Zettelkasten note-taking with Logseq - Tagging, processing and structuring your notes (Part 2)
Summary
TLDRこのビデオでは、ゼッテルカステンの生材料を整理し、それを使ってさらに発展させる方法について語られています。タグ付け、構造化、そして下位から上位への発展プロセスが強調されています。ビデオでは、さまざまな方法論の共通点や、他のフレームワークにおけるこれらのアイデアの足がかりについても触れられています。また、柔軟性と構造のバランスを保ちながら、自分に合ったシステムを見つけ出すプロセスが紹介されています。
Takeaways
- 📝 「Zettelkasten」メソッドは、自分のデータベース内の「原材料」を整理し、構造を追加することで知的生産性を高めるのに役立ちます。
- 🔍 カテゴライズは、コンテキストタグ付け、段階的な進歩の促進、抽象度のレベル、または出現のレベルに広範に及びます。
- 🌱 知的ガデニングの成長をサポートするために適切な「足場」を追加することが重要です。
- 🧠 デジタルワークスペースを整理することで、心の混沌を整理することができると述べています。
- 📚 「領域」「書籍」「章」という3レベルのタグ付け方法を使用して、自分にとって意味のあるカテゴライズを作成しています。
- 📈 スタック思考や仮想ワークショップを通じて、アイデアの成熟プロセスを管理しています。
- 🏷️ タグは、後で関連するノートを再び見つけやすくするため、慎重に選んで割り当てることが推奨されます。
- 🔄 柔軟性を持ったシステムであるため、自分に合った方法を見つける必要があります。
- 🔑 他のフレームワークや方法論との共通点を見つけることで、自分独自のシステムを構築することができます。
- 🔍 データベースのクエリ機能を活用することで、散らばったアイデアを整理し、深い洞察を得ることができます。
Q & A
ビデオでは何を学び、どのように道を変えることができますか?
-ビデオでは、人生は学びの旅であり、過去数週間の行動を変更し、新しいコースをたどる機会があると述べています。
ビデオのタイトルが前回とは異なる理由は何ですか?
-ビデオのタイトルは前回の予告とは異なりますが、これはビデオの内容がより広範なカテゴライゼーションと構造化プロセスに焦点を当てたからです。
ビデオで説明されている「raw materials」とは何を指しますか?
-「raw materials」とは、データベース内でまだ十分に形作られていない原始的な情報やアイデアを指しています。
ビデオで語られている「scaffolding」とは何を意味しますか?
-「scaffolding」とは、知識の庭園が成長するのに必要な構造的なサポートを意味し、整理と体系を提供するプロセスです。
ビデオで紹介されている「context tagging」とはどのようなものですか?
-「context tagging」とは、文脈、主題、またはキーワードによって関連するノートを再び掘り起こるための方法です。
ビデオで語られている「incremental progress」とは何を意味しますか?
-「incremental progress」とは、アイデアやノートを段階的に発展させ、段階的に改善するプロセスを指しています。
ビデオで説明されている「levels of abstraction or emergence」とは何を指しますか?
-「levels of abstraction or emergence」とは、ノートを異なるレベルの抽象化でグループ化し、それらが個々のノート以上の新しいプロパティを持つようにすることです。
ビデオで語られている「flexible system」とはどのようなシステムですか?
-「flexible system」とは、ユーザーが自分に合った方法でシステムをカスタマイズし、柔軟に使用できるシステムを指しています。
ビデオで紹介されている「thinking in stacks」とはどのような考え方ですか?
-「thinking in stacks」とは、アイデアやノートを「ToDo」「Doing」「Done」などの段階的なプロセスに分けることによって、段階的な進歩を促す考え方です。
ビデオで語られている「Zettelcasten method」とは何を意味しますか?
