The Pomodoro Technique: Breaking Work Into Focused Sprints
A time-tested method that divides your workday into 25-minute focused sessions with short breaks between them.
We compare two popular tools for organizing thoughts and projects. Each has strengths — here's how to pick the one that matches your workflow.
If you're drowning in sticky notes and scattered documents, you're not alone. Most professionals struggle with note-taking because they're using tools designed for one type of work, when they actually need something flexible.
Notion and Obsidian are both excellent — but they're built on completely different ideas. Notion wants to be your all-in-one workspace. It's cloud-based, collaborative, and connects everything through databases and relations. Obsidian, on the other hand, keeps your notes local and treats them as a personal knowledge base using simple markdown and links.
The right choice depends on how you work. Let's break down what actually matters.
All-in-one workspace
Personal knowledge vault
Notion works like a digital workspace where everything connects. You create databases of notes, tasks, and projects. Want to link a task to a project? Done. Need to filter your database by status and priority? It's built-in. The interface is rich and visual — you've got toggles, timelines, calendars, and galleries. It's powerful, but there's a learning curve.
Obsidian works differently. You write notes in markdown — that's plain text with simple formatting like `#` for headers and `**bold**` for emphasis. The magic happens through links. You create connections between notes using `[[double brackets]]`. Over time, you're building a knowledge graph where your ideas connect naturally. It's simple but incredibly effective for thinking.
Here's something people don't talk about enough: how fast does the app actually load? If you're switching between notes frequently, speed matters.
Obsidian is snappy. Your notes live on your device, so there's no waiting for servers. Jumping between notes, searching your vault, creating new pages — it all happens instantly. The whole app opens in seconds. If you're someone who works offline or travels frequently, this is huge.
Notion can feel sluggish sometimes. It's cloud-based, which means it depends on your internet connection. Complex databases with thousands of entries can slow down. That said, Notion's been improving performance over the past couple years. If you've got good internet and patience for occasional delays, it's manageable.
This article provides educational information about two note-taking applications based on their published features and documented user experiences. We're not recommending one over the other — different workflows need different tools. Your choice should depend on your specific needs, team size, and how you prefer to organize information. We encourage you to try both free versions and spend time with each before committing.
Working alone is one scenario. Working with a team is completely different.
Notion excels here. You can share databases, pages, and entire workspaces with team members. Multiple people can edit the same document simultaneously. You can set granular permissions — some people can view, others can edit, others can comment. For teams, especially remote teams, this is exactly what you need. We're talking about 5-10 people working on shared projects together.
Obsidian isn't built for collaboration. Your vault is personal by design. You can't directly share notes for real-time editing. However, you can publish individual notes publicly or use third-party sync services if you need some sharing capability. For solo knowledge workers and individual researchers, this privacy is actually the appeal. You're not sharing your thinking process with anyone.
Money matters, especially when you're choosing tools you'll use daily.
Notion has a free tier that's genuinely useful. You can create databases, build task managers, and organize your life without paying anything. The free version limits you to a reasonable amount of storage and no guest access, but it's solid. If you need more, they've got paid plans. For teams, pricing scales based on workspace size.
Obsidian is free to download and use forever. You're not paying for the app itself. Where you might pay is for optional services like Obsidian Sync (if you want encrypted cloud backup across devices) or Obsidian Publish (if you want to publish your vault as a website). Most people use it completely free. It's refreshing, honestly.
Here's the real talk: you don't have to choose forever. Many people use both. They use Notion for team projects and shared databases. They use Obsidian for personal thinking, learning, and knowledge building. The tools aren't competitors — they're designed for different problems.