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Zettlr graph view
Zettlr graph view











The idea is to both support behavior akin to embedding a tweet, where you are just viewing a singular card as a card, but also to allow people to effectively create "documents" on Supernotes (that can then be shared publicly) by displaying the children of a card in "seamless" mode, so that even though it's actually a bunch of cards under the hood, it'll look like a blog post, or wiki article, or readme, or whatever.Įvery card on Supernotes will be able to have multiple pages, so that you can have a truly publicly-facing representation (which might limit how people can interact with it) but simultaneously embed your card somewhere else that is semi-private (like a Notion doc for your team) and allow people to actually interact / edit the card from there. These pages can then be embedded into any other webpage. Hopefully quite soon (we already have a working demo) we will introduce "card pages", which will be public (or semi-private, it'll be configurable) pages that represent either a card itself or that card's children. Thanks! And the answer to your question is yes, absolutely! Unlike the OC solution, however, Supernotes is not self-hosted, and so probably isn't as appealing to a lot of the techie HN crowd. In that way it works similar to symbolic links in a filesystem, except it's nesting so there are no folders – just cards all the way down.Īt the same time, because your cards are not actually siloed into different folders, we have things like the "home", which has all the cards you've ever made so that you can easily filter your entire library by tag / author / etc. Each card can have multiple parents, so if you are collaborating with others you can easily have the same "card" in different places to keep yourself organized. On our platform, everything is a card (rather than a document), and if you want an actual structured hierarchy, you can nest cards inside other cards. We have actually tried to mitigate this with our knowledge-base solution by using multi-parent nesting in addition to hyperlinking + backlinks (zettelkasten). Since you've been doing this for years, I can bet that you have some great advice, and I hope you can spare the time to explain your procedures in a bit more detail. Is there a way to do that with zotero notes, other than using the "Related:" and "Tags:" items at the bottom of a note?Īlso, do you have hints on organizing folders of notes? I tend to use markdown and wiki approaches, because they make it easy to have inline cross-references to other documents. I am particularly interested in how you handle cross-references. However, I do not use zotero notes much at all (apart from taking notes on bibliographic elements), and so I am hoping you might write some more about the mechanics of how you do that. (I use dropbox to store PDFs of documents, rather than using zotero, because I already pay for dropbox and basically want to avoid the paperwork of yet another bill.) Your comment resonated strongly with me, for I am also a researcher who finds zotero and dropbox to be a very helpful combination. I would love though to discover new opportunities! So as a researcher (which translates to little money to spare and high volumes of documents to manage), I find that to this date I still have to find a solution that beats my configuration.

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And more importantly, to get things started one can rely on the free tier of Dropbox, so even that's free. And best of all, the only thing I'm actually paying for is Dropbox, which I would anyway and, IMHO, is totally worth it. This setup has worked for me for nearly 8 years, with over 50 publications and over 5000 documents in my Zotero library. The best thing is that these are not actual folders, so the same document, if relevant for multiple researches, can be placed in two or more folders/sub-folders etc. I organize the notes in Zotero "folders" and the documents of each note are stored in "sub-folders".

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In this way I can use whatever app I want to write the actual notes (MD, txt, docx, whatever). I collect all my notes and documents in the Zotero library, and I sync it on multiple devices by placing the Zotero files in a Dropbox folder.

zettlr graph view

To this day though I've found that Zotero is unbeaten to keep everything organized. As a researcher I always appreciate to see new opportunities to organize my work and improve my routines.











Zettlr graph view