-「Zettelcasten method」とは、ノート同士を関連付け、より大きな知識の構造を形成するプロセスを指しています。
Outlines
📚 知識の整理と体系化
ビデオでは、人生は学びの旅であり、道を変更し、これまでの行動を変える機会があると述べています。過去数週間で、ビデオではなく自分のシステムにもっと書き込んでおり、異なることに気づきました。今日のビデオは、Zettelkastenの生材料とそのタグ付けプロセス、構造についてです。前回のビデオでは、原則について見ましたが、今回はシンプルな分類について取り上げます。分類は、コンテキストタグ付けだけではなく、データベース内の未完成の生材料を整理し、より良いものにするためのボトムアップ開発プロセスです。また、知識の庭に成長させるための適切な足場を築くことも重要です。自分自身に問いかけているのは、デジタルで心を整理する方法と、適切な場所に物を置くための足場を構築する方法です。他の人々の方法を見て、自分に合ったものを模索し、一つのサイズが全てに合うとは考えていないこと、多くの異なる方法があることを示しています。
🏷️ タグ付けと段階的な進歩の促進
ビデオでは、コンテキストタグ付け、段階的な進歩の促進、そして抽象度のレベルや出現を通じて、これらの方法の共通点について説明しています。タグ付けは、後で関連するノートを再び掘り起こすための方法であり、タグは文脈、_subject_、またはキーワードによって行われます。また、ビデオでは、考え方をスタックとして扱い、アイデアを徐々に発展させていく方法についても触れています。これは、小さなアイデアから成長したアイデアへの移動を意味します。また、抽象度のレベルや出現は、非常に興味深いトピックであり、まだ開発中ですが、柔軟性を保ちながら行うことが重要です。実際には、コンテキスト、_subject_、キーワードタグ付けに焦点を当てており、Sanké Iren氏の「スマートノートの取り方」からのアドバイスも紹介しています。キーワードは慎重に選ばれ、sparinglyに割り当てられ、あなたが取り組んでいるトピックや興味を持つトピックに焦点を当てて割り当てられる必要があります。
🃏 抽象度と出現レベルの管理
ビデオでは、カードのデッキを用いたアナロジーを通じて、データベース内のノートをどのように集約して、それ単体よりも大きなプロパティを与えるかについて説明しています。カードの組み合わせは、カードの同じスートの数値的シーケンス、同じランクのカードのセット、または同じスートの5枚のカードなど、さまざまな方法でグループ化できます。重要なのは、柔軟性があることです。つまり、カードはこれらの異なるグループに何度も参加でき、適切なリソースを引き出し、それらを再編成することで繰り返し使用できます。Zettelkastenメソッドは、ノートの1つのレベルの抽象度であり、ノート同士を関連付けることに焦点が当てられています。しかし、より多くのことを行うことができます。Nick Marlow氏の「Linking Your Thinking」からMOCs(マインドのマップ)の概念を取り入れ、コンテンツマップとしてノートをグループ化する方法についても触れています。これは、基本単位がノートから、それらをリンクしたZettelcasterノード、コンテンツマップ、さらには異なる構造に集約する別のレベルに進化するプロセスを示しています。
🔍 他のフレームワークでのアイデアの足場
ビデオでは、Linking Your Thinkingの方法論、LumenのZettels、Robert Persigのメソッド論、Eisenhowerマトリックス、GTD(Getting Things Done)など、他のフレームワークでのアイデアの足場について見ていきます。これらのフレームワークは、ノートを整理し、プロセスを通じて発展させるための異なるアプローチを提供しています。Linking Your Thinkingでは、構造が得られること、ノートがめちゃくちゃになるときに精神的な絞り込みポイントや苦難ポイントに達し、そこで構造を定義し始めることが奨励されています。Lumenの方法では、インデックスカードを使い、異なるアイデアをリンクさせることで、抽象度を高めることを示しています。Robert Persigは、彼自身のインデックスカードシステムを使って、心の混沌を管理し、新しいカード、プログラム、crits、ジャンク、そしてtoughというカテゴリにカードを分類しました。Eisenhowerマトリックスは、緊急性と重要性の2x2マトリックスを使用して、優先順位を付ける方法を示しています。GTDは、inbox、ToDo、Doing、Doneというプロセスを通じてタスクを管理する方法を示しています。
🔗 他のリソースと今後の予定
ビデオでは、Linking Your ThinkingのビデオやJamie Mills氏の「Rhombus Tangled」コースなど、このトピックに関するさらなるリソースを紹介しています。また、将来のビデオでより多くの価値を追加できると感じるため、より多くの時間を書き込みに費やす予定についても触れています。最後に、視聴者のサポートに感謝し、フィードバックとコメントを楽しんでおり、今後も良いビデオを制作し続ける予定だと述べています。
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Zettelkasten
💡タグ付け
💡アトミックなノート
💡カテゴライズ
💡入力と出力の分離
💡スタック思考
💡抽象度
💡デジタルワークショップ
💡クエリ
💡インデント
Highlights
生活是一个学习之旅,我们有机会改变我们的路径和我们过去几周所做的事情。
作者最近几周更多地在个人系统中写作,而不是制作视频,意识到不同的事情并注意到不同的机会。
本视频的主题是关于如何在Zettelkasten中使用原材料进行标记、处理和结构化。
上一个视频中讨论的设计原则包括笔记的原子性、笔记之间的关系清晰以及输入输出的分离。
简单分类是作者想要深入探讨的话题,但它比上下文标记更广泛,包括自下而上的发展过程。
创建适当的脚手架是为了让知识花园成长,这涉及到添加一些结构。
作者询问自己如何管理工作空间,以便在数字上整理思维,以及如何构建脚手架以便正确放置事物。
作者强调没有一劳永逸的方法,需要根据个人需求定制系统。
上下文标记是重新浮现相关笔记的一种方式,可以按上下文、主题或关键词进行标记。
作者提倡逐步发展的方法,将想法从初步阶段慢慢发展到成熟阶段。
抽象层次或出现的概念是作者认为非常酷但尚未完全发展的概念。
实践中的分类看起来像是上下文、主题、关键词标记,作者引用了Sanké Iren的书籍《如何做智能笔记》。
关键词应该被谨慎选择,并且不要过多,以避免在心智中造成混乱。
作者提出了一种使用“区域、书籍、章节”方法来组织笔记的系统,这有助于长期记忆和结构化思考。
作者介绍了如何使用标签来简化生活,例如使用'z-a'来表示区域,'z'表示自创内容,':'用于区分输入和输出。
作者探讨了“思考堆栈”或“虚拟工作坊”的概念,包括时间线或发展成熟度以及管理工作区域。
抽象层次或出现的概念通过一副扑克牌的比喻来解释,说明了如何将单个笔记组合成更高级别的结构。
作者感谢Nick Marlow和'Linking Your Thinking'频道,他们介绍了MOCs的概念,帮助作者思考如何通过不同的组合来创造价值。
作者提出了一个将所有这些想法整合在一起的框架,从日常笔记开始,通过搜索或查询筛选,然后决定当天想要工作的笔记。
作者讨论了如何将这些想法应用于其他框架,如'Linking Your Thinking'的方法论、Lumen的方法和Robert Persig的方法。
作者强调了查询和缩进的重要性,认为这是数据库工作的一个非常酷的方式。
作者提供了进一步资源,包括'Linking Your Thinking'视频和Jamie Mills的课程'Rhizome Tangled'。
Transcripts
luckily life is a learning journey and
we have the opportunity to
change our course and and change the
things that we've been doing
over the last few weeks i've been
actually writing a little bit more in my
system
rather than making videos about it and
you know just realizing
different things and and noticing
different opportunities
so that's why we get to today with a
different title from what the previous
video
suggested it would be but this video is
all about working with the raw materials
in your zettel casten and beyond
so tagging process and structure so
what is our point of departure in my
last video i looked at the design
principles those few things were just
atomicity of notes
clear relationship between notes and a
separation of inputs and outputs
there was a little bit more in each of
those things and we went offline
tangents as
normal and the final one was simple
categorization of notes
that is what i wanted to get into today
but it's
a lot broader than what i just suggested
in terms of
areas books and chapters because that
was looking at
just context tagging but categorization
is broader than just
context tagging it's also the process of
bottom-up development because you're
working with
raw materials in your database and
