Zo vs Obsidian

Obsidian is beloved by knowledge workers for good reason: it stores your notes as plain markdown files in a local vault. No proprietary formats. No vendor lock-in. Your notes are just files.

Zo shares this philosophy. But where Obsidian is a local-first note editor, Zo is an always-on cloud computer with AI. They're different tools – and they work beautifully together.

Obsidian's Strengths

Obsidian does several things exceptionally well:

  • Markdown-native: Everything is stored as .md files you can open with any editor

  • Local-first: Your vault lives on your device, not someone else's server

  • Backlinks and graph view: See how your notes connect

  • Extensible: Hundreds of community plugins for almost any workflow

  • Privacy: Your data never leaves your device (unless you choose to sync)

For focused writing and note-taking, Obsidian is excellent.

The Sync Question

Obsidian's local-first design means you need a solution for:

  • Accessing notes from multiple devices

  • Backing up your vault

  • Sharing notes with others

Obsidian offers several sync options:

  • Obsidian Sync: $8/month for end-to-end encrypted sync

  • iCloud/Dropbox/Google Drive: Free but can have conflicts

  • Git: Free but requires technical setup

  • Syncthing: Free, decentralized, but requires configuration

Each has trade-offs between cost, reliability, and complexity.

Zo as Your Obsidian Vault

Here's an interesting option: use Zo as the home for your Obsidian vault.

With Zo's local sync, your files sync bidirectionally between your local machine and your Zo server. Point Obsidian at the synced folder, and you have:

  • Your vault on a server you control: Not a third-party sync service

  • Access from anywhere: Through Zo's web interface or synced locally

  • AI that understands your notes: Ask Zo questions about your vault

  • Automation capabilities: Build agents that work with your notes

  • 100GB included storage: Plenty of room for notes, attachments, and more

Obsidian becomes your writing interface. Zo becomes your always-on vault with AI superpowers.

The Best of Both Worlds

You don't have to choose. A common setup:

  1. Vault on Zo: Store your notes on your Zo server

  2. Sync locally: Use Zo's sync to mirror to your laptop

  3. Edit in Obsidian: Use Obsidian for focused writing

  4. Ask Zo questions: Query your vault with AI

  5. Build automations: Create agents that work with your notes

  6. Build apps: Build interactive views on top of your notes

Obsidian handles the editing experience. Zo handles sync, AI, automation, and web hosting.

For Obsidian Power Users

If you're deep into the Obsidian ecosystem, Zo complements rather than replaces your setup:

  • Keep editing your vault using Obsidian and your favorite plugins

  • Add an AI that can read and search across your entire vault

  • Create AI agents that automate research and organization tasks working with your notes

  • Build and host sites that integrate context from your notes

  • Add a backup location you control

"I'm so excited about Zo, I've dropped all work on the floor and am building a script to import all my X bookmarks. It seems like the exact Obsidian-in-the-cloud + Claude Code + automation product that I've been looking for."

Pricing

Obsidian:

  • Free for personal use

  • Sync: $8/month

  • Publish: $8/month

  • Commercial license: $50/year

Zo:

  • Plans start at $18/month

  • Includes sync, AI, storage, and server

Get Started

Ready to give your Obsidian vault AI superpowers? Try Zo Computer and sync your notes to an always-on server.

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