Readwise Reader - How I Process EVERYTHING I Read

FromSergio
26 Jan 202314:52

Summary

TLDRThe video introduces Readwise Reader, a powerful app that consolidates various content sources into one platform and connects seamlessly with Readwise for note-taking and highlighting. It offers features like annotating articles, saving YouTube video transcripts, and managing Twitter threads. The app is still in public beta but is stable and offers a 30-day free trial, with plans to increase its value post-beta. The video also highlights the integration of Readwise with Short Form for insightful content summaries and the Obsidian plugin for efficient content management.

Takeaways

  • πŸ“š The introduction of Readwise Reader has revolutionized content consumption by offering a centralized platform for various content types, including articles, YouTube videos, podcasts, and Twitter threads.
  • πŸ”— Readwise Reader seamlessly integrates with Readwise, allowing for automatic export of insights and annotations to other apps such as Obsidian or Notion.
  • πŸŽ₯ Taking notes on YouTube videos is simplified with Readwise Reader's ability to pull transcripts and sync them with the video, enabling users to highlight and tag sections for easy reference.
  • πŸ“± The Readwise Reader app is currently in public beta and offers stability and functionality despite its beta status, providing a smooth user experience.
  • 🌐 Readwise Reader can import content from various sources, including RSS feeds, newsletters, and Twitter lists, consolidating all subscriptions in one place.
  • πŸ“‹ The app's user interface is designed to enhance reading and note-taking with features like keyboard navigation, customizable views, and text-to-speech functionality.
  • πŸ” Readwise Reader offers powerful search capabilities, allowing users to easily find saved content across different formats and sources.
  • πŸ“Š The app suggests new feeds based on the user's reading habits, further personalizing the content experience and offering discoverability of new sources.
  • πŸ“ Users can manage their library with different workflows like Triage, Shortlist, or Classic, depending on their preference for organizing content.
  • πŸ”— Readwise Reader's integration with other apps, such as Shortform, adds value by providing research-backed input and summaries that support or challenge the original content.
  • πŸ’‘ The Readwise Reader plugin for Obsidian allows for detailed configuration of how content is synced and organized, including custom file naming and YAML front matter.

Q & A

  • What was the main issue with consuming content as described in the script?

    -The main issue was that the friction of capturing information while consuming content, such as articles, YouTube videos, or podcasts, detracted from the enjoyment of the content itself.

  • How did Readwise solve the problem of capturing insights from various sources?

    -Readwise aggregated insights found on the web from podcasts, tweets, books, etc., and automatically exported them into the user's app of choice, like Obsidian or Notion, serving as a good alternative to manual note-taking.

  • What is Readwise Reader and how does it differ from other Readwise features?

    -Readwise Reader is a powerful read-it-later app that functions not only as a repository for saved content but also as a Twitter newsletter and RSS reader. It works on YouTube videos as well and can export content to the user's preferred app, all in one centralized location.

  • How does the Readwise Reader browser extension enhance the user experience?

    -The browser extension allows users to grab articles and save them directly to Readwise Reader, where they can annotate and interact with the content more effectively than in other platforms.

  • What are the three main tabs in Readwise Reader and what do they represent?

    -The three main tabs are Home, Library, and Feed. Home is like a Netflix homepage for content, Library is where saved content is stored, and Feed is where subscribed content lands.

  • How can users manage their Library in Readwise Reader?

    -Users can manage their Library by moving items from the Inbox to Later, Archive, or deleting them. They can also use keyboard shortcuts for navigation and highlighting, and customize the Library view according to their preferences.

  • What is the process for taking notes on YouTube videos using Readwise Reader?

    -Users can open a YouTube video in Readwise Reader, which pulls the transcript and allows users to follow along and highlight sections. The video highlights and syncs with the user's progress, and these highlights can be exported to apps like Obsidian.

  • How does Readwise Reader integrate with other apps for content consumption?

    -Readwise Reader integrates with various apps for content consumption by allowing users to export their highlights and notes to their preferred apps, such as Obsidian or Notion, through browser extensions and direct integrations.

  • What is the significance of the Feed tab in Readwise Reader?

    -The Feed tab is where all subscribed content, such as RSS feeds, newsletters, and Twitter lists, lands. Users can organize and manage these subscriptions, and the tab also suggests new feeds based on the user's reading habits.

