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  1. #31
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    Quote Originally Posted by Acorn View Post
    You seem to have thrown away the synergy of hyperlinking across multiple documents. With Affinity, you will need to 'publish' every document and then work out what its link path will be. Both Xara and Serif (noting your typo) handle internal links adequately but external ones require a collection area (c.f., the Internet). With Obsidian (and MarkDown) the connectivity is down to the folder location (even across Vaults).
    Text based vs binary formatting
    Looking at history, there seems to have been two streams of formatting for output, either for the screen, or for printing, on computers. MarkDown is similar to html and Wikitext coding. Back in 1981 one of my brothers published his book "How To Design Your Very Own Solar Home" on a 6809 Southwest Technical Products computer using Flex and a type of crude desktop publishing program similar to NROFF which used text coding because people didn't even have monitors then and the only input was a keyboard. But I was not exposed to this at all having got my first computer in 1990 when all the programs I had like AutoCAD, Word, Microsoft Access, CorelDRAW, and Ventura Publisher were now completely binary. So I'm guessing that still, high level document workflows like desktop publishing and Computer Aided Design are binary so only using text based formatting for all work flows is not practical.

    What are notes going to be used for?
    I think the bigger question is, what do I and other people want to collect notes for? Just for knowledge? The original goal of the Zettelkasten note taking system was to collect information for writing reports, papers, books, public speaking, and movies. In the field of computer aided drawing, blocks are created which are common items that can be inserted into drawings to save time. These blocks need to be created in the same computer format as the main drawing so they are compatible. So I think the same rational could be used when deciding which program to use for creating notes. I want to create notes in a program that uses the same file formats as I will use in the final publication.

    The reason for program suites
    The Affinity Publisher, Designer, Photo program suite is a great program for publishing a book in, is low cost, is considered very user friendly, and has small file sizes. Program suites were developed because that is the only way to ensure compatibility of three different file types. Can I use the Affinity Designer, Photo files in Obsidian? No. Can I use the svg and png files that are used on Obsidian in Affinity Publisher? Not really. So in my note taking I want to collect files that I can use directly in Affinity Publisher. So it makes sense to use Affinity Publisher for notes, letters, reports, user manuals, papers, pamphlets, and books. I save time only learning one program instead of many and save time by recycling material in the same format.

    A super digital Zettelkasten system
    In the original Zettelkasten system, there were three work flows. (1) Taking notes on the cards. (2) Typing the book draft from information on the cards. (3) Typesetting the book. In the super digital Zettelkasten system we create the pieces for the book digitally in the notes over time, then combine them together into letters, reports, user manuals, papers, pamphlets, and books without having to retype or recreate a lot of the text and images by using the same program. My training is in manufacturing engineering and this sounds like an efficient work flow. I think this is even more integration of work flows than Sarif even dreamed of when they decided to create the Affinity suite or than generally happens in the industry. In fact experts keep telling me that there should be more steps. But why? I think in the traditional publishing industry there is a great division of labor and many people are involved each doing a small part but this was the way letters were written in companies many years ago with many people involved in writing a single letter, now the executives just do it all themselves on a computer.

    New Steps
    In the fascinating 1992 Australian movie "Strictly Ballroom" there are those who want to do the "New Steps" while the traditionalist wanted to do the "Accepted Steps" But New Steps are only good if they make sense. So what do you think, do these "New Steps" make sense? Does using a desktop publishing program for notes lack some features of established note taking systems? Yes? But they could be added.

  2. #32
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    Ben, I am finding you are rather quick in conflating concepts.

    MarkDown and WikiText are out of the same stable and a far cry from HTML. A wiki link [[...]] differs from an HTML hyperlink as it will create a placemarker for you to go back at any time and fill in the dots. In HTML, you would get a file not found or similar (404 error). MarkDown is human-readable, not binary, so with nothing other than its printout or a simple text editor, you could make sense of it. In comparison, HTML has a lot of scaffolding and requires a browser (viewer) to understand it more clearly. HTML has its own syntax and so a browser is not always an editor. Yes you can use a text editor but it is onerous.

