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Stratbook
Map-first Notebook for Strategic Thinking
Stratbook helps OSINT researchers, geopolitical analysts, defense planners, reporters, and field researchers turn maps, notes, sources, and AI briefings into spatial intelligence.
So over the last month, during Iran US-Israel War, I was keen on learning how global supply chains work, where oil originates, how it moves, how different actors are playing their role to get a good picture of geopolitics.
I was keeping notes in different places and I always found myself opening Google Maps, jumping to Obsidian. Going back and forth. I didn't really find an extension that was nice enough to pin markdown notes to locations on the map.
I wanted a map that I could evolve. A map I could add notes to, modify as I want, and colocate my notes and spatial thinking all in one place.
I tried building a plugin for Obsidian. It was scrappy. nothing really integrated with Notion, so I decided to vibe-code an app that helped me do this. An app that could seamlessly export markdown files for later use inside Obsidian vault. Where maps are first class citizen. Different notebooks can be created for different thematic studies.
Exported files can then be directly used with OpenClaw and other AI agents like Claude, Codex, OpenCode, etc.
I thought I might just put it out there in case someone finds it useful to use. I think OSINT researchers, geopolitical analysts, reporters and field researchers who follow economic developments, wars, and global events can find this useful.
Let me know guys how's your experience. Open to feedback 👍
About Stratbook on Product Hunt
“Map-first Notebook for Strategic Thinking”
Stratbook was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 3 upvotes and 1 comments, placing #158 on the daily leaderboard. Stratbook helps OSINT researchers, geopolitical analysts, defense planners, reporters, and field researchers turn maps, notes, sources, and AI briefings into spatial intelligence.
On the analytics side, Stratbook competes within Notes, Artificial Intelligence, GitHub and Business Intelligence — topics that collectively have 521.6k followers on Product Hunt. The dashboard above tracks how Stratbook performed against the three products that launched closest to it on the same day.
Who hunted Stratbook?
Stratbook was hunted by Haris Rashid. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
For a complete overview of Stratbook including community comment highlights and product details, visit the product overview.
So over the last month, during Iran US-Israel War, I was keen on learning how global supply chains work, where oil originates, how it moves, how different actors are playing their role to get a good picture of geopolitics.
I was keeping notes in different places and I always found myself opening Google Maps, jumping to Obsidian. Going back and forth. I didn't really find an extension that was nice enough to pin markdown notes to locations on the map.
I wanted a map that I could evolve. A map I could add notes to, modify as I want, and colocate my notes and spatial thinking all in one place.
I tried building a plugin for Obsidian. It was scrappy. nothing really integrated with Notion, so I decided to vibe-code an app that helped me do this. An app that could seamlessly export markdown files for later use inside Obsidian vault. Where maps are first class citizen. Different notebooks can be created for different thematic studies.
Exported files can then be directly used with OpenClaw and other AI agents like Claude, Codex, OpenCode, etc.
I thought I might just put it out there in case someone finds it useful to use. I think OSINT researchers, geopolitical analysts, reporters and field researchers who follow economic developments, wars, and global events can find this useful.
Let me know guys how's your experience. Open to feedback 👍