I didn't find moving them around from day to day very useful. They either need to happen, happened or aren't going to happen. I went with a subset of the bullet journal symbols, because I found my todos are generally not very complicated. I adopted a set of symbols based on the bullet journal suggestions to indicate different types of notes. I didn't have any todos or other particularly notable notes on this page, but it gives a flavor of how I use bullet journaling in the day to day. I kept track of what the training was about and observations on The Flight of the Phoenix, a training aid our instructor chose. Here's an example of notes I took during a project management training: Other times, I come out with a list of todos, and still other times I just come out with a bunch of things I want to remember. Sometimes my notes are just "I attended this meeting". I take notes at all the meetings and trainings I attend. The practices that I find most useful are adopting a set of shorthand symbols for each note, keeping a weekly log, keeping a monthly calendar and keeping an index of my notes. The note taking system that works best of me is Bullet Journaling, which is a structured way of categorizing and organizing notes. Their organizational schemes, and the fact that I need a working computer to use them puts too many barriers between me, and the notes I want to write. I've tried a wiki (several wikis, really). I wrote earlier about why you might take notes. What systems do you all use? Who does it all with a computer, and how do they handle meeting notes? Who has some paper-based system I've never heard of? I'm pretty curious what y'all up to. Originally published at This is longer than the usual #discuss post, but I'd love to hear about how dev.to takes their notes.
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