  • How can users customize their Readwise Reader experience with keyboard shortcuts and the command palette?

    -Users can use keyboard shortcuts for navigation, highlighting, tagging, and accessing websites. The command palette (activated by Command or Control + K) offers a range of options for further interaction with the content, such as summarizing or generating questions based on highlights.

  • What are the benefits of using Readwise Reader over other read-it-later apps?

    -Readwise Reader offers a centralized location for all content sources, powerful annotation tools, seamless integration with other apps like Obsidian and Notion, and the ability to handle various content types, including YouTube videos and Twitter threads, which other read-it-later apps may not support.

Outlines

00:00

πŸ“š Introduction to Readwise Reader

The paragraph discusses the common issue of being more focused on capturing information than enjoying the content itself while consuming articles, YouTube videos, or podcasts. It introduces Readwise Reader as a solution that aggregates insights from various sources like podcasts, tweets, and books into a single platform. The user highlights the limitations of previous methods, such as manual work and reliance on Chrome extensions, and then presents Readwise Reader as a powerful tool that also functions as a Twitter newsletter and RSS reader, capable of handling YouTube videos and exporting content to apps like Obsidian and Notion. The speaker notes that while Readwise Reader is in public beta, they have found it to be very stable in their daily use.

05:02

πŸ–‹οΈ Readwise Reader's Features and Functionality

This paragraph delves into the specifics of Readwise Reader's features, starting with the Home tab which functions like a personalized Netflix homepage, suggesting content based on various parameters. The Library tab is where saved content is stored, and the user explains their preference for managing it similar to a to-do list, ensuring nothing remains in the inbox. The paragraph also covers the annotation process, highlighting the ability to navigate and make notes using keyboard shortcuts, and the option to read articles aloud. The user then discusses the process of saving and organizing content, including archiving and searching within the app, and touches on the potential for future updates and improvements to the platform.

10:03

πŸ“Ί Note-Taking on YouTube Videos and Twitter Threads

The speaker continues by discussing the use of Readwise Reader for note-taking on YouTube videos, demonstrating how the app pulls transcripts and allows users to highlight and sync notes with Obsidian. The paragraph also covers the use of Readwise Reader for Twitter threads, showing how content can be shared and saved directly into the app. The user briefly mentions some minor parsing errors due to the beta status of the app and talks about the potential for a dedicated video section in the future. The paragraph concludes with a mention of the Obsidian configuration process that will be discussed in later parts of the video.

πŸ“± Cross-Platform Content Management and Integrations

This paragraph focuses on the cross-platform capabilities of Readwise Reader, including its use as an RSS aggregator and its integration with other apps like Instapaper and Pocket. The user explains how Readwise Reader has replaced multiple apps for them, providing a unified solution for managing RSS feeds, reading materials, and saving content for later. The paragraph also introduces the 'suggested' feature, which recommends new feeds based on the user's reading habits, and discusses the various views and filtered folders available within the app. The user then touches on the 'Ghost Reader' feature, which can summarize content and generate questions based on highlights, and concludes with a brief mention of the Obsidian configuration process.

Mindmap

Keywords

πŸ’‘Content consumption

The process of engaging with various forms of digital media such as articles, YouTube videos, and podcasts. In the context of the video, content consumption is often hindered by the need to capture information, which can detract from the enjoyment of the content itself.

πŸ’‘Readwise

A tool designed to aggregate insights found on the web from various sources like podcasts, tweets, books, etc., and export them into apps of choice for better organization and note-taking. It is an alternative to manual note-taking and is highlighted as a solution to the problem of content consumption friction.

πŸ’‘Readwise Reader

An application that functions as a reader app, similar to Pocket or Insta Paper, but with enhanced capabilities including the ability to connect with Readwise for automatic content aggregation and export. It also supports annotation and note-taking on different types of content sources, including YouTube videos.

πŸ’‘Annotations

The act of marking or highlighting text to emphasize important points or to make personal notes. In the context of the video, annotations are a key feature of Readwise Reader that allows users to engage more deeply with the content they are consuming.

πŸ’‘Content aggregation

The process of collecting content from various sources and bringing them together in one centralized location. Readwise Reader is described as an aggregator that simplifies the management of content consumption by funneling all sources into one place.