things that are not well
formed yet and you're taking them from a
state of not being good
to hopefully being a lot better and
usable in different contexts another
point is creating the appropriate
scaffolding
so that your knowledge garden can grow
so that's adding a little bit of
structure you know if
i envisage a creeper growing up the wall
if you don't have
anything for it to grow on it won't grow
very tall that's the way that i'm
thinking about categorization and the
questions that i'm asking myself are
how can i manage my workspaces so that i
can sort out my mind digitally
because it's chaos in there and then how
can i build the scaffolding that will
allow me to put things
in the right place what i've gone away
and done and you know
what's a continued process essentially
is looking at other people's
methods and trying to you know figure
out
what works for me and i think that's the
hard work it's not like a
one-size-fits-all and you know because
these systems are so flexible
you really need to figure out how you
want to make it work for you i'm also
hopefully not so arrogant to assume that
this is the right answer there's so many
different ways of doing these things
and i'm hopefully just able to plant a
few suggestions
of what you can do in your base using
your
structure that's already there and maybe
to apply some of these principles and
make it a little bit smoother
maybe we'll look at some of the methods
a little bit later and then you know
see where some of those source materials
might be
so what are the commonalities in these
methods okay the first one is
context tagging obviously it's just a
way to resurface your relevant notes
later
tagging either by context subject or
keyword
and i'm gonna get into all of these a
little bit later so let me just
cruise on through and then the second
one is a method of facilitating
incremental progress so it's moving
something slowly along
and taking it from as i said this little
baby idea to a grown-up idea
and the way that i think about that is
thinking in stacks
so you know the traditional one is to do
doing done
but also looking at virtual workshops
like different areas where i'm
developing ideas
and then the third one is levels of
abstraction or emergence
so this is a topic in its own right i'll
just name it exactly that because it's
very cool probably the least well
developed in my mind but
we'll look at it anyways so it's also
important
to do this whilst keeping it flexible
you know we're still trying to do it
bottom up
and not coming with a heavy hand of
structure and folders
and you know making our process not very
pleasant
so what does this look like in practice
okay we're going to look at context
subject keyword tagging first i'm going
to look at some advice from
how to take smart notes by sanke irens
great book to read if you're interested
in this sort of thing you don't have to
you can find a lot of these things on
the internet but oftentimes it's nice to
find it in a nice structured place
so some care says and i hope i'm
pronouncing his name right
keywords should be chosen carefully and
sparsely
i.e not adding 15 different things that
you'll never
or that will just create a mess in your
mind and you know not actually enable
you to find the thing later
and then keywords should always be
assigned with an eye towards the topics
you are working on or
interested in never by looking at the
notes in isolation and then you said
that it requires thinking
so it's not just a case of
seeing oh that's got notes
in the book title how to take smart
notes i'm going to put their
notes hashtag notes it's more around
like
structured thinking or zettelcasten or
whatever it might be
just an example and things that i'm
asking myself when i'm looking at notes
what are the questions that i want to
answer long term like
in 10 years 15 years whatever and then
also what are the breadcrumbs that i can
leave for myself
that will remain beyond my short-term
memory because i know that like
my memory is bad and i think everyone's
memory is bad like
from from a transitioning from
short-term to long-term memory the way
that our brains process those memories
is faulty to some degree and then this
i just put this here how do i get
contextual congruence
without even understanding what that
means contextual congruence is like
buzz word but i think the one thing is i
just i just want to avoid getting
trapped in keyword world
so contextual con congruence is
a little bit higher picture or higher
level than you know just keywords in an
article
so moving from just like what is what
are the words in the wikitu
what is the point of the article so
my method is looking at what are the
books that i want to write
