Skip to content

FeynmanLM vs Obsidian

Obsidian is the gold standard for owning your notes: free, local Markdown files, endlessly extensible through community plugins. FeynmanLM shares Obsidian's core value — your data lives on your machine, not in someone's cloud — but it solves a different problem. Obsidian is a place to write and link notes. FeynmanLM is a system to track what you consume and verify you understood it. See Why not a note-taking app?

At a glance

FeynmanLMObsidian
Price$29 one-time (launch price, regular $67), 7-day trialFree (core app, including commercial use). Sync add-on $4–8/mo; Publish $8/mo
AI costsPay-as-you-go: free with your existing AI subscription via MCP, or your own API keyNo built-in AI; community plugins, almost all bring-your-own-key
PlatformsNative macOS app (macOS 14+)macOS, Windows, Linux, iOS, Android
Data storageLocal SQLite + files in your private iCloud container, CloudKit syncLocal Markdown files; optional E2E-encrypted paid sync, or DIY iCloud/git sync
Source ingestionAutomatic: Safari reading list, Apple Podcasts, PDFs, papers, books, YouTube, X postsNone built in — web clipper for articles; everything else via plugins or manual
PodcastsFollow shows, full episode transcriptsNot supported natively
Review methodFeynman-technique dialogue with an AI tutorNone built in; community spaced-repetition plugins, self-graded
Model choiceAny MCP-compatible AI, or any API provider in-appWhatever a plugin supports (BYOK, incl. local models via Ollama)
ExportFiles in your iCloud Drive; SQLite you can openZero lock-in — it's already a folder of .md files

Pricing verified July 2026 — check obsidian.md/pricing for current numbers.

Pricing: both respect your wallet

Obsidian's core app is genuinely free, and if you sync via iCloud or git, it stays free. Paid Sync is $48–96/yr. AI features require assembling plugins and paying per-token with your own keys.

FeynmanLM is $29 one-time (launch price), with iCloud sync included — there's no paid sync tier. AI review is pay-as-you-go: free if you connect the AI subscription you already have via MCP, or metered at provider list price with your own key. Neither product puts a subscription between you and your own data.

Where Obsidian is better

  • It's free, and it runs on every platform — Windows, Linux, Android included. FeynmanLM is Mac-only.
  • Freeform thinking. Backlinks, graph view, canvas, daily notes — if you want to write, link, and structure your own ideas, Obsidian is built for exactly that. FeynmanLM deliberately isn't a note-taking app.
  • Ultimate data ownership. Plain Markdown on disk beats every other storage model for longevity, including FeynmanLM's SQLite-plus-iCloud.
  • The plugin ecosystem. Thousands of community plugins; if you can imagine a workflow, someone has built it.
  • Local AI. Plugins can run against Ollama models entirely offline — FeynmanLM's AI review requires a cloud provider.

Where FeynmanLM is better

  • Capture is automatic. Obsidian ingests nothing by itself — no articles, no podcasts, no papers, no highlights. FeynmanLM auto-discovers sources from your Safari reading list, Apple Podcasts follows, iCloud folders, and reference managers. Many Obsidian users pay $120/yr for Readwise just to pipe content in.
  • A learning loop exists out of the box. Obsidian has no review system; spaced-repetition plugins are self-graded flashcards you configure and maintain yourself. FeynmanLM ships a weekly Schedule, Feynman-style AI review sessions, and per-source understanding history — no assembly required.
  • The AI reads your actual sources. Through MCP, Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, or Grok can search your whole library, pull full source text, quiz you on it, and save the review back. Obsidian AI plugins mostly operate on your notes, not on original source material.
  • Sources, not just notes about sources. FeynmanLM tracks the article, the paper PDF, the episode transcript itself — with a built-in Reader and Read Aloud — so review is grounded in what the author wrote, not what you managed to write down.
  • Zero blank-canvas problem. Obsidian's flexibility is also its tax: you design and maintain your own system. FeynmanLM has one opinionated loop: track, schedule, read or listen, explain it back.

Which should you choose?

Choose Obsidian if your center of gravity is writing and linking your own notes, you need Windows/Linux/Android, or you enjoy building a personal system from plugins.

Choose FeynmanLM if you're on a Mac and your problem isn't note storage — it's that you read, watch, and listen to a flood of material and retain too little of it.

Many people run both: Obsidian for thinking and writing, FeynmanLM for tracking sources and verifying understanding. Both keep your data local, so neither locks the other out.