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I’m not “smarter” but keeping a daily journal where I can dump stream-of-consciousness onto the page and look back at it has been very helpful for me. It frees up memory for other things. It facilitates a better working relationship between my analytical and intuitive sides. And most of all it’s a greenhouse for mental seeds, which sometimes germinate unexpectedly but would otherwise be discarded.

I feel approaching journaling with a goal in mind, instrumentally, may undermine the process. Better to just till the mental soil and see what happens. Like going on a hike or a bike ride.

I’ve been watching a youtube psychiatrist who seems to be abreast of the latest research on some of this stuff. He had an interesting insight around learning and journaling. His take seems to be that journaling is something you do to help process big things, mostly emotional. Or to write things down so you can clear your working memory. But there seems to be evidence that you don’t want to write down certain things you want to recall. Or at least, you don’t want to write them down prior to sleep. Seems there’s some research that suggest sleep brain activity will proritise emotional problem solving, then non emotional problem solving, then recall. So to get better recall of facts, writing down things to clear the brain of everything but what you want to remember is a good strategy.

edit: healthy gamer is the channel, and I really enjoy when he talks the science behind some of these topics

There's a kind of busywork in note-taking, list-making, organizing, that can often feel like you're getting something done, but is a kind of procrastination.

Then, there's real value to taking notes that for me is most pronounced when I write them with a real pen and paper. I may never actually go back to these, but the act of writing them down solidifies things for me. Things like WWDC sessions, online courses. The value is the act of deliberately recording. There's a kind of brain/physical connection that happens.

Ultimately, intentionality matters. There are some projects where the note-taking itself is the point. The notes are the end product; you're producing something like a catalogue of thoughts. Hypercard.

But, it's easy to get lost in that if what you're really trying to achieve is 'over there' somewhere. It can be a way of avoiding the work entirely.

I share the same perspective. There's a notable subculture dedicated to meticulously refining their note-taking, to-do lists, and other organizational tools. It appears that communities like HN and various tech circles tend to have a heightened interest in this, which makes sense since tech enthusiasts often enjoy fine-tuning tools just like writing scripts for tasks. However, akin to yak shaving in programming, there's a parallel phenomenon in personal productivity tools. While I appreciate Obsidian and similar tools (though apparently not as much as the next guy), it seems somewhat futile to invest excessive energy in crafting the perfect organizational system, as in reality, most of what we jot down or bookmark goes untouched. So, while it may feel productive, as you rightly noted, it can often be a form of procrastination.
> there's real value to taking notes that for me is most pronounced when I write them with a real pen and paper. I may never actually go back to these, but the act of writing them down solidifies things for me.

Yes, this is me. I've gone through all sorts of ways to "improve" my note-taking, including various note-taking apps. But they all actually reduce the value of note-taking for me, because the valuable part of note-taking is that act of taking notes itself. If I'm not writing them long-form by hand, as opposed to tapping or typing, that value is eliminated.

An exception to all of this is when attending lectures or presentations -- in that setting, taking notes always reduces my comprehension of what it being presented, because I can't take notes and listen at the same time. For me, it's similar to photography -- if I'm taking photographs of a place or event that I'm at, the act of taking the photographs removes me from that place or event and I can no longer fully take it in.

> but the act of writing them down solidifies things for me

Did that in uni when cramming for some exams. Writing (a good part of the course) by hand in the days prior to the exam helped a lot.

This is the secret of professors who tell you can bring a cheat sheet to an exam. The trick is that making the cheat sheet helps you study.

I had a few teachers who would twist this a bit by saying "you can bring a single note card" or similar. Once you've had to figure out how to stuff a calc-exam's worth of help into a 3x5 card, you'll damn sure know more than when you started!

I'll often make myself little docs or cheat sheets for some onerous process at work, and again - getting to the point where I have a doc that's foolproof even on my stupidest mornings does a lot to make sure I know the material well.