and i divide that into three different
things so the highest level is actually
areas like
in what areas am i looking to write
those books so it could be
business spirituality professional
life that overlaps with business um you
know
personal life relationships those are
all different areas
and then books looks at what are the
books that i want to write so for
instance in
relationships maybe you'd want to write
a book on marriage or write a book on
friendship or like to write a book on
dealing with strangers or something like
that so that's
like a sub book and then in those books
i would break it down into chapters so
marriage would be about like you know
the different challenges of marriage or
the joys of marriage or whatever it
might be
so another book title that i'm using is
decision making now decision making
applies in a number of different areas
it applies in relationships it applies
in professional life business it applies
in sociology and politics or whatever
like is all different
levels of decision making or you know
decision making is pertinence all those
different things
and then within decision making i might
look at you know different chapters
within that so
you know if i'm looking at personal
decision making i might look at
fallacies and biases and stuff like that
and each of those would be a chapter in
that book so
that's just the way that i i think about
it when i'm when i'm doing my tags and
it really helps me to
to try and get things at the right level
it also helps you to develop these
skeletons
of things that you're working on you
know it's because what
some care said up here which is look at
the topics you are interested in
those tend to be the topics that i'm
interested in i mean you know these
skeletons
are the things that are naturally in my
mind already
so this also applies to inputs you know
i can use
the areas books and chapters approach
and for me the z
just indicates we have written it myself
and it also makes it more searchable
because now
in my search bar i can say z-a
and there we go i've got relationship
spirituality
money and i can go zb i can look at
working christianity debt interesting
one that comes up there
um zcc i could look at trade-offs
hiring prioritization that really makes
it easy for me to go and find things
i think that's what i'm trying to say so
the difference between my output which
is denoted with a z
a colon areas and my input
which is just areas is that z and that
colon so
i can use other name spaces or spaces in
those names and if you use a forward
slash
it will actually create the link between
the input and
the output tag so i want to get into
that it might be a little bit confusing
for some so that is another way to do
your naming so that you can
simplify your life a little bit later
down the line okay so some examples i
think we've chat a little bit about that
definitely something i want to look at a
bit more in future looking at
in my database what i'm working on and
how it
and how it manifests in in writing etc
the second thing i want to look at is
thinking in stacks
or virtual workshops now there's two
components to this that i want to look
at
the first is timelines or maturity of
development
what is done what is in progress and
what needs to be developed
so that's really thinking about like you
know managing your process very
clearly and some ideas there
are the one that i use i think which is
quite nice
is empty you know if a note is empty and
i've just had a title i'll say it's
empty
if it's something that i want to develop
i'll just use the hashtag develop
if i've written something that's you
know quite meaty but it's still in its
raw states i use
raw and then medium baked
that's like where i start you know doing
a little bit more work i haven't done
as much work on that side and moving
things into reviews so you know that
this will
probably change that's the beauty of
having a flexible system
another one that you could use is steak
so it goes from blue
rare medium medium well well
i burnt it you know you can just use
something that is visually or
sticks with you from a process manager
perspective
okay and the reason i i've avoided using
to do doing done
in my stacks is because i use that in
crms
so in my personal and works crm i use to
do doing done to manage tasks
so that's the first element the second
element is
managing working areas so the idea here
is to set up different
working areas for yourself again using
tags
so inbox i think this is the most common
one that i've seen across a bunch of
systems
and that just is something that's come
in that i have not yet processed
again like you know it's separate from
like the the note writing process where
