From 80ccf68f55dbb70d7e5ed52ee95b3c9d1b6ce264 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jasper Ras Date: Thu, 20 Mar 2025 11:07:49 +0100 Subject: vault backup: 2025-03-20 11:07:48 --- .trash/Second brain 1/Making notes useful.md | 19 +++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 19 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .trash/Second brain 1/Making notes useful.md (limited to '.trash/Second brain 1/Making notes useful.md') diff --git a/.trash/Second brain 1/Making notes useful.md b/.trash/Second brain 1/Making notes useful.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0f60cce --- /dev/null +++ b/.trash/Second brain 1/Making notes useful.md @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +The most important factor in whether your notes can survive that journey into the future is their discoverability—how easy it is to discover what they contain and access the specific points that are most immediately useful. + +The technique is simple: you highlight the main points of a note, and then highlight the main points of those highlights, and so on, distilling the essence of a note in several "layers." + +Do this only when you're about to use a note, when preparing a project for example. (Page 138). + +The main point of doing this is to help our future self be able to reference and lookup things quickly. If a piece of information cannot be consumed quickly it's practically useless. + +We can use our time learning new things, reading/watching interesting things by taking notes of it to be prepared for future challenges. + +Put the distilled information from initial notes into a new file and set a reminder to look at it a week or so later to see if it's still easy to use. If not, use the original to improve. Only throw away the original when it's distilled form is useful. + +![[Pasted image 20250107205518.jpg]] +![[IMG_3980.jpg]] +![[IMG_3982.jpg]] + +![[IMG_3985.jpg]] + +![[IMG_3987.jpg]] -- cgit v1.2.3