>The problem with "knowledge assimilation" aka note taking is that after a certain point, you have more "knowledge" than you even want. The extra becomes noise. At first, the idea to clip and save anything interesting seems so fascinating but soon you realize that you have saved so much that it's become a problem.
This doesn't matter at all. The thing with Obsidian and other bidirectional linking tools is that if you never see a note again, if you never link to it again then it doesn't matter. There is no cluttering the system.
>The problem with "knowledge assimilation" aka note taking is that after a certain point, you have more "knowledge" than you even want. The extra becomes noise. At first, the idea to clip and save anything interesting seems so fascinating but soon you realize that you have saved so much that it's become a problem.
This doesn't matter at all. The thing with Obsidian and other bidirectional linking tools is that if you never see a note again, if you never link to it again then it doesn't matter. There is no cluttering the system.