it's empty or fleeting whatever it's
like
something that i have to give my
attention to and then
some other ones that you can look at are
ideas things to investigate
questions graveyard is like a denotation
of something that's
moved it's past its life you know it's
it's dead and you don't want to delete
it but you just put in graveyard
observations and fleeting are some of
the ones that i've used before in
previous videos
i don't use the emojis i definitely
would like to going forward because it's
just a nice visual way and i think you
know humans are
visual creatures so anything that you
can do to help your brain remember
is going to really help and then you
know sort straight
junk all of those just the notes some
sort of process
you know it's a working area i need to
sort this stuff out this stuff is
straight it's lost
and this stuff is junk it's rubbish um
so yeah
some ideas there hopefully some of those
will work for you
levels of abstraction or emergence
this one is the coolest for me by way of
analogy i'm going to start
with a deck of playing cards so
here is my deck of playing cards and
what i was trying to go for was that
look when you played solitaire when you
were a kid and all the different things
fall down and you filled the whole
screen but i didn't have the time to do
that so
this is your deck of paint cards and now
each of these
playing cards represents a note in your
database
you've written all these different notes
and now you're looking
to aggregate them together to give them
some sort of
emergent property that is not that is
beyond just them
individually being a note so if i think
of an example from
rummy i can have a run which is a
numerical sequence of three or more
cards of the same suite
so that is my 234 there so that is one
grouping of the cards
i can also have a set group of three or
four cards of the same
rank and that's also from ramy if i look
at it from a poker perspective
if i have five cards from the same suite
that would be a flush it's just another
way to group
these cards and then if i have a
straight
again from poker it's just a numerical
sequence of five cards from different
suites that's another way to group them
but the key point here is that one card
can be in more than one of these
different groups using things in a
repeatable fashion just by drawing on
the right resources and just
reorganizing these things so there's
different levels that you can you can
take the cards to
again you have my two fives in the
corner here i realized that you wouldn't
have been able to see
those cards earlier but now you can so
that makes everyone happy i hope
thinking a little beyond this you know
you could even have other groupings
where you just have red cards you know
if you're just having your diamonds and
hearts then that would be your red cards
or your mail cards that would be your
jacks and your kings
so there's so many different ways to
organize these things but it's all using
different notes and building them up
and the important part here is that it's
flexible you can move things around and
you know it doesn't have to stay fixed
in that position for all eternity
so the zethel casten method is actually
all the zettacast and storage of your
notes it's only one level
of abstraction it's just relating to
notes to one another but there's so much
more that you can do
and i'd like to thank nick marlow and
linking your thinking
for this like introducing this concept
of mocs it's like
really helped me think about this a
little bit more and
it talks about having map notes where
you then start grouping nodes together
in these
maps of content so your notes stays the
same
or your base note stays the same but
then you start grouping those things
into different levels of abstraction so
it's like a pyramid almost
my my face is hiding the bottom right to
the pyramid but
i like to use my hands so you know
you've got
your all your notes at the bottom and
they feed into your different
chapters and then those chapters feed
into your different books and then your
books
will you know be related to a certain
area so this is now looking how you can
create value later on by grouping notes
together
in maps but not not just by tagging them
you can use the tags to help you do your
grouping but
it's it's it's separate processes yeah
as i said this this area is still very
much
work in progress for me um i really
would recommend if you're interested
here to look at linking your thinkings
videos
but i think the important thing is that
you know it's just doing different
things with different groups so
what is our basic unit and and we'll
look at a little bit more in next
when i look at next example in another
