![]() I have a hard time “seeing” and grasping all of my information in Evernote (Filterize helps). Evernote with its extensive tagging can be set up in a way that the same note can 'reside' in multiple places/ hierarchies but I still wish Evernote had a few more notebooks deep of organization and had explicit note ‘cloning’. I try to avoid making multiple copies since if I need to update this material I will invariably end up updating one of the copies but not all of the others. If I have an entry in a Dynalist outline I can link it elsewhere but if I want the very same text associated with that entry to show up elsewhere I will have to copy it over. Dynalist does not allow for this behavior. For example, I can easily make the thought ‘interest rate parity’ with an extensive note and it is no problem whatsoever connecting it to other thoughts within TheBrain including ancestors or descendants of that very thought. TheBrain readily handles transcluded nodes (or at least I think that is the term). In addition to the ability to play well together I think that Evernote, Dynalist, and TheBrain have complimentary strengths. Table of contents function) and that more of the desktop functionality of TheBrain will find its way over to the ios app. I am hopeful that the upcoming version of Evernote will bring parity with the desktop and ios apps (e.g. I also agree about 'future proofing' your notes although I have not quite settled on the right way to structure the material in Evernote versus Dynalist versus TheBrain. I like that I can easily share content with my students and colleagues from all three apps and that Evernote and Dynalist public links shared in a public brain are readily accessible. On the Desktop version of TheBrain I can even manipulate Dynalist via the embedded browser. I find that Evernote and Dynalist work well with TheBrain. I see that Ruudhein also uses Dynalist and Filterize. Yes, nice workflow! I too use Evernote with TheBrain. Tools: The Brain | Evernote | Omnigraffle | OmniOutliner | Scrivener | My current main brain I apply this content too has 1550 thoughts and 2600 thought links and is used to map and organize unstructured content, referencing lots of reports, articles, geographies. When not at my computer but on mobile devices, or if I encounter interesting web content while browsing, I tend to add the weblinks encountered to the Brain Box, fo later review and processing, using the same procedure.Optional:Link Thought to other relevant thoughts, use Type or Tag classification if needed.Optional: attach the computer- or cloud-stored file as well (I have my personal motives for sometimes storing and sometimes not).Paste the sharing weblink to attach it to the Thought.Create a thought where the content is going to go.Create a sharing link of the note in Evernote.Include the file or link into and Evernote Note and store the note.Download the file as to computer or cloud service (e.g.Find a file or webpage on the internet (articles, reports etc).Finally, information security and tool risks (we never know whether EN or TB will preserve current solutions, I use the following workflow to arrive a robust knowledge repository that contains my personal view of linking content (network-based) while also solving backup and independence issues. Knowledge link mapping in TB has advantages, although it is often a time-consuming process. Needless to say that TB is much better in visualizing connections. Also, EN lets me put content faster into its repository than The Brain Box allows me to do, and in many cases the EN lets me find specific content faster in a more user-friendly format (tabular). Thoughts in TB speak) with contact, to receive content automatically from social media and web searches through IFTTT, and to annotate embedded pdf files. I also use Evernote as document repository, since EN allows me to share individual notes (EN speak, i.e. I use The Brain for my personal knowledge mapping for complex content, with different knowledge views and levels that are impossible to combine in table or hierarchical format. Hello, just to share my use of The Brain: PersonalBrain 4.3 Experimental Release Archive TheBrain for iOS 1.0 Beta - Password required
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