For drawing, diagramming, and writing things out, I often use an iPad Pro and Apple Pencil, with the Paper app [0]. I find that writing with a pencil-type thing works better for me than typing.
I also do Rubber Duck brainstorming. This is often for asynchronous collaboration with other people. I'll start up an audio recording and kinda do a stream-of-consciousness thing. If necessary, I'll go through later and edit it or take more notes from what I just said. If I'm using Paper, I'll often do a screen recording at the same time, so I can talk while I'm drawing/diagramming.
If I _have_ to use other tools, I prefer Markdown over pretty much anything. I really like StackEdit [1] because it's browser based, easy to use, and easy to sync with git repos. I take session notes for my D&D group and they automatically get turned into GitHub Pages.
0. https://apps.apple.com/us/app/paper-by-wetransfer/id50600381...
I'd like to move some of the drawing and note taking to an electronic system, but the good ones are too expensive and don't have the privacy features I want (mainly the ability to keep notes transcribed, sorted, filed, searchable, and strictly local on my network). It would also have to be cheap enough that I could scatter many tablets+pens everywhere to make them easy to access. It would have to be pretty indestructible and have long battery life and be small enough to easily carry in a pocket.
The app identifies and digitizes handwritten content in real time (without any special hardware), allowing remote participants to actually contribute to a real whiteboard session. The goal is to eventually have our cake and eat it too: automatically integrating the digitized content with a number of productivity tools.
If you have a chance, I'd love some feedback from any fellow whiteboard enthusiasts.
After struggling to find a digital version that I liked, I decided to build my own. It's still quite early in development, but it focuses more on bottom up thinking which I've found particularly helpful when brainstorming.
I realize this is like a fireside chat at this point, but its quite interesting and hope its sparking (no pun intended) some interesting thoughts (I just couldn't say ideas) for you as it is for me.
usually that means looking at it, looking it up, figure out what, if anything i want to do with it.
i might delete it. i might archive it. i might bookmark it.
i might put it in my 8-mile-long notepad as 'idea: do this cool thing' so that i can find it later and see how bad of an idea it was, or on the very rare occasion, rethink thru it again, and/or even try to do something with it, bounce it off a friend, etc.
in the end, my two repositories are: notepad (which right now is 'Text' program on my Chromebook, backed by a google doc -- i.e. where the content/file actually lives) * gmail, just in my Archived email
i've never actually known the value of 'innovation management'.
always assumed it had more to do with PR -- "hey big company x, capture the _brilliant_ idea of your _brilliant_ people and make enough money next quarter that you won't get fired, or at a minimum you'll contribute to this idea of the company as being an egalitarian place, democracy, etc."
not hating, that's just my general impression.
Lastly if I'm out walking or an a train and have an AHA moment for an idea I would put that down in my phone notes app as a reminder
I'd also like something to effortlessly record voice notes, but I still haven't found anything (though Just Press Record is very close)
``` park “some hairbrained idea” ```
Adds a new line to a text file and clears the terminal.