmarked: The 123 Method: How I Organize My To-Do List and Get Things Done
r/Zettelkasten - Strategies for connecting notes
This is something I used to really struggle with, but after around a year of building a Zettelkasten, I think I've found a good rhythm with this.Initially, I would rely on Obsidian's automatic backlinking functionality to tie notes together. After a around 100 notes, that started to fall apart because I ended up with too many contextless links. I didn't know which links were important and which weren't. In general, it's better to manually add a few well-explained links to a selection of notes than trying to link to every related note.My next attempt consisted of adding every note I wrote to some explicit index of related notes (essentially a structure note). That way, I was confident that I could find my way back to related notes, so I didn't have the fear of forgetting about my notes. This approach lasted until I had around 1,000 notes or so. It started to break down, because these indexes became bloated -- there were too many links to notes, many of them with duplicate information, and therefore I didn't actually want to use them. It also made writing a new note a huge chore, since I'd always have to find a relevant index to add it to so I wouldn't "lose" it.The approach that I currently use essentially follows Luhmann's Folgezettel. Whenever I create a new note, I always choose some "location" for it. It doesn't have to be the best possible place, or even be that relevant, but I will always pick a location. At this location, I insert a link to the new note (usually at the bottom of an existing note), and from the new note, I also make a link back to the insertion point. Browsing the Zettelkasten consists of picking a random note, and then following both the "backlinks" to previous notes at the top of the note, and the "forward-links" to following notes at the bottom of the note.The advantage is that every note in the system is now reachable in some way from every other note, so I never have to worry about "losing" them. It's not a chore to add new notes, since I can just add them where I think of them (there is no need for an inbox with this approach); I don't need to worry about finding exactly the right spot; and I'm not incentiviced to add a massive amount of semi-irrelevant links to enable browsing through backlinks. It also enables serendipitous discovery of old notes, which is what gives the Zettelkasten its "conversation partner" quality.I still use structure notes, but I add only a small selection of notes to the structure notes. I don't try to add every note related to a topic, and I specifically avoid having multiple notes with closely related content in the same structure note. I think of structure notes as essentially a sort of "wormhole" that can tie otherwise distant notes together, but I rely mainly on the organic tree structure created from Folgezettel for actually navigating my Zettelkasten.This approach seems to be working well so far. Hopefully it'll last me at least until I hit 10,000 notes!
A Beginner’s Guide to the Zettelkasten Method
Bookmarked: How to Take Notes
Liked on YouTube: Obsidian setup for 2023
Bookmarked: Use Obsidian Like a Pro