Many of my classes prohibited bringing notes but scratch paper was always permitted, so we'd spend the first part of an exam doing a "brain dump" onto the scratch paper. Similarly to building a note sheet, if you can write your notes out from memory, you know the material well.
Yes, this exactly: sometimes I don't write things down to review them later, but write them down to remember them now.
I never understood the purpose of doing the daily note for these apps but I completely disagree with the author. Multiple times now I’ve been writing, gotten stuck, went to go look at relevant notes, and found a note thinking about the issue in a completely different way that I could then integrate with my current form of thought. The fact of the matter is that storage is a bit like expanding your conscious world. You think about things differently depending on context, mood, etc. If you have your thoughts about the same subject from two different contexts, it’s like reaching back into your brain and pulling out subconscious truths that you would’ve forgotten otherwise.

The issue with the daily note is that it doesn’t sort by content. That’s why I just constantly make notes based on topic of discussion. Whenever I have an idea, I take a voice memo on my phone. Then I send that voice memo to whisper AI for autotranscription, and a little script on my server formats it for Obsidian MD. I used to try to write from scratch. Now I realize that writing from scratch is a terrible method of writing.

>I never understood the purpose of doing the daily note for these apps

I mostly use Obsidian for taking notes during D&D (arguably its killer app), but I think "session" notes are a good enough analogue to "daily notes".

To that end, these notes serve as an excuse to force you to list your individual notes in chronological order (which makes it easy to trigger further memories/details that came next), which then prompts you to spin out any specific-enough information into atomic notes, adding backlinks which provide context and organic categorization that might not otherwise be obvious.

I was sort of exaggerating. I do get how it can be a useful process but it does seem like the author had blind faith in that type of organization without understanding the pros and cons of it, and I do think that the cons are way bigger than people seem to think they are. Some of my more rambling voice memos approach a “daily note” style of chronological organization. I’ve tried to create outlines for them but it’s pretty time consuming. Someday soon I’ll try to use ai to create summaries and see where that takes me.

My point was that I think the authors problem is the daily note rather than the note taking app.

Taking notes involves writing, which compels you to structure your thoughts. Centralizing your writing in one place provides ample opportunities for AI/LLM enhancements, like better search, recall, suggestions, etc.
I don't see the benefit of this when you can reach for the internet and find a magnitude of thoughts on the very same issue with a very different perspective. I also think thoughts from others are the only way to adjust your own bias about the issue.

Rather the benefit seems to mostly stem from freeing up mental space by removing whatever the thought was that you want to cling to, and putting it somewhere else that "feels" permanent. That feeling is important because it allows your brain to drop it, rather than feel like you have to continue to think about it out of fear of "forgetting".

It doesn’t help to find different thoughts on the same issue because you can’t relate to the majority of them. When you find out that you, yourself, came to different opinions of the same subject, then you end up having a practical understanding of that POV.

You have to understand where that differing POV connects with other POVs. The bridge between the two is what matters here; not the content.

Why can I not relate to the majority of them? It's a basic feature of empathy.
Relating may be the wrong word. Its one thing to empathize with someone’s pov, but it’s another to recreate it. We all are living, in some respect, in response to our environment. You can empathize with another’s pov but that doesn’t mean you have a full understanding of the ecosystem of thoughts that led them to their conclusions. What I’m saying is that as our environment changes over time, your ecosystem of thoughts change, and if you put those thoughts down at the moment then you can find moments in your past when you, too, came to the same conclusion as other people. That way you can relate not only to their opinion, but to the environment that the opinion was (in some respect) created in response to. You can then relate not just to their conscious pov but to the unsaid subconscious aspects of their pov as well. It allows you to find connections you previously wouldn’t have found. It also has helped me change my perception of myself.
In my experience, going to the internet to get whatever random thoughts a search algorithm turns up for me can feel interesting, but is almost always counterproductive. Other people have different circumstances, different experiences, and while some content on the internet is good, a lot of it is just crap.

