- Sep 2023
-
lifehacker.com lifehacker.com
- May 2023
-
www.thecramped.com www.thecramped.com
- Jan 2023
-
usesthis.com usesthis.com
-
https://usesthis.com/interviews/kicks.condor/
Part of the game (or not?) I miss Kicks...
-
- Aug 2022
-
impedagogy.com impedagogy.com
-
I am going to add some optional 'reading and doing' directions to my posts. Might be helpful.
- You might listen to the poem first.
- You might answer the question that Trethewey asks first. Maybe you can engage in the margins with it.
- You can make all or part of your responses public or private.
- You can start a group to consider the question.
- You can have at it in the order presented: my intro--> Twitter thread--> my response to the thread-->check out the link-->listen to the poem.
- Perch in the margins with the withered wild grapes and the black haw and the redbuds.
- Join in the work of forecasting your own life.
-
- Feb 2022
-
interconnected.org interconnected.org
-
https://interconnected.org/home/2021/02/10/reservoirs
I like that he suggest to watch out for longevity as it's been rare for an app or set up to last longer than 20 years. Portability in note taking is key.
Editing can become a time suck, so don't do it and rely on the system to unearth the things you thought might be important in the future. Accrete ideas and make connections. They'll eventually begin outgassing new ideas (like layers of fermenting trash in the town dump).
-
- Jun 2021
-
dbfiddle.uk dbfiddle.uk
-
a leap of faith?
Tags
Annotators
URL
-
- May 2021
-
brainbaking.com brainbaking.com
-
A relatively comprehensive view of Wouter Groeneveld's commonplacing workflow. There are a few bits missing here and there, but he's got most of the bigger basics down that a majority of people seem to have found and discovered.
He's got a strong concept of indexing, search, and even some review, which many miss. There's some organic work toward combinatorial thought, but only via the search piece.
I should make a list of the important pieces for more advanced versions to have. I've yet to see any articles or work on this.
-
- Apr 2021
-
www.kaa.bz www.kaa.bz
-
A lot of this resonates with me. On links, it is often the reason I was interested in it in the first place that's the most important.
The nostalgia factor is very valuable to me, but it also means you need an easy means for not only looking back, but regular reminders to do so.
Owning your stuff: hopefully my stance on this is obvious.
I'm not sure I agree so much with the taxonomy stance. I find it helpful to have it for search and review, the tougher part is doing it consistently with terms that are important to you.
-
- Mar 2021
-
david.shanske.com david.shanske.com
-
This is great. I've been playing around with an early beta version.
-
- Feb 2021
- Sep 2020
-
github.com github.com
-
I don't read comments as I think they are dangerous
Why does he think they are dangerous?
-
- Aug 2020
-
pdf.sciencedirectassets.com pdf.sciencedirectassets.com
-
future gamification research should investigate specific elements of gamification rather than as an over-arching concept so that the effectiveness of different mechanics can be parsed out.
see Chapman and Rich (2018), which examined this very thing.
-
- Jun 2020
-
www.fastcompany.com www.fastcompany.com
-
Kahneman’s Thinking Fast and Slow
Read
-
Neil Postman
Review
-
Human Universals
Donald Brown
-
- Mar 2020
-
www.frontiersin.org www.frontiersin.org
-
has a surprising connection to the world of aging today.
-
- Jan 2020
-
-
a private library is not an ego-boosting appendages but a research tool. The library should contain as much of what you do not know as your financial means … allow you to put there. You will accumulate more knowledge and more books as you grow older, and the growing number of unread books on the shelves will look at you menacingly. Indeed, the more you know, the larger the rows of unread books. Let us call this collection of unread books an antilibrary.
-
- Jan 2019
-
runestone.academy runestone.academy
-
Modifies a list to be sorted
? Like modifies to be sorted, like what does that mean? Sorts it? by what criteria?
-
Note that when two integers are divided, the result is a floating point.
note: check up what a floating point exactly means Googled : How floating-point numbers work The idea is to compose a number of two main parts:
A significand that contains the number’s digits. Negative significands represent negative numbers. An exponent that says where the decimal (or binary) point is placed relative to the beginning of the significand. Negative exponents represent numbers that are very small (i.e. close to zero).
-