πŸ’‘Note-taking

The practice of recording information in a written or digital format for later reference. In the video, note-taking is a crucial aspect of content consumption, and Readwise Reader is presented as a tool that facilitates this process.

πŸ’‘Public beta

A pre-release version of a product that is made available to the public for testing and feedback. The term is used to describe the current stage of Readwise Reader's development, indicating that it is not yet a final release but is functional and can be used by early adopters.

πŸ’‘Integration

The process of combining two or more systems or applications to work together seamlessly. In the context of the video, integration refers to how Readwise Reader connects with other apps, such as Obsidian and Notion, to export and organize content.

πŸ’‘Workflow

A series of steps or processes that are followed to achieve a particular outcome. In the video, workflow refers to the way users manage and organize their content within Readwise Reader, including how they save, archive, and categorize the material they consume.

πŸ’‘RSS feeds

A technology that allows users to automatically receive updates from websites they are interested in. RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication and is a common method for distributing content like blog posts, news articles, and podcasts.

πŸ’‘Twitter threads

A series of connected tweets that form a continuous conversation or narrative on Twitter. Twitter threads are often used to share detailed thoughts, information, or stories in a structured format.

Highlights

The introduction of Readwise Reader as a powerful tool for aggregating and managing content from various sources like articles, YouTube videos, podcasts, and Twitter threads.

The problem of friction in content consumption where users are more focused on capturing information than enjoying the content itself.

The previous solution of using Readwise to aggregate insights from the web and automatically export them to apps like Obsidian or Notion.

The limitation of existing tools where taking notes on YouTube videos required reliance on Chrome extensions and manual work.

The release of Readwise Reader that changed the game by offering a centralized location for all content sources and automatic connection to Readwise for exporting.

The stability of Readwise Reader despite being in public beta, providing a seamless daily user experience.

The feature of Readwise Reader that allows annotation and interaction with the content directly within the app for an enhanced experience.

The Home tab in Reader functioning like a Netflix homepage, suggesting content based on parameters such as recently added, quick reads, and long reads.

The Library tab as a saved content repository that can be managed like a to-do list, with efficient organization techniques.

The ability to perform all actions within Reader using keyboard shortcuts, enhancing speed and efficiency.

The integration of Readwise Reader with YouTube videos, allowing users to follow along with the transcript and highlight parts of the video.

The unique feature of Reader that enables text-to-speech functionality, allowing users to listen to their saved content at their preferred speed and voice.

The use of Reader for managing Twitter threads by saving them to the inbox and highlighting important points.

The Feed tab as a centralized location for all subscribed content like RSS feeds, newsletters, and Twitter lists.

The customization options in Reader, including different library setups like Triage, Shortlist, and Classic workflows.

The integration of Shortform with Readwise, providing insightful summaries and research-backed input on various topics, enhancing critical thinking.

The future potential of Reader to have a dedicated video section due to high demand and the current parsing errors being addressed as part of its beta status.

The Obsidian configuration process for Readwise, allowing seamless synchronization of highlights and notes from Reader to the Obsidian vault.

