I'm a QA Engineer who loves to not just find the breaks but also help with the fixes. Also avid reader, love to cook, wood carve, and look for ways to help others without leaving home.
I went through so many apps and methods of note taking in school and at work. I finally settled on keep txt files in my IDE. ex: for work I have a file marked QA. Within that directory, I have files for each project I'm working on with meeting notes from each project person within their projects. I summarize from those notes into a TODO list at the root of QA for my tasks with time frames and use the notes within each section to guide each task. Since I generally have VSCode open anyway, one more window isn't a big deal. I also keep various SE scripts in a folder there as well and can grab and past into terminal to run reports or do minor support work.
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I went through so many apps and methods of note taking in school and at work. I finally settled on keep txt files in my IDE. ex: for work I have a file marked QA. Within that directory, I have files for each project I'm working on with meeting notes from each project person within their projects. I summarize from those notes into a TODO list at the root of QA for my tasks with time frames and use the notes within each section to guide each task. Since I generally have VSCode open anyway, one more window isn't a big deal. I also keep various SE scripts in a folder there as well and can grab and past into terminal to run reports or do minor support work.