Revo Digital Twin vs Obsidian: a team brain, or a folder of notes?
Obsidian is a brilliant personal thinking tool. But a vault of markdown files is not a memory for your organization. Here is where the two part ways, and why teams that try vaults as agent memory end up wanting a digital twin.
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Vault vs twin: the deep dive.
Obsidian treats knowledge as documents you write. Revo treats knowledge as verified facts it captures. That single difference drives everything below.
Built for teams
Who the product is designed for
One shared brain for the whole organization, with per-person access
Single-player by design; teams bolt on git merges and shared folders
Privacy model
What happens when not everyone should see everything
Privacy by design: every fact inherits the permissions of its source
A vault has no access model; anything in it is visible to whoever, or whatever, opens it
Knows what is still true
Temporality and staleness
Facts carry a validity over time; new facts supersede old ones
Stale notes win: the vault serves last year's decision as confidently as today's
Cost at scale
Tokens and maintenance as knowledge grows
Semi-deterministic maintenance plus a graph that sends only the relevant subgraph to the model
Agents re-read markdown files into the context window; token burn grows with the vault
Captures knowledge automatically
Where the knowledge comes from
From meetings, email, chat, documents, and tools, as work happens
Only knows what someone typed; ingestion is a manual habit
Maintains itself
Who does the upkeep
Dedupes, reconciles, and prunes stale facts continuously
Manual gardening; unmaintained vaults rot
One record per entity
Connecting the dots
Entity resolution: one canonical record per person, account, and project
Five mentions of one person stay five unlinked notes
Provenance and verification
Can you trust an answer
Every fact carries an owner, a source, and a timestamp, corroborated across sources
Backlinks and file history exist, but a note is still one person's claim
Works where your team works
Surfaces
Revo app, Slack and Teams, and any agent via MCP, SDK, and API
Desktop app first; sync, plugins, and git for everything else
Personal thinking tool
Credit where due
Revo is built for organizations, not personal journaling
Obsidian is excellent at what it is designed for
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Obsidian is one of the best personal knowledge tools ever made. Your notes are plain markdown files you own, linked into a graph you can see, extended by thousands of plugins. For an individual building a second brain, it is hard to beat.
That is exactly why teams keep trying to stretch it further: point an AI agent at the vault and call it company memory. The idea is appealing because markdown is readable and git is familiar. But a folder of files was never designed to be an organization's memory, and the cracks show quickly.
Obsidian is single-player by design. There are no shared permissions, no concept of who in the company may see what, and collaboration means syncing files or merging git branches. Revo starts from the opposite end: one brain for the whole team, built from everyone's work, with access controlled person by person.
No access model
A vault has no permissions. Whoever opens it, human or agent, sees all of it: the compensation discussion next to the sprint notes, the board memo next to the meeting summary. The moment more than one person uses the vault, or one agent works across it, everything is exposed to everyone. In Revo, privacy is structural: each data point inherits the privacy settings of its source, so an answer can only contain facts the person asking is allowed to see.
Stale notes win
Markdown has no notion of time. If a decision changes and the note does not, the vault keeps serving the old version, and an agent builds confidently on bad context. Practitioners who tried vaults as agent memory put it bluntly: stale memory is worse than no memory. Revo tracks what is still true. Facts carry a validity over time, new facts supersede old ones, and contradictions are surfaced instead of silently coexisting in two files.
The context window tax
Files do not retrieve themselves. An agent working from a vault has to search, open, and re-read markdown into its context window on every session, and the bigger the vault gets, the more it over-fetches or under-fetches. You pay that token tax on every question, plus the engineering tax of the search tools and index files bolted on to compensate. Revo's twin is a graph: maintenance is semi-deterministic rather than model-driven, and retrieval sends the model a compact, deduplicated subgraph instead of a pile of documents. Cost stays flat as knowledge grows.
Ingestion is the product
A vault only knows what someone typed into it. The knowledge that actually runs a company lives in meetings, email threads, and chat, and nobody has time to transcribe it into notes. Setup is a weekend; keeping the vault fed and gardened is a second job that quietly stops happening. Revo captures knowledge from the work itself, automatically, and maintains it continuously: deduplicating, reconciling, and pruning what is no longer true.
Revo builds a digital twin of your company from the work itself. Emails, meetings, team chats, documents, CRM, and ticketing flow through a pipeline that captures, connects, and verifies: entities are resolved into one canonical record per person, account, and project, facts are corroborated across sources, and every fact carries an owner, a source, a permission, and a validity over time.
The result is a governed graph your whole team can use: in the Revo app, inside Slack and Teams, or from any agent through MCP, SDK, and API. Ask how a departed colleague ran an account, why a decision was made, or what changed this month, and the answer comes back with its sources.
Keep Obsidian for your personal thinking. When the knowledge belongs to the company, give it a memory that is shared, permissioned, current, and cheap to query.
Give your team a brain, not a folder
Revo builds your company's digital twin from the work itself and keeps it current. See it on your own data.
Talk to the team