Obsidian
Paulo Pinto [Unofficial]
May 9, 2026
I’ve fallen for new ways of knowledge management — tools like Obsidian that turn note-taking into an active, living practice. They don’t just store facts; they let ideas breathe, connect, and evolve. Linking thoughts across notes reveals unexpected patterns, the graph view surfaces relationships I didn’t know I had, and plain-text portability keeps everything future-proof. With markdown, plugins, and templates I shape a system that fits my thinking, not the other way around. It’s not about perfect organization — it’s about creating a space where curiosity leads, threads of insight cross-pollinate, and knowledge grows into something I can actually use.
Discussion in the ATmosphere