Most of the work is in thinking through things for yourself, organizing information, and synthesizing some outcome. Internet browsing is like junk food, and doesn't do a good job substituting for that.

Also, you mention "thoughts from others are the only way to adjust your own bias." I definitely agree with that, but I want to get thoughts from people who I know and trust. If you adjust your biases based on the cacophony of the internet it's much more likely that you'll get swept up in other people's biases instead

One thing I've experienced is I often need to rephrase a concept in my own words and understanding to truly grok it.

An online resource using a lot of context specific phrases, that l'll need to spend time to define and understand individually, just to build up that greater understanding of a topic is a bit of a time sink. It's helpful to have a note on something in one's own voice that helps you return to that frame of mind.

The thing is I never picked up tools like Obsidian or Anytype because I wanted them to do my thinking for me. On the contrary, I use them because they help me be rigorous in my thinking. The process of methodically recording and organizing what I find and where I found it ensures that there are some questions I always ask about everything.

Like, my template record for a company has slots for the C-suite that link to records for persons, and slots for parent and child companies. Because of that, whenever I add a new company to my database, I'm prompted to add that information. I don't have to, but what's important is that I don't have to worry about forgetting to deliberately make that choice. And in the future I can count on being reminded of what I omitted.

This is such a strange headline.

> Why note-taking apps don’t make us smarter

Because... they're not supposed to?

To me, this sounds like "Why pen doesn't make us smarter" or "Why lamp doesn't make us smarter". Why was the author expecting it to make us smarter anyway? Where did they get that expectation?

> This is such a strange headline.

This is such a strange comment.

"They’re designed for storage, not sparking insights. Can AI change that?"

That's the sub-header. The followup. The next line.

> Because... they're not supposed to?

Tell that to the note-taking apps that are adding AI to their apps in order to "make us smarter" as some would say. To improve our knowledge, to think bigger, to brainstorm for us.

> Why was the author expecting it to make us smarter anyway?

The headline doesn't say that at all. In fact, the article starts off by making it very very very clear that they aren't doing this.

> Where did they get that expectation?

They didn't. That's your conclusion.

> To me, this sounds like "Why pen doesn't make us smarter" or "Why lamp doesn't make us smarter".

They sound nothing alike. The sounds are completely different. You should get your hearing checked. =)

Heh, you haven't looked around for a note-taking app recently. Note-taking is like the nerdy version of weight loss. There's a cottage industry around note-taking apps and techniques, complete with dozens (at least) of people producing influencer content on how they make their life amazing using <notetaking-method-A> with <notetaking-app-B>.
No, you see, they're not "note-taking apps", they're PKMSs - Personal Knowledge Management Systems. (bleh)
This sounds like the equivalent of a gas station attendant calling themselves a petrol product distribution technician.
The problem is that people confuse information for knowledge.
Yes, it feels like people are desperately searching for "This one crazy hack that will make you think better!"

In my experience, thinking more is the only thing that will reliably make you think better. And to think more, you need space and time, not a breathtaking density of inputs and outputs surrounding your thoughts, which seems to be the note-taking industry's solution.

>> you need space and time

ie.: a simple walk in a park or a calm and silent place

Agreed. Everyone is overthinking it, and spending their brain cells on the wrong thing looking for that one panacea.

Wanna get fit: watch what you eat, burn more calories than you intake, exercise, probably minimize alcohol intake.

Wanna learn stuff: intake new information from a reliable source, write it down (in anything), reprocess the information in your own words, and review often enough for you to pick it up.

Anything I'm missing?

I agree there isn't a panacea, but small improvements can pay huge dividends over time.

> burn more calories than you intake

That's harder than it sounds. Most people incorrectly measure how many calories they intake and incorrectly measure how many calories they burn.

Even for folks who correctly calculate both, they then have to change behaviors -- usually behaviors that have been developed over decades. Again, harder than it sounds.

This is why so many people keep seeking out weight-loss solutions: because the best way isn't easy.

