Adopt a small, expressive tag set grounded in verbs and domains, like research, draft, reference, decide, or teach. Combine with project identifiers and people tags only when helpful. Avoid cleverness that future you will forget. Automations can suggest likely tags from text, but always allow a blank option, proving restraint is a feature, not a failure of imagination.
Create templates with prompts that pull context automatically: title, date, related links, and key questions. A Shortcut can prefill properties from calendar events or clipboard, then place checklists where action happens. Consistent scaffolding makes notes easier to review and merge. Over time, refine prompts based on the insights you actually use, trimming anything that seldom earns its keep.
Use backlinks to surface adjacent ideas and turn collections into maps. Automation can generate index notes from tags or links, adding short summaries pulled from the first lines. Schedule a monthly pass that prunes stale connections, promotes strong clusters, and invites new questions. Your knowledge atlas stays navigable because connections are tested, renewed, and genuinely helpful during real work.
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