Post by yamanhosen5657 on Mar 8, 2024 23:20:56 GMT -5
Copies text over in bullet point format rather than article format So which is better for note-taking and organizing thoughts? Notion is easier to use and less expensive. If you want an app that can work for your information organizational needs, and you also like its usefulness for other tasks, Notion is the better option. Roam is very tailored to hardcore researchers and tech folks. If you gather a lot of research and information that you want to go back to often and want a tool that might help you discover connections and nuances from your notes and research that might not be obvious, Roam Research may be for you. Those who've been willing to climb its steep learning curve and "get it," seem to love it. Hence, the #roamcult hashtag.
A Twitter thread with the hashtag #roamcult To put it simply, if you're looking for a Notion alternative, Roam probably isn't it—it's a very different app with a very different audience in mind. Notion is more structured; Roam was built to work like your brain Notion's databases and pages work together through hierarchical and relationship structures. To centralize or connect databases, you need to create each structure and define their relationship. Turn ideas into action Automate your note-taking Panama mobile number list It can be hard to master Notion's building blocks of databases, pages, relationships, roll-ups, and sub-pages, as they all work with each other to set up the hierarchy, relationships, and navigation you want. Frankly, I've not achieved mastery yet to organize my research in the way that works best for me.
In contrast, Roam Research was built to work like our brains, organically creating pathways of connection without taking us out of the flow of what we're doing in the moment. Roam is all about identifying and surfacing connections among whatever you're researching. Creating a bidirectional link in Roam takes no more effort than putting [[double brackets]] around the phrase. After you do that for a phrase the first time, that phrase automatically appears in a dropdown list when you type the opening brackets.
A Twitter thread with the hashtag #roamcult To put it simply, if you're looking for a Notion alternative, Roam probably isn't it—it's a very different app with a very different audience in mind. Notion is more structured; Roam was built to work like your brain Notion's databases and pages work together through hierarchical and relationship structures. To centralize or connect databases, you need to create each structure and define their relationship. Turn ideas into action Automate your note-taking Panama mobile number list It can be hard to master Notion's building blocks of databases, pages, relationships, roll-ups, and sub-pages, as they all work with each other to set up the hierarchy, relationships, and navigation you want. Frankly, I've not achieved mastery yet to organize my research in the way that works best for me.
In contrast, Roam Research was built to work like our brains, organically creating pathways of connection without taking us out of the flow of what we're doing in the moment. Roam is all about identifying and surfacing connections among whatever you're researching. Creating a bidirectional link in Roam takes no more effort than putting [[double brackets]] around the phrase. After you do that for a phrase the first time, that phrase automatically appears in a dropdown list when you type the opening brackets.