I'm a big fan of @HungSu's prompt generator. It's simple and yet effective at getting you to engage your thinking muscles, and because you don't know what the next prompt will be, it keeps things interesting.
I just noticed @TfTHacker prepend's their plugins with "Obsidian42" which makes it really nice to see more from the same developer if you like their style.
@TfTHacker I just installed BRAT so I can more easily play with the Fantasy Calendar. If it does what I think it does, then planning productions (or vacations) is going to get a lot more fun
@TfTHacker Cool, there is now plugin out there that makes it "hot knife through butter" simple to archive URL links in a note to archive.org so they'll be available even if the original site goes down. And I've done my part to preserve and curate a slice of humanity's knowledge!
Good to see Map View being actively developed. Between Map View and Fantasy Calendar, there are interesting possibilities..
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What type of "smart" import am I looking for? 1. Can it add new book highlights without overwriting the whole file? Because once I start note-making, I don't want my connections to be erase.
In short, it's making sense of the world around us.
Good sensemaking illuminates our thoughts and guides our actions—adding clarity and enrichment to every moment of our lives.
A thread 🧵
If we can improve our sensemaking by even a tiny bit, we can greatly improve the quality of our inner world and the quality of our contribution to the world around us.
One supercharged, healthy, and sustainable way to improve our sensemaking is through a process I call note-making.
There are many note apps out there...but among them...
Obsidian is one of one—without equal—an app of apps.
It's a generational level event.
Here are 8 ways Obsidian (@obsdmd) is changing the game...& the 2 forces driving it.
A love-thread🧵
This is a celebration and a love letter. It's a celebration because after 15 trailblazing months of Obsidian being in beta, this week marks the official launch of Obsidian's mobile app. 🚀
This is also a love letter. Because for free, Obsidian is empowering anyone from around the world—with a computer and a desire to think better—a way to do it.
What I see that gets me fired up, is when people with platforms—people with positions of responsibility—are making money encouraging others to over-collect, over-highlight, and yet under-think.
Why do I care❓
Mini 🧵 (1/6)
Because they are teaching people to develop the habits that will form a toxic relationship to Knowledge in the long-term. (2/6)
And when that toxic relationship—based on FOMO, "Shiny Object Syndrome", and superficial thinking—backfires 3-5 years down the road...
...people will either become disillusioned with PKM or they will think *they* are the problem, losing some self-worth and feeling shame. (3/6)
⚜️Maybe you're trying to get through history class...or write your dissertation for a PhD.
⚜️Maybe you've gone down the internet rabbit hole into some fascinating topic but don't want to forget everything by next week.
⚜️Maybe you're putting together a grocery list or a list of todos for the day.
⚜️Maybe you're working your way in a new career, trying to track who knows who, and how, and how that's relevant to your aspirations.
A thread 🧵on the history ideas and the current state of notes.
THE ANCIENT AGE
After many millennia of wandering in darkness, something emerged into the consciousness of humanity: ideas! Since that Promethean moment, humans have tried to figure out how to handle them.
The ancient Greeks constructed elaborate Mind Palaces, where they held memories in the mind. Ideas were also shared by making sounds with vocal chords into what we call words. Thus came the beginning of "Rhetoric": where words expressing ideas were spoken to each other.