While most folks today can pick any note software (or notebook) off the shelf and happily jot things down, a relative few folks are trying to do a _lot_ more with their notes and are going to be frustrated with the generic tools that most people use. For those few folks, the easy way isn't the best way.

And this isn't new: depending how we categorize it (har), folks have been trying to refine their "note-taking" for hundreds or thousands of years. I don't think they were looking for a panacea; they were heavy thinkers who wanted to improve their process.

Curiously there have been indications that the way we take notes does indeed affect our thinking — but not in the way those note app devs would like: Taking handwritten notes is linked to better memorization in various studies over e.g. typing.
I think the pen and the lamp have made us smarter. You need tools to "scale up" knowledge distribution and acquisition (and reliability). Writing and printing did are essential in that. It's not an unreasonable starting point to think that note-taking apps can help us further.
The title gets even funnier when bookended with the author's conclusion: "The reason, sadly, is that thinking takes place in your brain."
My wife vehemently disagrees
Yeah, this is dumb. Gotta study your notes and things you write down. Most people don't have the raw IQ or photographic memory to get it first try.
Ok, we've changed the title to a more representative phrase from the article.
I sure someone had published a url about "personal assistant", rely on LLama and work notebook. guess this is the dream of author of this article ?
[INSERT OS] (or any platform) doesn't make you smarter...

But, how you use it can make you smarter,

or suck you into a cult.

I do find note-taking to be a useful way to learn and remember things. Usually if I'm studying something seriously I'll make notes using pen and paper, and then later consolidate them and synthesize them into an Obsidian vault.

But I admit that the Zettelkasten method has had marginal benefit for me, possibly because I'm not working that way all day every day; and simply copying and pasting articles from the web into your knowledge base isn't going to accomplish much of anything for anybody.

Is there an open source option to Obsidian? This is the type of thing I wouldn’t want reading or tracking my inner thoughts. Preferably something that isn’t using a limited format like Markdown.
Obsidian stores everything in markdown files, which are just text, so you can use any software you want to read and edit them.
There's LogSeq, which is a bit of a different model, but is open source and has all the basic functionality that Obsidian has.

I don't know what kind of formatting you're looking for, but most of the apps I'm familiar with are markdown or just plain text. I use Vimwiki in markdown for my notes, but it can also be exported to HTML, which I don't use often.

Ideally something like reStructuredText or AsciiDoc, both of which have a much larger feature set for taking notes where longer form is needed. I don’t really like the idea of embracing an Obsidian-only fork either.
I used to be a note taking nerd. I switched to handwritten notes. Supposedly writing vs. typing helps with recall. Who knows. Anyway, shortly after that I became a fountain pen connoisseur. Started to see the pattern/problem... Now it's just dumb notes on a legal pad using a ballpoint. Minimum distraction. Sometimes I do a document scan with my phone.
I simply use the Notes app on my iPhone, and even that got over-complicated with the introduction of iCloud. Idk how but it deleted all my notes when I enabled that back in the day. My bad for not just using a plaintext file.
I think they were still there but it started showing your icloud notes instead of asking you to import your local notes into icloud.

Apple still hasn't learned how to do online stuff...

I keep notes, but my main problem is that I don’t read them often enough. Somehow I have tendency to keep moving ahead and I really need to have a good reason to go back and look something up.

So for me, main benefit is extra information which I retained while/because I was writing it down. I stay away from commercial apps, just org(roam) mode since emacs is not going out of business

The word "smarter" or even "smart" doesn't appear in the text, so I guess this is not the claim of the text; I would have appreciated a summary or at least a conclusion. I did not have the patience to read it all, but just skimmed over it and think it's more about information overflow in general.

It's not true that note-taking and well designed apps to do so don't make us smarter. Being smart means "having or showing a high degree of mental ability" (point 1 of 7 in https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/smart). Applications which support our information management increase our mental abilities.

