Productivity Tools & Methods — 2026-07-17
A former Notion and Obsidian power user has switched to a mobile-first markdown app, signaling growing frustration with desktop-heavy note-taking tools. Meanwhile, productivity experts are shifting from rigid time-blocking to adaptive scheduling based on energy rhythms, and research confirms that time management remains foundational to both academic and workplace success.
Productivity Tools & Methods — 2026-07-17
Tool Updates
Mobile-First Markdown Apps Gain Traction
A prominent Medium contributor reported abandoning both Notion and Obsidian in favor of a smartphone-optimized markdown note-taking app, citing frustration with folder syncing and desktop-centric design. This reflects a broader shift toward mobile-first knowledge management as remote workers increasingly capture and organize notes on phones rather than desktops.

Notion Expands AI Agent Integrations
Notion's latest release added connections to financial data platform Mercury and product analytics tool Mixpanel, expanding its AI agent capabilities beyond existing integrations like Figma, GitHub, and Zapier. This allows workspace agents to pull financial data and update analytics dashboards without manual setup. The move positions Notion as a unified hub for AI-assisted workspace intelligence rather than a standalone note-taking tool.

Method
Adaptive Time Blocking: Energy-Based Task Scheduling
Instead of the rigid 9-to-5 or fixed-block approach, productivity experts now recommend adaptive time blocking—scheduling work types based on your natural energy rhythms rather than clock-based containers. The traditional approach assumes all hours are equal; adaptive blocking acknowledges that creative work, admin tasks, and deep focus require different conditions.
How it works:
- Identify your energy curve (when you're sharpest, when you dip, when you recharge)
- Group tasks by type and cognitive demand, not by duration
- Schedule deep work during peak focus periods, administrative tasks during natural dips
- Build recovery time into your week explicitly
Research confirms the foundation: time management itself—not the tool—drives productivity. Goal-setting, prioritization, and both short- and long-term planning consistently correlate with higher achievement.

Weekly Hack
Audit Your Note-Taking Setup: Desktop vs. Mobile Balance
This week, track where you actually capture ideas: phone, desktop, or paper. If you're spending 80% of your day on mobile but using a desktop-first tool like Notion or Obsidian, you're fighting your workflow. Test a mobile-friendly alternative for quick capture (even just to sync to your main tool later). The best system is the one you'll actually use—and that increasingly means starting on the device in your pocket.
This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.