12-1d Flexible media will surface contingency
1-1c6a2a Don’t let how you work affect what problems you can work on
3-1c2e 情報は関係性の中にある - Meaning is often in relation to other things
10-2g2e9a The contingent relation between the form and the abstract can be only realized by digital systems. Analog systems cannot do this.
9-4b3e1 Concise explanations accelerate. It helps others understand you better and faster at all scales.
8-2d1b Forwardable insights can lead to network effects
3-1c2e0 There is no minimum ideadevelop
3-1c3d0 Break down into mini-projects, they become more actionable because they are less scary than bigger ones
1-2g2s7b3 An explanation for how something really works cannot rely on infinity
3-1c2e3 Infinite semiosis - ‘There is no beginning or end to symbols because it is recursive’
1-2g2s7b2 The laws of physics determine what’s rare-common, probable-improbable, finite-infinite
2-1a0a ‘Occam’s razor’ & ‘Irreducibility’ - Simplify the problem but don’t oversimplify.
- https://stephango.com/evergreen-notes
- Atomic notes are bottom-up via links:
- https://twitter.com/kepano/status/1628473983057408001?lang=en
- I use a mostly folderless method. I don’t organize things top-down. I let Obsidian organize things for me, bottom-up, from the links in my notes. I do have a few folders for admin files that I don’t want cluttering the nav, namely: attachments, clippings, daily notes, external references. I use templates very heavily to make sure each note type links to the relevant category. I use links very heavily, for proper nouns, names, places, concepts, etc. Even if I don’t create the note immediately. Most of my notetaking is atomic journal-type entries (like zettelkasten). Some are synthesized into evergreen notes. I am consistent about reviewing and summarizing my thoughts about once a week and every 6 months.
- https://twitter.com/kepano/status/1628473983057408001?lang=en
- Atomic notes are bottom-up via links:
- Andy Matuschak