    Wikis are content management systems whereas MarkDown is focused on the content and HTML is a high mix of semantics and syntax, usually swamping content. MarkDown is the closest to pure text with a lighter sprinkling of syntax that allows easy conversion to HTML, allowing for all the formatting and styling without the need to learn a language or use a specialist tool.


    You mention three file types. I can only guess these are text, raster and vector.
    SVG is a file format that handles and edits text and vector and manipulates raster to a limited extent.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ben Wiens View Post
    Program suites were developed because that is the only way to ensure compatibility of three different file types.
    Can I use the Affinity Designer, Photo files in Obsidian? No.
    Can I use the svg and png files that are used on Obsidian in Affinity Publisher? Not really.
    Program suites use concepts like object linking and embedding to switch modes into different editor programs. Basically, replacing the tedium of copy & pasting provided you have the right convertors built-in.
    APhoto files (proprietary) into Obsidian -> No but a raster version Yes and a link back into the AD Photo program of the master file. So AD and Obsidian have an interchange mechanism.
    Obsidian SVG -> APub - Yes; Obsidian PNG -> APub - yes. Both SVG and PNG are open source and AD has convertors for Import and Export.

    You want a mix of Text, Raster and Vector all in the same file. Well you could with an SVG but MarkDown handles Text and embeds Vector (SVG) and, better, links in Raster & Vector (SVG).


    What confuses me is Obsidian readily capable and can hold all types of digital content (your "blocks") and mash them in countless combinations:
    • You can embed a block into another.
    • You can collation any number of block into a book, PDF or HTML.
    • You can choose you own native editor for Raster (e.g., APhoto or Xara or Adobe CS).
    • You can choose your native editor for Vector similarly.

    What Affinity does not do is present a cohesive content management or retrieval system and you will be reliant on your tacit knowledge that necessarily has a shelf life.
    Obsidian is extensible and handles "New Steps" while Affinity is definitely "Accepted Steps" so you will always be dancing a jig to its tune.

    Other Wikis are available and we still use keyboards on computers for a number of reasons.
    Thank you for helping me reaffirm my Weltanshauung.

    Acorn
    Acorn - installed Xara software: Cloud+/Pro+ and most others back through time (to CC's Artworks). Contact for technical remediation/consultancy for your web designs.
    When we provide assistance, your responses are valuable as they benefit the community. TG Nuggets you might like. Report faults: Xara Cloud+/Pro+/Magix Legacy; Xara KB & Chat

  3. #33
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    @Acorn Obsidian sounds interesting. Before downloading and trying it, are there any examples of where it's being used, you can point me to? I don't have a specific need right now, but there might be something in the future. Thanks.
    Jono (Jon)
    Xara Photo & Graphic Designer+

  4. #34
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    @Ben Wiens - and anyone else reading

    it has now been officially announced that affinity is being sold to canva:

    https://affinity.serif.com/en-gb/pre...nva-statement/

    you may wish to take this onboard...
    -------------------------------
    Nothing lasts forever...

  5. #35
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    Quote Originally Posted by Jonopen View Post
    @Acorn Obsidian sounds interesting. Before downloading and trying it, are there any examples of where it's being used, you can point me to? I don't have a specific need right now, but there might be something in the future. Thanks.
    Jon, here's a heavy example: https://publish.obsidian.md/myaiba/

    Most Obsidian Vaults are running locally. There is no need to publish if it if you your own use.

    Another example - https://notes.philoserf.com/Index.

    Hope the offers a flavour of its richness.

