While making the note more complete in terms of metadata, it's redundant because it's supposed to be a personal wiki. Only one person is the assumed owner of them.
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Maintain your own digital library
Having your own digital library can be one of the most valuable thing for your life. It is flexible in purpose: you can use it as a personal knowledge base, digital novelties collection, and/or project repository.
A digital library should have the following features:
- Easy to maintain (e.g., modifying File metadata, adding more digital objects) which is the top priority.
- Catalog the files using open standardized tools and specifications if available.
- Provide an easy and reliable search interface with rich metadata.
Instituition libraries such as Internet Archive and ArXiv are the go-to examples for a long sustaining digital library. On the other hand, personal digital libraries are basically personal information management systems where your resources are stored: documents, notes, references, and media files.
I have been thinking of creating a digital library for myself. These are the tools I've been using for my experiment:
- Zotero as my reference management library.
- Exiftool for annotating my files with metadata.
- Recoll as the search interface.
- Org-Mode with org-roam as my personal wiki/knowledge base.
There are a couple of minor things such as Buku as my bookmarks manager, lf as a file explorer, mpv for multimedia, and Firefox as my web browser.
The digital library does not have to be integrated as the established libraries, you just have to loosely connect a system with each of the components of your library.
My digital library are fragmented with each component located in its own directory (e.g., Zotero data directory is in $HOME/Documents/references
, books and documents are at $HOME/Documents/books
, wiki at $HOME/writings/wiki
) but it is a non-problem for me and it is easy to solve if it's a problem.