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This week —
Physical vs Digital PKM — Curtis McHale ✅ Physical notes:
❌ Physical Notes:
✅ Digital Notes:
❌ Digital Notes:
You can’t always blame your tools though, most often the problem is you. Analogue or Digital can be an excellent system for your notes if you are disciplined enough to work inside the constraints of that system.
— Curtis McHale
Curtis uses a hybrid system, because that works best for him. The lesson from this article for me is that no-one can step in and tell you what’s right for you — although many will try. You have to figure this out for yourself!
Remember: the type of system you use matters more than either type of tool.
Truly, I can’t believe I’m even asking this question. On one hand, my internal answer is, “it’s plain text, so of course you should!!” But on the other hand, I note an internal sense of ambivalence that is most unlike me.
don’t trash the current system and create another, without taking time to count the cost and evaluate the alternatives
Perhaps because I’ve recently spent numerous hours double-handling things from one app to another? Maybe I need some space to come to terms with what appears to have been a completely unnecessary waste of time. smiles philosophically Ah well, it’s only a waste if I don’t learn something. My takeaway is mindfulness: don’t trash the current system and create another, without taking time to count the cost and evaluate the alternatives.
For now, I’m trusting Anki — and making regular backups.
I read with interest Richard Carter’s description of the way he uses pegs and chopping boards to make note taking easier, and using a computer more comfortable while sitting away from a table.
According to the photograph in the article, Richard uses a nice soft plastic peg to attach reference paper to his laptop. The type of peg strikes me as important: the highly tensioned, bent-wire stainless steel type seem likely to damage your screen over time.
This quote about his father from Charles Darwin’s son, Francis, in 1887, evokes a lovely image:
After he had read his paper, came his time for writing letters. These, as well as the MS. of his books, were written by him as he sat in a huge horse-hair chair by the fire, his paper supported on a board resting on the arms of the chair.
I have a nice old piece of wood (battered, but unchristened by the culinary arts), that lives between my lounge and the wall, always ready to sit across my lap when I’m doing work away from my desk.
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