For most of ecom you lose money acquiring a customer, and can only hope to break even by emailing them and going for repeat purchases. A few ecom folks manage to acquire customers without losing money. Typically it's…
Similar bilingual parent here. "C'est pas socier" and "Numberblocks" are excellent.
Getting started phase: was 15 min a day. Over-hyped phase: for some memory "projects" maybe 30 min a day. Now: I just use memory tricks all day long without really training. However every day, for the last 30 min of…
That's awesome. Did it change your relationship with or experience of birds?
>the latter is for putting impractical information You can also input practical information ;)
If you want to learn more about indigenous memory techniques read: "Memory Craft" by Dr. Lynne Kelly and "Sand Talk" by one of the authors of the experiment in question.
> Do you ever "refactor" you maps to show updated understanding? Or do you find that this happens naturally? Yes. I often add on things. So let's say I read a book and years later I realize that the author omitted…
Cool idea. I'd love to check it out just to see how your concept works.
What is "this" that you're referring to?
Great idea. I do this in a notebook. Left page: a list of items to recall, right page: a quick sketch of the palace. Rooms are simple squares. If I can't go back to the palace, then I paste in some printed photos.
I used to try to do that. Now I keep a list of potential palaces and do everything just-in-time. Preparing a memory palace is just yet another skill. At first it seems like a big "job" to do. Later, it's like nothing,…
> So, for the sake of etymology I guess it would not be visualise but factualize or some other word. In terms of the process, it's like imagining something using all of your senses: sight, sound, smell, taste, balance.…
Yes. There have been many follow up interviews with these researchers. It's an early "is this interesting" proof-of-concept study. But, they are getting funding for a study which should generate more reliable data.
Dr. Lynne Kelley the author of The Memory Code and Memory Craft has it. She uses memory palaces. With aphantasia you still have a hippocampus so thinking about the concept of space to encode info works just the same. :)
> do you have one palace per book? Yes. Some people chain together small locations that in aggregate serve as a large palace > Many bullet points per location? At first I used the "roman room method" which put 10 items…
Several memory champions have aphantasia
I've trained my memory over the last ~5 years. I became fascinated with oral cultures. How could they transmit enough knowledge to survive and basically confer PhD level knowledge of survival without books? How could…
This looks great. It seems like there are issues with sign up. There is no sign-up link on the home page. I found it via guest mode --> sign up. After clicking sign up,... there is no form. I'm using firefox. HTH!
For most of ecom you lose money acquiring a customer, and can only hope to break even by emailing them and going for repeat purchases. A few ecom folks manage to acquire customers without losing money. Typically it's…
Similar bilingual parent here. "C'est pas socier" and "Numberblocks" are excellent.
Getting started phase: was 15 min a day. Over-hyped phase: for some memory "projects" maybe 30 min a day. Now: I just use memory tricks all day long without really training. However every day, for the last 30 min of…
That's awesome. Did it change your relationship with or experience of birds?
>the latter is for putting impractical information You can also input practical information ;)
If you want to learn more about indigenous memory techniques read: "Memory Craft" by Dr. Lynne Kelly and "Sand Talk" by one of the authors of the experiment in question.
> Do you ever "refactor" you maps to show updated understanding? Or do you find that this happens naturally? Yes. I often add on things. So let's say I read a book and years later I realize that the author omitted…
Cool idea. I'd love to check it out just to see how your concept works.
What is "this" that you're referring to?
Great idea. I do this in a notebook. Left page: a list of items to recall, right page: a quick sketch of the palace. Rooms are simple squares. If I can't go back to the palace, then I paste in some printed photos.
I used to try to do that. Now I keep a list of potential palaces and do everything just-in-time. Preparing a memory palace is just yet another skill. At first it seems like a big "job" to do. Later, it's like nothing,…
> So, for the sake of etymology I guess it would not be visualise but factualize or some other word. In terms of the process, it's like imagining something using all of your senses: sight, sound, smell, taste, balance.…
Yes. There have been many follow up interviews with these researchers. It's an early "is this interesting" proof-of-concept study. But, they are getting funding for a study which should generate more reliable data.
Dr. Lynne Kelley the author of The Memory Code and Memory Craft has it. She uses memory palaces. With aphantasia you still have a hippocampus so thinking about the concept of space to encode info works just the same. :)
> do you have one palace per book? Yes. Some people chain together small locations that in aggregate serve as a large palace > Many bullet points per location? At first I used the "roman room method" which put 10 items…
Several memory champions have aphantasia
I've trained my memory over the last ~5 years. I became fascinated with oral cultures. How could they transmit enough knowledge to survive and basically confer PhD level knowledge of survival without books? How could…
This looks great. It seems like there are issues with sign up. There is no sign-up link on the home page. I found it via guest mode --> sign up. After clicking sign up,... there is no form. I'm using firefox. HTH!