Open formats in personal knowledge management

I have a complicated relationship with personal information management (PIM) tools. I love PIM software and services that promise to remember everything that I once knew. I am tempted by every new information gadget that comes down the pike. But I have also been burned lots of times too. I spent hours on corporate intranets documenting my knowledge only to have them shut down. I used proprietary software like the The Brain which became inaccessible when I switched computing platforms (note: now The Brain supports Linux and Mac OSX as well as Windows). My Google notebooks are now barely supported by Google. And now we have news of Delicious’s uncertain future.

Because of these experiences, I have been fighting my urges to use services like Evernote, SpringPad, Yojimbo, etc.. Instead, I have been sticking with humble text files. In an earlier post, I described how I am using TextMate as a blogging tool. I have started to use it as a knowledge management tool as well.

Textmate Notebook

I don’t pretend that I have the features that products like Evernote do, but here is what I can do:

  • Create notebooks with multiple pages by using TextMate’s project feature.
  • Organize pages into folders.
  • Create todo items and other tags that I can summarize by using the ToDo bundle
  • Search using “Find in Project” or Spotlight.
  • Collaborate with others using GitHub or another code hosting service.
  • Store and organize binary files like diagrams created in OmniGraffle.

The truth for me is that the greatest benefit of any PIM tool is simply the act of recording and organizing the information. These activities help me remember and process information into actionable knowledge in my head. You can do that with any tool. The second most important aspect is search and recall. This is where the open format of text files really excels. It would be really frustrating to try to retrieve some information but not have access to the software to consume it.

  • http://gadgetopia.com/ Deane

    I loved Google Notebook. Very sad when they pulled the plug on that. There was a great Firefox extension for it.

  • http://buildndeploy.wordpress.com/ Brian Kelly

    I like to add in DropBox so that my To Do’s and notes are accessible from multiple machines.

    Obviously, using Git achieves the same thing but DropBox saves me from having to commit changes all the time.

  • http://twitter.com/akuckartz Andreas Kuckartz

    For some people TiddlyWiki (http://www.tiddlywiki.com/) might be an alternative. What differentiates it from other Wiki-software is that it does not require a server.

  • http://byronmiller.typepad.com Ron Miller

    Seth:
    I couldn’t live without Evernote. I track interesting posts, story ideas, even my expenses there. It’s an invaluable tool and what’s great is that there is an app for my desktop, the web and a smart phone and they all sync automatically so I always have access to my notebooks.

    I don’t use it for To Dos. Still use a pen and paper for that, but I could because it includes a little check box tool you can add to a note.

    I highly recommend. It literally changed my life as a journalist.

    Ron

  • http://www.ecm-stuff.blogspot.com Jed

    When I read this I was going to suggest Tiddly Wiki, but Andreas beat me to it !

    Have you ever looked at Chandler ? http://chandlerproject.org/

    It uses open standards based formats like ical and ics.