Since I take notes of every meeting, I still know days or even years later what was decided and for what reason, and I can check the arguments afterwards to see if they are still valid and, if necessary, make sure that they are returned to if circumstances change. If I don't take any notes or only keyword notes, I can't do that because after two hours you only remember a fraction of the meeting, and after a day full of meetings you hardly remember any details. I've done big enough projects for long enough and participated in meetings of 2 with up to 50 people in a room, and have been able to observe very well how what kind of notes affected the aftermath of the meeting on individuals.

The phrase "improve our thinking" appears, which can be understood as the article author's clarification about what "make us smarter" refers to.
Thanks, though "thinking" is a mental process and "make smarter" or "showing a high degree of mental ability" applies to a quality.
The entire article can be summarized like this:

"I define intelligence an innate ability to juggle information well, which is independent of memory. If you're trying to think, but have forgotten some key information and not have taken notes, you're not less intelligent, only less informed; therefore, note taking cannot make you more intelligent, only better informed."

Yawn ...

Thanks for the summary.

> I define intelligence an innate ability to juggle information well, which is independent of memory ...

Well, if people start using their own definitions, then we should not wonder that they come to unusual conclusions.

Ok, now it's another headline (no longer "Why note-taking apps don't make us smarter"). But I doubt that "Note-taking apps are designed for storage, not insight" is more correct. When I'm taking notes, I'm collecting facts and evidence, from which I later draw conclusions, i.e. get insight.
I tried taking notes and then organizing them afterward.

Then, I switched to spending a little bit of time organizing my notes before taking lots of them. This changed the game for me considerably.

It definitely doesn't make me smarter but it does keep me more organized. To the point where I'm not in a conversation remembering something I missed from earlier. This does make me more effective in those conversations and more able to focus on the people I'm conversing with.

And that can definitely make me _seem_ smarter...

1. The main reason we don't leanr from notes is that its exhausting to go back and review.

2. Learning requires a risk of loss. Without some kind of loss being averted, your mind won't retain nor focus on the subject at hand.

This is why TV and entertainment or fiction rarely help us learn anything.

BENEFITS

The biggest benefit of note taking is 1. Writing the notes helps your instantly retain - hand written notes much more so 2. you miss about 20%-80% of verbal information when its presented first tiem - especially subjects we aren't familair with.

The article is a nothingburger, as others have noted.

But quite often, you get replies in the comments saying that _all_ note-taking and organization is a procrastinating waste of time. ("Why can't everyone just memorize everything like I do???") Which is wrong too.

Notes are just a tool for knowledge work. They are necessary but not sufficient. If you're not writing things down SOMEWHERE every day, you are leaving a LOT of mental capacity on the table. All the while setting up Future You to relearn the same things over and over again.

(Final tangent: apprentice woodworkers and blacksmiths would craft their own basic tools when just getting started, I think most apprentice software devs should do the same.)

I graduated from college because a classmate took notes.

I rarely ever attended class in my major. I was notorious for it. I had 3 jobs. I would ride the bus an hour and a half to school and spend most days sleeping in the student union. I'd go xerox her notes right before the test, study them a few times during lunch breaks and afterward at work, and then go take the exams.

She took such good notes that I almost always had higher grades than she did. Studying notes is more important than taking them, but having great notes means As if you understand what you're reading.

My notes (Emacs/org-mode/org-roam/attachments/agenda and so on) makes me able to find anything at my fingertips without traversing a filesystem, carefully storing files in a hyper-curated hierarchy etc, ultimately they made my life easier, more productive.

In smartness terms they give me:

- good reference when I need them

- details on something when I want

My brain is still the same, no IT tool so far can extend my neural processing, but the overall results are pretty positive.

My note against much other "apps" is:

- not integrated with anything else, so you can't link things like mail, financial transactions etc

- not easy to run automation on top of notes (something more complex than simple agenda reminder)

That's not much a "note app" issue but a system design issue. Emacs is a fully integrated tool, like classical systems, in the modern era for business reasons anything is just an isle with all the flexibility and usability issue of the case.