Transcripts

00:00

there has definitely been a point

00:01

perhaps multiple times where you're

00:03

consuming content whether it's an

00:04

article a YouTube video or a podcast and

00:07

as you consume it in the back of your

00:09

mind you're more concerned with

00:10

capturing the information and how you'll

00:12

do it rather than the content itself and

00:15

this friction alone takes a lot of the

00:17

pleasure away from the content you're

00:18

consuming and up until now the closest

00:20

thing we have to fix this was read wise

00:22

which aggregated all of our insights we

00:24

found on the web whether it's podcasts

00:26

tweets books Etc and automatically

00:29

export them into our app of choice

00:30

whether it's obsidian notion or others

00:33

this was a pretty good alternative to

00:34

doing everything manually but it still

00:36

has a major issue if you want to take

00:37

notes on something like a YouTube video

00:39

you have to rely on Chrome extensions

00:41

and a bit of manual work if you want to

00:43

take notes on different blog posts maybe

00:45

through an RSS feed you have to have

00:47

more apps and likely paid ones to do

00:49

that and don't even get me started on

00:51

podcasts however late last year read

00:53

wise released read wise reader and that

00:55

changed everything so what is reader

00:57

reader is probably the most powerful

00:59

readilyter app out there right now kind

01:00

of like pocket or insta paper but on a

01:02

whole other level because it's also a

01:04

Twitter newsletter and RSS reader and it

01:07

even works on YouTube videos it also

01:09

funnels all of your content sources into

01:10

one centralized location which

01:12

automatically connects to read wise and

01:14

exports all of it to your app of choice

01:16

it's important to note that reader is

01:18

still in public beta but I found it to

01:20

be very stable I've been using it daily

01:21

for a while now without a single issue

01:23

so let's move over to the screen and

01:25

take a look at it alright so you can

01:26

find reader by coming to readwise.io and

01:28

it'll be here on top if you don't yet

01:30

have a readwise account they have a

01:31

30-day free trial available so you can

01:33

follow along and if you use my link

01:34

below you get an extra 30 days on top of

01:36

that once you're logged in to read wise

01:37

you can just click on reader here or

01:39

just type in forward slash read and now

01:42

you're on read wise as reader when you

01:43

open up reader for the first time it'll

01:45

prompt you to install their readwise

01:46

browser extension as well as the IOS and

01:48

Android apps so it's now used that

01:50

extension to grab an article and I'm

01:51

going to grab one of the Articles I'm

01:53

going to feature in my monthly

01:54

newsletter for January and it's right

01:56

here so then if we click on the read

01:57

wise reader extension I now have the

01:59

option to annotate anything I want

02:01

straight here but I'd rather do that

02:03

inside reader because the experience is

02:04

much better I'm going to make this a

02:06

little bigger so you guys can see and

02:07

now this article lives in our inbox so

02:10

the first thing to understand about

02:11

reader is how it's broken down we have a

02:13

Home tab library and a feed Tab and the

02:16

Home tab is kind of like a Netflix home

02:17

page you can continue what you're

02:19

reading and you suggested different

02:20

things based on different parameters

02:21

such as recently added quick reads and

02:24

long reads you can configure this to

02:25

your liking by coming over here to the

02:27

top right press configure and you can

02:29

toggle on what it is you want to see on

02:30

the Home tab next up we have the library

02:32

and the feed Tab and the library is

02:34

stuff that you find online and saving to

02:36

reader so the article that we just saved

02:38

is over here in our inbox and I like to

02:40

manage my library the same way I manage

02:41

my to-do list if you're interested I

02:43

have a video on it as well but in short

02:45

nothing ever stays in my inbox it needs

02:47

to end up in either later archive or be

02:49

deleted so let's look at the article

02:50

that we just saved and let's do some

02:52

highlighting and the first thing is that

02:53

everything can be done with the keyboard

02:55

you can use up and down arrows to

02:56

navigate across your article you can

02:58

hide the side panels by pressing the

02:59

different brackets you can press h to

03:01

highlight the current paragraph which

03:03

will be exported to your app of choice T

03:05

to give it a tag and if you press o it's

03:07

going to take you to that website and

03:08

I'm just scratching the surface here if

03:10

you press the question mark you can see

03:11

a list of everything that you can do

03:13

with the keyboard you can yet customize

03:14

the keyboard shortcuts but you will in

03:16

the future and lastly just like notion

03:18

or obsidian you also have the command

03:19

palette which in reader is command or

03:22

control K so when you press it there's a

03:24

lot of things that you can do straight

03:25

from here if I press on the right

03:26

