Every now and then we are struck by a sudden realisation or idea - a moment of clarity, if you will - which is exhilerating, but at the same time easy to forget, because we do not choose the time they happen (at least I usually don't).<p>My question is two-fold: Where do you save your ideas and when/how do you revisit them?<p>I've been using standard iOS Notes app, but I'm interested in hearing how other people do it.<p>I'm referring to ideas that can be put in a single sentence or two.
For years I wrote all my ideas down in a spreadsheet. But once the list got into the hundreds of lines I figured "I'm never actually gonna build most of this stuff..." so I stopped doing that.<p>Now I keep a top-10 list only, in an evernote file. If I want to add something to the list, I have to delete something else. And the next time I have spare time to build something, I'll just have 10 good options to choose from, instead of a thousand terrible ones.
A text file called ideas.txt, one idea per line. I try to aim for just a stream of consciousness; if anyone actually read it I'd be quite embarrassed. The fewer formalities or barriers that exist between a momentary idea and writing it down, the better.<p>Ideally, I should have placed the file under version control from the start so I could reference when a particular idea came to mind, but I didn't do that.<p>My actual project planning docs are all text files though, and those actually are under version control. I find using a blank commit message works best because it lowers the barrier to further editing or writing.
A Google Docs file, so I can quickly open it on my phone or PC. The filename begins with 3 zeros, so it'll always show up at the top if sorted by name, and I can just type in three zeros to search for it in the event that I don't remember the exact name.
I used to save my ideas, quite rigorously. Now, I try not to. Ideas are nothing, execution is everything, and execution is very much composed of things that you will remember, because they are so specific.
Not sure why what app being used is relevant. Plain text is all we need to write anything like this. You could use Markdown if you must (and must you?), but whether you use VIM or emacs or sublime slime or something else, two things are clear:<p>You type in plain text (just like I'm doing here in this comments box) and jot down notes. Save it an ongoing text file (probably called 'ideas.txt' or you could separate them into 'personal_ideas.txt' and 'business_ideas.txt' and 'new_relationship_ideas.txt' (lol) if you need, and place all that 'org' stuff in a folder that auto-syncs to some service somewhere if you need cloud backup (dropbox, iCloud, gdocs, etc).<p>Standard iOS Notes app is fine if you are all in the Mac/iOS space routinely.<p>The only thing I do in terms of 'formatting' is to put bigger ideas in all caps and then indent (it's a tab!) for sub-notes and maybe put an asterisk if I'm feeling bulletproof.<p>So, like this:<p>from business_ideas.txt<p>* increase Twitter to 180 characters
* publish corporate drone-like rants on LinkedIn
* command-line movie time tool
* dog walking service combined with GoPro/Vine channel for owners to watch 'best of' clips
* invent a new "to-do" app and try to monetize it since text files haven't worked in 30 years
* See if WordStar is for sale and revamp it for the Mac with lots of shiny glossy new icons
* MOSQUITO FARM
<i></i><i></i> order breeds online
<i></i><i></i> build security fence to hide farm from nosy neighbors
<i></i><i></i> what about a super-mosquito cross-bred with a hornet?
<i></i><i></i> sell to labs who need well-trained mosquitoes for zika testing
* refurbish old consignment shop as an "eBay shop"
* frozen yogurt, but only for pre-teen girls in a "safe" environment (no boys allowed) and only in girl-like colors, but where we teach them coding, laser tag, and play songs from the movie 'Frozen' all day long. Name: Frozen Yog-Her?
* record online python coding tutorial for beginners since there is not much available now
I use nvAlt on Mac + Simplenote on iOS.<p>Easy to sync between the two using plaintext files in a Dropbox folder. About as lightweight and easy to search for simple notes (whie still working on both desktop and mobile) as I've found.<p>Caveats: not great for longer notes, and keeps things super simple…so mostly great for collecting ideas.<p>I keep stuff here that I add to frequently; other things I typically move elsewhere to organize / edit…I love Scrivener for this but also use Google Docs for certain things.
I use Workflowy - I have an "ideas" bullet which collapses into individual ideas. Then I shift-enter it and write a small description. I can later go back at it and collapse the idea into sub-points and expand into it.<p>If the idea is worth it, I can drag its bullet into "production" or another section like that.<p><a href="https://www.workflowy.com" rel="nofollow">https://www.workflowy.com</a>
I use Evernote. There are better tools for organization and prioritization, but I find that I get distracted by those things. So, I take it down in Evernote (or a Field Notes book if I'm AFK) so that my thought doesn't get interrupted by shiny things, then I copy it to Asana if it's work-related or just leave it in Evernote if it's a personal thought.