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Im a student and have been slowly messing with other note taking strategies for class. I switched first to joplin for md and html which was jeads and shoulders above google docs for speed and organization. This semester im giving obsidian a shot for its links and an automatic flashcard plugin, hoping it helps me review quicker and gets me to think about how these topics connect instead of just copying information from start to end. But admittedly i was convinced by one of those "my second brain changed my life forever and cured cancer" videos

So far its been good and an improvement, thanks to md im taking great notes fast and efficiently and im putting more thought into connections. But all the videos and posts claiming its changed their lives or something is a bit much. I cant imagine it being that much more useful outside of school.

On a side note, any other useful programs/techniques feel free to share.

Notion + GoodNotes is where I’m at currently. I do wish I could combine the two, but no app I’ve found does tablet+pen and typed notes seamlessly together, so I just split them out for this setup.

I’m also experimenting with Asana to track class assignments, but I’m currently trying to get them to let me buy “only” one seat of Business level, since the “workload” tool seems immensely valuable to keep my work spread out evenly through the semester.

This trend is indeed weird. It reminds me of my journey with Vim. In the beginning it was life changing. Like I felt like it really gave me an edge. I had all kinds of customizations on top of it. After a while I changed to Vim plugins inside full IDEs. No customization, just my plain comfortable text editor of choice. I feel nice while using it. Feels at home. I can't use mouse based text editors and feel happy anymore. Or at least I don't bother trying. Also I see no point in comparing this with anyone else using their tools. It's their tools and they could have more than a decade of experience in it.
> But admittedly i was convinced by one of those "my second brain changed my life forever and cured cancer" videos [...] But all the videos and posts claiming its changed their lives or something is a bit much.

Would you have clicked on the video if the title was "My second brain has been kinda useful, I guess"?

Maybe i dont know, but i had already tried obsidian in the past and mostly clicked the video to see what i was missing.
Note taking can help to offload your brain.
Notes really are such a fraught topic. One one hand you might say note taking is superfluous if you're just trying to get information in your brain (you'd be better off using a spaced-repetition system like Anki). On the other, they can be beneficial as a kind of personal archive, however it usually requires a lot of manual work (even with some kind of AI assistance).
The article does mention that the "AI" current fad may improve note apps. Or at least generate more sales.

Personally, I'd just like an assistant that will automatically label my mails. Per project, utility bills, accounting stuff, all in their own bucket.

The per project stuff is the problem because just using the sender won't work, and there are even emails referring to multiple projects. Which i'd like filed as multiple copies in multiple folders. Can the current LLMs sort that?

On my local machines not on someone's cloud thank you very much.

I'd pay maybe a Starbucks coffee per year (not month).

I can't recommend the Zettlekasten Method enough: https://zettelkasten.de/introduction/

You can do it with index cards or you can use software to practice the method and grow your note collection. I now prefer Zettlr (https://www.zettlr.com) after using Joplin (https://joplinapp.org), which are both FOSS.

One of the core strategies of the Zettlekasten Method is to link notes to each other. That's how knowledge grows: connections and synthesis (internalization/application of the connections)

Here's a 3-year-old video on the method that serves as a good primer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFZHuWLA09M

Guess I'll toot my horn slightly: I made a Zettlekasten-ish tool for the CLI a few years ago and have used it for my work notes (including daily TODO), project logs, and personal diary stuff ever since. At this point I've got a hierarchy of 114 notes, with some notes linked into multiple locations in the tree. The hardest part is trying to decide if you want a new note for a topic, or if it should fit into an existing one.

Maybe somebody might find it useful:

https://github.com/floren/zk

Everything is just files in a directory, so I use Syncthing to have access to it everywhere.

It's also got a thing that lets you associate files with a given note, but the tooling around that isn't very good yet. I've been slowly working on a client for the Acme text editor, and I've also wanted to make a proper Go GUI client.

