Kevin William David

Tana - Put your notes to work with voice and AI

An AI-native workspace for tech-savvy professionals who want to stay on top of everything—without the busywork. Tana helps you connect and organize information so you get it where you need it, in a super flexible format.

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Anna Butterfield
Hey @olavkriken, Your product has actually changed my life. Where I muddled through with other note-taking apps, Tana has actually allowed me to take control of my business, writing and note-taking. It's a fantastic product! All the very best and many thanks!
Aurora
You had me at life changing @anna_butterfield! Thank you so much for your support!
Hansjörg Schächtelin
I've been using Tana every single day for nearly two years - you could say I "live" in Tana. Such a great product! And it keeps getting better!
Aurora
Love hearing that @hansjorg_schachtelin! Thank you for being an early Tanarian!
Jan-Egbert Hamming
Tana is my goto app for Notetaking! Could not live without it! With Tana I can manage all my meeting/project/coaching notes! Kudos for the team! #kudos
Aurora
Love to hear this, @jan_egbert_hamming! So much more to come!
Youcef Es-skouri
I'm so happy to see Tana out for everyone. Congrats, team, on such a great milestone. I'm excited about what's coming next!
Aurora
@youcefhq Thank you for your advice, being an angle and being a true Tanarian! Onwards and upwards!!!
Olav Sindre Kriken
Thanks @youcefhq! We are super stoked to have you as an backer and early believer in our mission! I'm looking forward to our next coffee in SF - they always give me a bunch of learnings.
Chris Smith
Tana has changed how I work. I've tried so many apps in this space including Notion, Agenda, Obsidian, Roam Research, Craft, Bear, Ulysses, Day One, and others. I've tried TODO apps like Things 3, Todoist, and several others. I've tried analog approaches. The same thing happens with them all, I get uber excited, go nuts for two weeks, and then slowly stop using the app until I get overwhelmed and try the next one. This hasn't happened with Tana. I've been using Tana since February 1st, 2023. That's the longest run of any app I've ever used. What clicked for me was the simplicity of the interface. It's just so simple and yet so powerful. Search nodes are a game-changer. I track all my goals, monitor areas, manage projects and tasks in Tana. Nothing gets lost and I can find anything and everything with a few keystrokes without ever having to worry when and where I captured that thought or todo. Tana gets out of the way and just lets me work at the speed of thought. As a designer and product leader I couldn't imagine not having Tana as my PKM and productivity tool. 10/10
Aurora
This really resonates @chrisuxsmith! Thank you for your kind words. We're only at the begining
5key
I've been using Tana on and off for over a year now, and after a few tries, I finally get just how powerful it is. It definitely has a learning curve, but once you get the hang of it, you can’t live without it. Keep it up, Tana!!!
Aurora
Glad to hear you've been part of the ride for a while @5key! We are working to lower that learning curve!
Joshua Patton
Tana is the best tool I've used for bottom-up note-taking. With most objects being nodes, I don't have to worry about whether I should convert a note into a document or folder. This allows for a significantly more flexible structure that's great for supporting my thinking. This flexible structure doesn't stop at the inter-node level, as the ability to add not just reference backlinks, but supertag backlinks as well, allows sentences to function like structural frameworks. Further, because of Tana's supertags, I don't have to manually maintain node metadata properties the way I'd have to maintain frontmatter in a document. For anyone who's thinking about giving Tana a shot, but isn't quite sure where to start, I have three main recommendations: 1. Focus on the home node that's created for you automatically. One of the challenges I encountered when I first started using Tana was knowing where my nodes lived, so having some kind of hub to serve as a common starting point helped ground me. 2. Consider favoring supertags that declare types of nodes over ones that declare types of notes. This approach allows me to get away with only using a few tags to categorize my nodes. If you're not sure which node types to declare, a few of my favorites are #pro, #con, #update, #uncertainty, and #material. The first two make it easy to do some casual sentiment analysis of notes (like a note vibe check). The #update tag is great for little ad-hoc progress reports. #uncertainty is for questions or information I'm not sure is correct. This tag extends my #task tag, which allows me to check off information that I have become certain of; however, I like leaving the uncertainty tags to maintain a record of gaps in my knowledge that have since been filled. #material is a generic "object" tag for practically everything from concepts to video games. This tag is useful for declaring which node is the true representation of something. For instance, if you have five nodes that all say "The Office", but only one that has the material tag, you'll know which one to link to if you're trying to reference that show. As an aside, I tend to not assign more than one tag to a node, except for when the second tag is a #task tag. I don't actually manage my tasks in Tana, but use the task tag for nodes that contain information related to tasks in my todo list. 3. Beware of unnecessarily linking to a high-level topical node just because you typed its name (e.g., "#update I've been working on my [[productivity]] systems as of late."). I often backlinked this way while using Obsidian and it resulted in a rat's nest of references that didn't give me a better sense of my understanding of a topic. In many cases, I can just create a search node that searches for all mentions of a topic (e.g., "productivity") if I need this kind of information. Bonus Tip: I've enjoyed using Tana to create outline representations of things I'm trying to make sense of, such as a character's move set in Tekken 8 or the homework questions in a programming assignment. I can reference components of these outlines to indicate which specific part of the reference material I'm referring to. A common note-taking tip I've heard over the years is to take notes in your own words, but I've found that starting with this advice just results in me becoming a thesaurus without actually gaining a better understanding of whatever it is that I'm studying. However, refactoring source material actually tends to help me better understand what I'm studying by giving me a greater sense of ownership over it, as one typically feels after building anything themself. Obscure, Miscellaneous Usage Tips - Shift Click: Get an in-line card displaying information contained within node referenced - Command Option Down: Expand Node without exposing any preexisting children (especially useful for nodes with a lot of children) - Command C (with cursor in a field header) -> Command V within a new field: To copy a preexisting field to a different supertag (for avoiding field redundancy)
Odin Urdland
@tacit_transistor These tips are great! Thank you for taking the time to distill and share that!
Hilde Dybdahl Johannessen
@tacit_transistor love these tips!
Joshua Patton
@odinu No problem!
Joshua Patton
Shivam Singh
@olavkriken Just WoW! Tana looks like a fresh take on organizing and working with information. Managing scattered details across different tools is a constant struggle, and the idea of a knowledge graph that actually adapts to the way we think is refreshing. Supertags turning unstructured notes into structured, actionable data is something I didn’t realize I needed until now. Excited to see how this reshapes workflows. Sending wins to the team :)
Odin Urdland
@whatshivamdo That's what we're trying in a nice summary! Thank you for the wins :D
Prashant Karpe
There are very few products in this space that are as well-engineered as Tana. The primitives are all there. It seems intimidatingly complex in the beginning. But once you get a hang of the constructs, you understand the beauty of the tool.
Aurora
I'll pass your complements to the team, @prashantwit! Thank you for being part of this journey with us. We've only begun!
Ajit Deodhar
The best All in One productivity app. I tried many apps but Tana changed everything. I am using Tana as a single app to manage my small business interaction with clients, as well as my personal life. All in one place. Extremely satisfied and greatful.
Aurora
@ajit_deodhar This really resonates as a fellow 'organizing my (work) life in Tana'! Thank you for your support!
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