![]() “Ready Backlog” contains project notes which are ready to start. “Current Sprint” contains what I want to finish in my current two-week sprint and then I move the notes to “Done”, then “Archive”. There are at least 3 different kinds of notes: Inbox, Slip-box and Project note. Inbox and Slip-box notes are written as short as possible in my words and are atomic, means they contain one point (idea, thought, issue, request, …). Both have a descriptive title, a link to the source (email, article, Tweet, …) and a summary. Different from Inbox notes, the Slip-box notes are numbered with an ID and have at least one backlink. They can have more backlinks and none or several forward links. While Inbox notes are temporary, means after processing I either file them away into an archive or delete them (they don’t stay in “Inbox”), the Slip-box notes are permanent. Project notes are created using the Slip-box notes as source material, and they are only relevant for the duration of that project. Once finished, they will be filed away into an archive. They contain a quite detailed plan how I want to implement a feature or fix a bug. ![]() Markdown links have the problem that the URLs are way too long and clutter your note. So ideally the URL field should be hidden. And you can edit it by navigating the cursor into the URL part. It could reveal the URL or by clicking into it, a dialog could pop up like in Bear. Hiding is not a problem anymore, but it's not enough. Bear uses NSTextAttachments to display the link symbol. ![]() Upon copy and save, I need to overwrite it. I link extensively to notes in my Slip-box folder because when I start to plan a project, I have figured out already 80% of the problems. Capturing Notesĭuring the day I take short inbox notes written in my words with a link back to the source (similar to Literature Notes). This often happens when I read feedback emails and messages. Sometimes I add my ideas or when I read something interesting which might be useful. ![]()
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