(man I need to re-do the CLI with some library that does built-in help, because some commands like `zk orphans` [which finds notes that have no parents] aren't documented anywhere)

I’ve been an Obsidian user for a couple of years and love it. Hitting CMD + u creates a unique note under my “Journal” folder with a filename derived from a datetime string. This keeps notes ordered chronologically and avoids having to name everything up front.

I make liberal use of tags and find that this basically works great - 50 to 100 tags seems to be all I could ever need for both personal and work stuff, which number is quite scalable. However, I had always intended to progressively adopt Zettlekasten, which does sort of seem like the gold standard.

Unfortunately, the way Obsidian works is that you can only really conveniently link to the filenames of other notes, rather than directly to a heading therein. That UX makes it a non-starter for Zettlekasten, for me.

Thought I’d leave this here in case it’s of use to anyone, and would be very interested to hear from anyone who’s landed on a good Zettlekasten setup in Obsidian.

Zettlr looks excellent, and since they both run on a plain folder of markdown files, I might even trial running both together for a bit.

Did you know you could type [[## in Obsidian and it will autocomplete all headings available in the current vault instead of just the current note with [[#?

It's barely mentioned and I don't even remember what post I saw this in on the Obsidian forum.

You can also link to a section/paragraph using (if I remember correctly) [[#^
Note taking apps can make us smarter when note taking apps allow people to cooperate.

It can already happen on Twitter that people complete each other's thoughts but the Twitter timeline is not the medium to publish half-finished thoughts that could tarnish one's reputation.

Still, there is some joined thinking. HN shows that it's fun to pool notes on poplar topics. The difficulty lies in managing the attention on notes. Popularity voting doesn't work to navigate note collections.

The headline is about our smartness, but it doesn't mean us as a group. There is no joined thinking in his note-taking apps.

He is right when he talks about his isolated thinking:

>But the original promise of Roam — that it would improve my thinking by helping me to build a knowledge base and discover new ideas — fizzled completely

Where should new ideas arise in old notes when nobody sees them? Old notes just remind us that something is important. Revisiting them later, with new connections from new memories, it's possible to have new insights.

There is an easier way to access new memories: When notes are published, other brains, with many more, and different memories, can find solutions or advancements.

Historically, scientists only publish polished results, apart from exceptions like Hilbert's problems. Even those were remarkable problems. Who would dare to publish their minor nuisances or shallow observations (unless they come with a nice picture)?

The author hopes that AI can find answers. Why should we wait for AI when there are already intelligent humans? The problem lies in managing access to our thoughts. We don't want to allow everybody to see each of our notes.

>One interpretation of these events is that the software failed: that journaling and souped-up links simply don’t have the power some of us once hoped they did.

>In short: it is probably a mistake, in the end, to ask software to improve our thinking.

Software could improve our joined thinking. We need an acceptable format to publish our notes.

Again for those who choose not to read, the answer is probably not.

I love this article, because I've had to discover this independently.

The specific point that I realized was the following: You know the whole mindmapping thing with the bidirectionality and the fancy graphs and so forth?

That's REALLY appealing to us for the following reason: We, as humans, are already very good at it. It's literally how our brains work.

But also, consequently, that's why the apps suck at it -- we do this WAY better than they likely EVER will. That was one of those "once I realized that, I was enlightened" things in this space for sure.

I've just kind of found that, good bookmarks/article tools (for me that was Shaarli, and later Shiori) and then just making notes to myself ALL THE TIME, even if I don't read them as much, does a much better job of this. I'm the real computer here :)

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The feedback loop needs to be very small, from thought to insight, to storage, to retrieval at a later time. Probably the best is maybe audio => transcription => storage The audio => transcription UX isn’t too great at the moment Edit: I should add the BEST experience here is direct thought => storage => retrieval This is how our brains work but we need a module extender for our brain when we are doing a fuzzy search