bracket you can see who the author was

03:28

you can see the domain when it was

03:30

published how long ago it was saved and

03:32

how long it will take you to read and

03:33

even have a notebook for the document

03:35

and you can write a document note and if

03:37

whatever I'm reading was recommended by

03:38

someone I just put that here and on the

03:40

left hand side you would see chapters or

03:42

headers for easy navigation but because

03:43

this is a short one it won't have

03:45

anything but I just added an article

03:46

here by Ali abdall and if you want to

03:48

search just press forward slash I'm

03:50

going to type all your doll

03:52

and this is what it would look like if

03:54

it was full and one of the best features

03:56

which actually already works on mobile

03:57

is to have it read back to you at

03:59

whatever speed you like you can even

04:01

change the voice this functionality is

04:03

not yet on the desktop but the readwise

04:04

team said they'll bring it soon and when

04:06

you highlight something and you know

04:07

it's going to end up in the obsidian you

04:09

can just use double brackets because

04:10

even though read wise can't read the

04:12

obsidian can so in this case here let's

04:14

say that I'm highlighting this here in a

04:17

nutshell and I make a note on the

04:19

Highlight I can just say

04:21

relates to Skin Care

04:23

and then when I open it up in obsidian

04:25

I'm going to have the link to skincare

04:27

active alright so let's now move on to

04:29

one of my favorite features which is

04:30

taking notes on YouTube videos so I'm

04:32

going to come here to my YouTube channel

04:34

so I'm going to play my last video

04:36

and I'm going to put it in reader by

04:37

clicking the browser extension and then

04:39

I can open this up in reader and as you

04:42

can see it pulls the transcript and you

04:43

can follow along where you are in the

04:45

video through the transcript so if I hit

04:46

play it's going to highlight where I am

04:49

on the video and this also works even if

04:51

I speed it up

04:54

and if I click on different parts of the

04:55

transcript it's going to take me to that

04:57

part of the video

05:00

and then you can highlight whatever you

05:01

want you can then come to obsidian

05:03

and I'm going to manually sync

05:07

as you can see the videos right here and

05:09

here are my highlights and I'm going to

05:10

get into the obsidian configuration in

05:11

the later parts of the video it's also

05:13

worth mentioning that at times there may

05:15

be some small parsing errors because

05:17

remember this is still in beta and also

05:19

for now the videos that you take

05:20

highlights on live over here in the

05:23

Articles folder but in the future I

05:25

imagine that read-wise will have a

05:26

dedicated video section because there's

05:28

a lot of demand for that another way

05:29

I've been using reader is for Twitter

05:31

threads so let's say I'm reading the

05:32

thread I got right here from Thomas

05:34

Frank and I can share this thread to

05:36

read Wise by sharing it via private

05:38

message and I just type in a t

05:42

and now I can just come back to read

05:43

wise and now it's here in my inbox and I

05:45

can just take my highlights on it as I

05:47

would with a blog post normally when I'm

05:49

going over my inbox in my library which

05:52

usually happens first thing in the

05:53

morning or at night I just go one by one

05:56

and if it's something I actually want to

05:58

read I'll just press L to save it for

06:00

later

06:01

and if I'm done reading it and I got

06:02

nothing out of value I'll just press D

06:04

to delete and then I'm going to say I'm

06:06

sure and then from the later tab the

06:08

ones that I want to save in reference to

06:10

in the future I'm going to Archive and

06:12

I'm going to press e for that and then

06:13

if I want to find a piece of content

06:15

that I archived I can just come to my

06:16

archive tab or I can just press forward

06:19

slash and search for what I want you can

06:21

also have different Library setups by

06:23

clicking here on the library and then

06:25

edit library locations by default you'll

06:27

have the triage workflow which uses the

06:29

inbox later archive system but if you

06:32

want you can choose the shortlist

06:33

workflow which gets rid of the inbox

06:35

altogether and everything lands on the

06:37

later page and then you can move the

06:39

documents you want to focus on into

06:40

short list and then to Archive and

06:42

lastly you can also have the classic

06:43

workflow which as they say is kind of

06:45

like insta paper or pocket and it just

06:47

has a later and an archive before we

06:50

move on to the feed tab I want to talk

06:51

about today's sponsor which read wise

06:53

also has an integration with and that is

06:55

short form short form is an app that

06:57

provides concise and insightful

06:58

summaries of the best books articles and

07:00

educational material over the holidays I

07:02

read one of Austin cleon's Books titled

07:04

keep going and the first thing I did

07:06

when I finished it was to head over to

07:07

short form to look at the summary now

07:09

you might be thinking why are you

