There is a lot going on on the the screen, but unlike some apps, Organizedly doesn’t feel cramped or confusing on my MacBook. Like Roam, Obsidian, Amplenote and NotePlan (among others), Organizedly automatically creates a note for each day. Like Amplenote, you can create tasks within notes and then view a list of tasks pulled from all your notes. Like Obsidian and Roam, Organizedly has a graph view that displays the network of your notes. It looks as if I can make sense of it… which sets it apart from Amplenote. I know that other apps have similar tools for gathering related notes and tasks, but Organizedly feels different to me. There are no folders, but it provides ways to create collections and queries, so you can get quick access to grouped information. The app uses tags to categorize your notes and tasks. It has bi-directional linking to connect your thoughts and projects. Like those apps, Organizedly allows you to combine notes and tasks (it also has a calendar feature). It works somewhat like a mashup of Obsidian and Amplenote or NotePlan.
It is not officially released, but people can sign up for free early access as I’ve done.
I just learned about Organizedly this morning and am giving it a try. If I can, I link a task to a project note for reference.Organizedly: A mashup of Obsidian and NotePlan (sort of) The main task gets broken down into many small steps and I copy forward what's still open on a daily basis. So usually I'm tracking what I want to get done today and I have a few extra points which I keep migrating forward which have a lower priority. But I see the value in those other logs and might pick it up for my sprint planning which is every 2 weeks. So technically a lot of custom collections. You can also reach out in a DM or email ( I use NotePlan as Bullet Journal: I use the basics, since I have a Zettelkasten running side-by-side to my daily notes, I'm not using future, monthly or weekly logs too much. I would love to integrate this into a video/blog post and reference it back to you. Would you mind sharing more of how you work, like screenshots, or a video or similar (with data which is not confidential)? Your Index and future log sound very interesting. It would be awesome, if could share some more workflow ideas of other people. Hi /u/neilg3, thanks for sharing this! I was planning to make a video how I use NotePlan as Bullet Journal where I explain the similarities. On paper a table might be the most efficient way to do it, but on digital there are more efficient ways to do it. When I used to have my BuJo on Notion I used to have tables for my habit tracking and it ended up being all slow and clunky.
As I mentioned earlier, better use specialized software for that. So answering your suggestions for habit / hour tracking in a table questions. On analog I had to leave some blank space in case I ended up doing some extra tasks or wrote some extra notes. I create a note for every project I have, have their tasks organized in their specific section and then I just move them to a specific day once I know when I'm gonna do it.Ī pros of it being digital is that I'm able to start planning for tomorrow even if the day just started. I'm not tracking habits for now, it was very helpful and convenient to have in the analog BuJo, but if you are on digital you might as well just use specialized apps for that. Then I use the moving function once I assign it to a day I want to do an specific task.
I do have to create a note for each month and each year to have my goals and tasks that are not specific for a day. I don't create an index not since I got a calendar, a search function and #tags.
To describe some way I'm using Noteplan as a BuJo: I think Noteplan is getting where a bullet journal practitioner would like it to be. Analog remains the most fitting one for the method due to its flexibility but it so far it seems like NotePlan is most fitting BuJo right now.īefore that I was using some Notion templates that ended up more of a hassle because I still had to do many things manually, which defeats one of the main purposes of switching to digital. I started bullet journaling since 4 years ago I've switched back and forth from analog to digital maybe like three times already.