    Acorn
    Acorn - installed Xara software: Cloud+/Pro+ and most others back through time (to CC's Artworks). Contact for technical remediation/consultancy for your web designs.
    When we provide assistance, your responses are valuable as they benefit the community. TG Nuggets you might like. Report faults: Xara Cloud+/Pro+/Magix Legacy; Xara KB & Chat

  6. #36
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    Quote Originally Posted by Acorn View Post
    Jon, here's a heavy example: https://publish.obsidian.md/myaiba/

    Most Obsidian Vaults are running locally. There is no need to publish if it if you your own use.

    Another example - https://notes.philoserf.com/Index.

    Hope the offers a flavour of its richness.

    Acorn
    Thanks for those links Acorn, I'll take a good look.

    For the past few years I've been using mind maps (SimpleMind) to keep track of text notes, ideas, links and other bits and pieces, but it's good to look at alternatives.
    Jono (Jon)
    Xara Photo & Graphic Designer+

  7. #37
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    Quote Originally Posted by Jonopen View Post
    Thanks for those links Acorn, I'll take a good look.
    For the past few years I've been using mind maps (SimpleMind) to keep track of text notes, ideas, links and other bits and pieces, but it's good to look at alternatives.
    Jon, I did all my Master's notes will handrawn Mindmaps and had been using Buzan's approach for over a decade before.
    I bought into MindManager for about 10 years but it palls in comparison to drafting a MM by hand.
    That got expensive so I moved to FreeMind, stable v1.0.1 and bet2 2 v1.1.0, running under Java for nigh on universal.

    In between I discovered TiddlyWikis and got hooked on Markdown and eventually found Obsidian.

    Acorn
    Acorn - installed Xara software: Cloud+/Pro+ and most others back through time (to CC's Artworks). Contact for technical remediation/consultancy for your web designs.
    When we provide assistance, your responses are valuable as they benefit the community. TG Nuggets you might like. Report faults: Xara Cloud+/Pro+/Magix Legacy; Xara KB & Chat

  8. #38
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    Quote Originally Posted by Jonopen View Post
    Thanks for those links Acorn, I'll take a good look.

    For the past few years I've been using mind maps (SimpleMind) to keep track of text notes, ideas, links and other bits and pieces, but it's good to look at alternatives.
    Acorn converted me Jon. Love it. Passwords, notes, very fast search. It’s also free. Cross platforms is where they make a buck, but you can always make a vault and open it on another rig. I really like it. I do still use google keep as a cross platform, but Obsidian is the best I’ve seen.
    Bill Wood
    Charity Web Design
    XARA Pro+. WD17, Designer 17. Premium packages.

  9. #39
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    Quote Originally Posted by handrawn View Post
    ...it has now been officially announced that affinity is being sold to canva...
    Maybe they'll put a really good bitmap to vector utility in Affinity Photo now but more likely it'll be a separate app

  10. #40
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    Default Re: Xara Designer Pro+ questions about desktop publishing and note taking features

    Quote Originally Posted by Acorn View Post
    Ben, I am finding you are rather quick in conflating concepts.
    Should we call you Professor Acorn? You used three words in your post that I had to look up. But that's what quick access knowledge systems are for, so I learned three new words in less than a minute.

    Quote Originally Posted by Acorn View Post
    You want a mix of Text, Raster and Vector all in the same file. Well you could with an SVG but MarkDown handles Text and embeds Vector (SVG) and, better, links in Raster & Vector (SVG).
    So I've never been a fan of this concept you describe. Actually I've disliked this for the last 30 years. I see an interesting web page and would like to save it to my Zettelkasten full documents folder but I can't because it's a whole collection of things that's linked together in so many weird ways it's impossible to do that. But I see a scientific paper in Acrobat pdf format which has a collection of text, vector, and raster images all bundled together in a proper way and I can save it, move it around, email it, print it, and I love that. The pdf is about 10,000 times more useful than the html document. I wish the whole Internet would be based on pdfs and millions of other people would like that too.