07:10

looking at the summary of a book you

07:12

just read and the reason is that short

07:13

form isn't just summarizing what you

07:15

read it's also providing their own

07:17

research-backed input about each

07:19

important point in the summary these

07:20

short form interventions add a ton of

07:22

value to what you're reading because

07:23

they can support what you just read but

07:25

also at times they will provide a

07:27

counter argument to the author's point

07:29

which really helps Foster our own

07:31

critical thinking and that's what makes

07:32

short form great short form covers

07:34

dozens of genres including philosophy

07:36

productivity and self-improvement and

07:38

because short form integrates with read

07:39

wise whatever I highlight in short form

07:41

will show up in my obsidian Vault

07:43

seamlessly short form is constantly

07:45

updating their library with new books

07:46

and articles so there's always something

07:47

new to discover and subscribers get to

07:49

vote on what books to cover to get a

07:51

five-day free trial draw in short form

07:53

through my special link short form.com

07:55

from Sergio or click the link in the

07:57

description thanks short forum for

07:58

sponsoring this video alright so now

08:00

we're on the feed Tab and this is where

08:01

all the stuff that you already

08:02

subscribed to will land such as RSS

08:04

feeds newsletters and even Twitter lists

08:07

so if you create a Twitter list in your

08:08

Twitter account you can just make that

08:09

list public and then just paste the URL

08:11

for that list right here under manage

08:13

feeds and I'm going to come here to

08:15

Nasim talab's list and I have one here

08:18

for math Twitter and if I press the

08:20

share button copy link to List come back

08:23

to read wise then I can come here to add

08:25

feed and paste it here

08:27

then I'm going to give it a second as

08:29

you can see it's adding the newest five

08:30

items or I said already picked up math

08:32

Twitter so if I come back to feed I can

08:35

see math Twitter is here and the latest

08:37

tweets from the accounts on that list

08:39

will always be shown here this is one of

08:41

the few features of reader that I don't

08:43

really use I prefer to browse Twitter on

08:45

my app or the website and the tweets

08:48

that I do want to look into I'll save

08:49

those into reader another source of

08:52

content that you can have on your feed

08:53

are newsletter so if you come back here

08:55

and we press the blue plus icon and we

08:57

go into more import options and when we

09:00

scroll down we can see that read wise

09:01

provides us with two emails one to send

09:03

it to the library to our inbox and

09:06

another one to forward it to our feed

09:07

personally I prefer to have my

09:09

newsletters land on my feed and then for

09:11

the ones that I know I want to pay more

09:12

attention to I just move those to the

09:14

inbox so whenever I'm signing up for a

09:16

newsletter I just give them this address

09:17

right here which sends all the

09:19

newsletters to my feed but if you'd

09:21

rather have your emails land in your

09:22

email inbox you can set up Auto

09:24

forwarding with your own email provider

09:26

like Gmail you can make a all that

09:28

emails from a specific newsletter get

09:29

forward to this address right here if

09:31

you wanted to go to the feed or this

09:33

address right here if you wanted to go

09:34

to the inbox the other main thing that

09:36

lands in my feed are my RSS

09:37

subscriptions and if you don't know what

09:39

an RSS feed is it's just an automatic

09:41

subscription to a website's posts and

09:43

read wise lets you do that straight from

09:44

reader once you're on an article or a

09:46

blog post or even some newsletters

09:48

you'll see here on the side that we have

09:50

an option to subscribe to this person's

09:52

feed so if I subscribe to Olive doll

09:54

every new post that gets published on

09:56

Ali abdall's website will show up here

09:58

on my feed and before using reader I was

10:01

using three different apps to manage my

10:03

RSS feed I was using inner reader as an

10:05

RSS aggregator I was then using an iOS

10:07

and Mac app called reader to read my

10:09

feeds and then finally insta paper as my

10:12

reader letter solution and this was all

10:14

replaced by reader you can also head

10:16

over here to manage feeds to see not

10:18

only the feeds that you're subscribed to

10:19

but also this new feature called

10:21

suggested and as a name implies this is

10:23

suggesting new feeds based on what you

10:25

read so over here High signal feeds is

10:27

from source courses that you read a lot

10:28

and then here lower signal are from ones

10:30

that you've occasionally saved read or

10:32

highlighted I imagine that in the future

10:34

it'll suggest your new feeds based on

10:36

the ones that you already have and I

10:38

really like that read wise tells us the

10:39

frequency of the feed because if you see

10:41

something here that's like 100 posts a

10:43

day I mean it's obvious that you're not

10:45

going to sign up for that it's going to

10:46

clutter your whole Space so it's a

10:47

really nice addition to see that here

