Obsidian is a note-taking app, but that description undersells it. The thing that makes it different from Notion, Roam, or any of the cloud-based alternatives is this: your vault is just a folder of Markdown files on your computer. No proprietary database, no sync service you're locked into, no account required. Just .md files sitting on disk, organized however you want. That simplicity is also what makes it uniquely useful as a context layer for AI. What Obsidian Actually Is The core features: a Markdown editor with live preview, a graph view that visualizes how your notes connect via backlinks, and a community plugin ecosystem with over 1,000 plugins. It runs on Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS, and Android. Sync is optional and paid, but your vault works completely offline. What you build in Obsidian is a personal knowledge graph. Each note links to others via [[wikilinks]] . Over time, the graph view shows you which ideas are densely connected and which are isolated. It's the...
Every agent project I've built that touches internal data hits the same wall. The agent needs context: what is this BigQuery table, what do the columns mean, how does it join to the orders table, what's "monthly active users" in your org and not the textbook definition. You end up dumping SQL schemas into the system prompt, pointing at Confluence pages, writing a bespoke context builder that assembles fragments before each request. It works, barely, and it doesn't travel. Move to a different team's data, start a new project, and you're rebuilding it from scratch. Google Cloud published a spec on June 12, 2026 that addresses exactly this: the Open Knowledge Format (OKF), v0.1. It formalizes what Andrej Karpathy called the "LLM wiki" into a portable, interoperable format. What OKF Is (and What It Isn't) OKF is not a service or a platform. It's a file format. The spec fits on a single page. Your knowledge base is a directory of markdow...