![]() ![]() Download the articles in a centralized place for offline reading across your devices.Save articles to ‘read later’ with one-click.There are a few reasons why it’s helpful to use a read-later app: Reader: a read-later app created by Readwise.Readwise: a tool to collect and sync your highlights from various sources with your preferred note-taking tool.What’s the difference between Readwise and Readwise Reader? Readwise launched its own read-later app, called Readwise Reader. I’ve written a detailed guide on using Readwise, how it fits into my system, and my favorite features. It’s a great way for old highlights to resurface and often gives me new inspiration or ways to connect them to new ideas. I usually go through it while commuting or waiting somewhere. ![]() I have it set up as a daily email in the morning, with 10 random highlights from my library. There could also be highlights that you want to keep in your database but don’t need to see in your Daily Review.For instance, you might want to see more highlights from your favorite books than from an online article. You can also adjust the settings to change how often you see a specific highlight or source.You choose how many highlights are shown.You decide when and how frequently you receive the selection (daily, x per week, weekly).You choose if you want to receive the daily selection as an email or review it in the app.The best part about it is that the email is highly customizable: Instead, you want to continue to review your notes so you recall more and grow your knowledge over time. You don’t want to save highlights and never look at them again. The Daily Review email uses a scientific process called Spaced Repetition. One feature I do use and love is this: Daily Review emailsĭubbed ‘ your daily dose of wisdom,’ The Daily Review is a random selection of highlights from your database, sent to you by Readwise. For me, organizing and connecting ideas happen in Roam, but more on that later. I personally haven’t been using Readwise in that way. Use search to instantly find a highlight, add tags, and then add your own annotation. With your highlights all in one place, you can use Readwise to organize and connect these ideas in new ways. There are a few other interesting features you can use Readwise for. You can connect many other platforms (like Medium, Twitter, etc.) to Readwise, depending on what you’re using. Book and article highlights imported by Readwise into my Roam graph ![]() This happens automatically every day, without any effort on my part. Simply put: Readwise will import all my highlights into its system, and export everything to Roam, my key note-taking app. ![]() Shortform highlights: imported to Readwise → exported to Roam.Online content: highlighted in Readwise Reader → imported to Readwise → exported to Roam.Book highlights: Kindle → imported to Readwise → exported to Roam.If you do a lot of reading and highlighting, Readwise is a must - especially if you want to use those notes in your writing. Readwise is a tool that extracts all your highlights and notes from different platforms and stores them in one central location. I am simply going to describe how I use each one and how they interconnect. I’m now at a stage where I have a system that works well for me, with a few tools and simple routines I’ve picked up from different sources.īefore we jump in: this is not an in-depth guide or explanation of the features of each tool. I’ve now been writing online for 18 months, and I’ve been slowly building my digital note-taking practice. I find it hard to believe that whoever made those systems truly uses them for longer than a few weeks. I see these online tutorials with elaborate tagging systems and color coding, and it makes my head spin. What you don’t need is a complicated note-taking system. If you write online, you need a note-taking system. ![]()
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