10:48

and over here on the left side ribbon we

10:51

have a bunch of these different views as

10:52

default and all of your content will be

10:54

automatically parsed into these

10:55

different folders so all of your

10:57

articles will be here your emails here

10:59

your tweets here Etc and if you click

11:01

here on the gear icon and then manage

11:03

filtered views and everything that's on

11:05

the sidebar can be managed here in the

11:07

filtered views so if you don't want to

11:09

see books on your sidebar just come here

11:10

and simply unpin from sidebar and as you

11:13

can see all these different views are

11:15

defined by the queries here and these

11:16

queries work kind of like SQL or data

11:19

view in obsidian you can tell it exactly

11:20

what you want as a filter as long as you

11:22

specify it using their syntax and I'm

11:24

going to leave a link to their syntax in

11:25

the description but in the future I'm

11:27

imagine it'll look very similar to

11:28

something like notion where you have a

11:30

user interface with drop down lists for

11:31

different filters the last thing I want

11:33

to show you before the obsidian

11:34

configuration is the ghost reader so if

11:36

you click on anything you have saved in

11:38

reader and press command k for command

11:40

palette you can type invoke ghost reader

11:43

or just press shift G and when you press

11:45

it we have all these different options

11:47

that we can do with it and you can tell

11:48

it to summarize the content and in here

11:51

you'll see this little ghost shows up

11:52

which means that it's working and once

11:54

it's done it'll add it to the documents

11:56

note over here on the right hand side

11:58

you can also ask it to generate some

12:00

questions or generate q a pairs based on

12:03

your own highlights I says now go over

12:04

the obsidian configuration so I'm going

12:06

to come here into my obsidian Vault and

12:08

I need to install a plugin so I'm going

12:09

to come here to settings browse and

12:12

we're going to search for read wise

12:13

official

12:15

and here it is we're going to install

12:17

we're going to enable then options and

12:19

now we need to go into the readvises

12:21

website to authenticate so in here I'm

12:24

going to go to read wise and I'll come

12:26

to dashboard

12:27

and here for export I already have for

12:30

this account I already have obsidian

12:32

here but if you don't you need to click

12:34

on obsidian and click connect and then

12:36

we can come back to the read-wise

12:37

official plugin settings and click

12:39

connect

12:40

and it's going to take us to the config

12:42

page inside readwise and by default the

12:44

plugin will create a folder called read

12:46

wise and inside that folder you'll have

12:48

a subfolder for books articles tweets

12:51

and podcasts and over here we can have a

12:53

custom file name and I do make a small

12:54

change here if you want you can go

12:56

through all the documentation but all I

12:58

do here is add the author followed by

13:01

title and you can see we have a preview

13:03

here on the right and then I'll leave

13:05

most of this as default but I do have my

13:07

own yaml front matter which is this so

13:11

this will just create a yaml here for

13:13

author tags and when this node was

13:15

created so then if you come back to the

13:17

plugin settings you can see we have an

13:19

option here to configure resync

13:22

frequency I'll choose the smallest that

13:24

they'll let me which is one hour but you

13:26

can also activate it manually by

13:29

pressing command P for command palette

13:31

read wise and we have the option sync

13:34

your data now and as you can see it was

13:36

already synced so over here on the left

13:37

we can see we have a readwise folder and

13:39

since we only looked up and saved

13:41

articles those two are already here as

13:44

you can see the yaml configuration was

13:46

already applied as well if you're

13:48

thinking of signing up with widthwise

13:49

now is probably the best time you could

13:51

do it because if you come here to

13:53

readwise.io read and you scroll all the

13:56

way down to the frequently asked

13:58

questions and you click on the second

14:00

one it tells you that once reader

14:01

officially exits beta we intend to

14:04

reprice read wise reader so they're

14:05

increasing the price which is fair but

14:08

they say here only for new subscribers

14:10

and they say it again this means that if

14:13

you subscribe while readers in beta

14:14

you'll get lifetime access for 7.99 and

14:16

you know read Y is not sponsoring me but

14:18

I really think this is a great deal and

14:20

in all honesty I was actually not a

14:22

read-wise subscriber until reader came

14:24

along it was a good service but it felt

14:26

more like a nice to have rather than a

14:28

need but with reader this is honestly a

14:30

no-brainer alright so that's gonna be it

14:32

for this video guys let me know what you

14:33

thought and also let me know if you

14:35

enjoyed the way I laid out the studio I

14:38

made a couple big changes and I love to

14:39

hear from you thanks for watching guys

14:41

and I'll see in the next one