    Quote Originally Posted by Acorn View Post
    Obsidian (is) readily capable and can hold all types of digital content (your "blocks") and mash them in countless combinations.
    OK, I actually did download and install Obsidian and also Excalidraw and have been trying them out for two weeks already. Here is an initial summary of my thoughts. If the founders had just used the JSON language which is used by the plug in Excalidraw, or SVG, instead of Markdown, it would be a great program for me as these other types can do much more complex arrangements of text, vector, and raster. And all three file types are text searchable. I like to have notes where the text and drawings are all mixed up together and trying to do that with linking is impractical as each note would be a collection of up to 100 separate files and if there were up to 100,000 of these types of notes in my system that would be 10,000,000 files and that arrangement isn't even possible in Obsidian. CAD drawings are such a collection of masses of text and vector blocks that are packed in one file so that's how it's done in that industry for good reason.

    Quote Originally Posted by Acorn View Post
    What Affinity does not do is present a cohesive content management or retrieval system and you will be reliant on your tacit knowledge that necessarily has a shelf life.
    I hear you loud and clear! But I'm in a bind, yes I've tried many workarounds over a span of one month already to use Affinity as a note taking system and none of them even work 10% as good as Obsidian but Affinity has the complex document format I want and Obsidian does not.

    Quote Originally Posted by Acorn View Post
    Obsidian is extensible and handles "New Steps" while Affinity is definitely "Accepted Steps" so you will always be dancing a jig to its tune.
    Maybe, but there is a much bigger picture which is part of the whole note taking system. In the original Zettelkasten system there were (1) fleeting or rough notes, (2) A file box of permanent notes on cards containing titles and reference numbers, (3) An index with card title and reference numbers to find the cards, (4) full documents such as articles, papers, and books which might be in various places.

    In the new digital Zettelkasten system, we often have the full documents in the form of the Internet or PDFs saved to the HDD. So then how do we find the information without the permanent notes and index cards? Digital indexing systems. In the beginning of the Internet people at companies like Yahoo manually created indexes for web pages, but this was obviously way too slow, and along came Google with search engines to do that job. In much the same way, the modern digital library might be able to live with mostly machine indexing. And we might use that rather because creating all those permanent notes manually is way too much work. But human written notes do have a place for one's own material and with so much information out here we need to make a note of where we found it.

    But the human and machine indexes have to live in harmony. And how? First, the likely focus for me and most other people should be to create full documents, letters, note books such as lecture notes, research documents, user manuals, books and these should be done in a nice format that can be distributed in organizations, sent to colleagues, or even to customers. These should be done in a desktop publishing program to properly combine the text, vector, and raster in a professional format that can also be printed. If there is time left then we could make some permanent notes, but actually the permanent notes might just grow to eventually become the full documents, as is so often the case in my experience, so I might as well do everything in longer full documents in Affinity Publisher because indexing can now find the information in the longer documents and because short format permanent notes if used at all are now between 0-10% of the entire workflow.

    The present dilemma is that Affinity Publisher doesn't have a Document Asset Management system to search the compressed file format. Obsidian does have this built in and their system is simpler because of the uncompressed text based Markdown and I understand indexing is also used. But just yesterday I did tests with indexing Adobe Acrobat documents and found I could find words in 0.027 seconds per instance and it produces a list of documents which are expandable to list all sentences with the word which is highlighted. Does this look like Obsidian or what? Indexing pdf documents results in 126 times faster searching than without indexing. Also pdfs can be previewed in Windows Explorer. Using Adobe Acrobat however is a two step process. But imagine if Affinity had a proper Document Asset Management system and the same type of indexing and searching plus a preview. Yes, this would be just as great as Obsidian now. No it's not Markdown but I don't think complex documents could ever be done in Markdown, all programs that output complex formats like Affinity Publisher, Adobe Indesign, CorelDRAW, Word, are binary. So I have no idea what I'm going to do in the interim while hoping for a proper DAM for Affinity. Maybe use the kludges.

 

 

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