I've been using google keep and it's been mostly great.*<p>It's free, it's simple and works in multiple platforms: Web, Android, iOS.<p>It supports tags, attaching images and, archiving notes, so you can keep your list clear.<p>I mostly use a note per idea. Before, when I used a txt/spreadsheet, I mostly had a 1 line per idea kind of organization, but it became impractical when my mind started going back to the same ideas with more thoughts.<p>* it failed on me when it had some sync issues..
I am interested to see some of the suggestions here.. I currently just leave things rattling around in my head...<p>I always tell myself I should document them on a Trello board then I can add notes to each idea when I think of things.<p>Trello: <a href="https://trello.com/" rel="nofollow">https://trello.com/</a>
I organize most of what I do outside of work, including starting my own business and running my website, in google folders so it's accessible straight from gmail. I setup filters to automatically sort emails into various folders (boost traffic, various swipe files, books to read) so, for example, if someone sends me a cool article on hydroponics (something applicable to my business) and it sparks an idea, I just forward the email to myself and add "uvf swipe" to the subject line.<p>Depending on the folders, I visit them once every month or so, or almost never. It just depends what I'm into at the time, but I can always get them later.<p>When it comes to afk, I usually use evernote, but just as a basic notetaker that I can type up later.
Combination of paper notebook, text files, and a program I wrote that acts as a probabilistic reminder list (<a href="https://github.com/JD-P/epiphanal" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/JD-P/epiphanal</a>). I found I was having trouble ever actually reading the giant project and ideas lists I'd write because you'd get to a certain number of items and there was no <i>way</i> you were actually going to read that entire list, even skimming it became a hassle. So I wrote this instead as an alternative where it feeds you a small number of items from a list at a time.
Plain text files written using Vim in a Terminal. Then archived by folder to Google Drive or DropBox. I want them to be in a format I, and any machine, can read N years from now. I've been burned before by proprietary solutions ;)<p>I revisit old files at odd intervals. I have ~5 years worth of notes. What I love most is when I think I have a new idea, or stumbled upon original inspiration, and I find an almost exact sentiment mirrored years ago, albeit using different language. Then I know I've revealed some deep truth that will remain constant for me, and it is only my manner of expressing it that has evolved!
I used to save mine everywhere from emails, text files, to-do apps, Google keep, trello notebooks, and texting myself to random pieces of paper. What I use really depends on what's available to me at the time as well as the convenience.<p>Yesterday I just finished putting all my family cooking recipes into a single JSON file so they'll easier to digest. This morning I started on compiling all my notes to a single JSON file too, adding summaries, detailed explanations, tags, and categories. After I'm done I plan on making a nice Webapp to add, search, and view entries.
Evernote. It proved so far to be the most useful.
Especially because you can easily add tags to the notes.<p>When using 'clip to Evernote' browser extensions to add research materials you add same tags and then you have nicely linked together idea + research material.<p>I used to use index cards for storing ideas, but if you move often or just away from them - they are not so useful.<p>Hassle of digitizing notes are compensated by better availability.<p>For quick notes on a move I may use voice memo or voice note and then type in when I'm at the computer.
I use Trello. I have a board where I general store things, and happen to have a column just for ideas.<p>Also, have another column for things to read. Things to research/investigate.
Google keep. I've given up on any hope of organizing my ideas (at least in first draft form). The important for me is being able to enter them quickly and easily on any device and then being able to retrieve them quickly via search.<p>Organizing can come later once I refine the ideas.<p>The most important thing I have to keep in mind here is to include terms that are good for search (not too generic, otherwise they bring up too many results).
I use the developer diary Devarist nowadays, which lets you store things in Markdown, and I periodically export those entries to a single local markdown file. I prefer the searching and organization (and always online) aspect of Devarist, but I don't want to lose my files either.<p>I also include little icons that represent the category so I can visually browse and filter pretty quickly and easily as I scroll through it.
Depends on what field the ideas are concerned with but my short answer would be: personal journal, evernote, or Google Docs (now switched that to Quip)
I have mostly used notes.app on iOS/Mac synced via iCloud (I have both short ideas and more fleshed out concepts in there)<p>Recently I've been experimenting with markdown documents in a git/hg repo. I haven't quite found an iOS vcs+markdown editor I'm happy with though, so it's not a full migration from notes.app
When these moments of clarity arise I immediately open Simplenote[0] and type it down (unless im busy and forgets it).<p>Simplenote mainly because I never found a satisfying way to sync my txt files across all devices<p>[0]: <a href="http://simplenote.com/" rel="nofollow">http://simplenote.com/</a>
In a Google docs file called "UN-Validated Ideas". Unless I've presold an idea to other people (and have their money in-hand), those ideas never make it out of that file.
Emacs org-mode. Notes are plain text are they can be exported to HTML, PDF and LaTeX. Google Drive and Dropbox folders help me out to read my notes from anywhere.
Google drive: in a big folder named ideas with sub-folders like B2B, B2C, Fun, etc (doc files inside each sub-folder).<p>It's also easy to sync and access on all devices.