framework here
bringing this all together what we're
really doing is we're starting with a
whole bunch of
items in our journal which are denoted
by these tags like these are the
workshop areas
reflection idea fleeting journal any of
these things are just like
working ideas basically and as i said
this is usually in my daily notes
journal
i then put these things through a funnel
which is just either a search or
query and then i will decide what i want
to work on
based on my interest for that day
and this goes then into a new note
which gets the hashtag raw and as i
develop that
or you know figure out what i need to
develop a little bit more
it goes through this process you know
this stack moving from one to the next
to the next
the final element of the categorization
is this tagging z-a areas b book
z chapter as discussed before i also do
it by an endangered process
but we'll get into that in future videos
now we get to
hopefully quite a fun part of the video
where we start looking at
footholds of these ideas in other
frameworks
so i think it's a good place to start is
linking your thinking their methodology
is very cool
and they've got a course and workshops
and lots of cool things
and i also quite like the look of what
nick milo is doing
so these are the levels of emergence and
you know it's just
abstraction beyond the different beyond
your atomic units of a note
so the first level is a note the second
level is zettel casting where you're
relating those notes
the third level almost makes an atomic
unit of the zetercaster nodes that are
linked together
and then builds a map of content the
fourth level then
makes a you know the atomic unit is the
level three which it then aggregates
into a different structure
this is my understanding of it at least
i hope i'm doing it justice
and the home page is the level five
which
for me seems a little bit redundant but
it seems to work for a lot of people
so to each their own some great
principles that i found
watching videos nick talks about
structure being earned and i really like
this idea but at the same time you know
you've got an idea of what your
interests are you know what you're going
to be writing about so
having that skeleton it's up to you i
like having the skeleton
they also talk about when your notes
become messy you come through a mental
squeeze point or struggle points and
that's where you start defining the
structure
and i found that to be a very cool
principle i don't really work like that
i'll sort of do a little bit of
pre-structuring before i actually get
into the note
process so maybe not 100 right
so that's the first one which is linking
your thinking
then looking at lumens zettels of
zettels
so what lumen would do and we spoke
about lumen
in the previous video if if this is your
first time seeing this channel what
lumen would do
is he would have his settles so his his
index cards that he'd written on in
complete fashion so they would be usable
in other areas
and then he would make index cards which
linked
those different ideas on another zettel
so it's also indicating that level of
abstraction where you're taking
two different things and you're making
something higher order from it
so that's that's the thinking behind
abstractional emergence
so robert perseg's methodologies so
who's robert persig
robert persig wrote a famous book called
zenon art of motorcycle maintenance
he's got a very very interesting story
and he went through psychiatric clinic
and yeah i highly recommend reading it
he wrote a second book called lila
and i haven't read that i think it's
lila or lila
maybe potato potato and in that second
book he
spoke about his own index card system
that he used to sort of manage the chaos
in his mind
and i linked that to the digital
workshops because
his categorizations were unasstimulated
was the first one which is
new cards that haven't been organized
maybe that's my equivalence of fleeting
then he had program which was an
instruction for his system or
instruction for something to do and
maybe even like the same concept as
lumen like having a link of your settles
or
link of his cards the third one was
crits which was a holding pen for notes
that he wanted to move to junk
and junk was a notes that he deemed to
be below par
and not worth publishing and then tough
were the cards which
had been written and but then had been
difficult to organize
the next one is the eisenhower matrix so
that is also akin to these digital
workshops or at least denoting different
areas
and eisenhower matrix is that you know
for that that two by two which is
urgence versus importance so if
something is urgent and important i want
to go work
on it so i do that first and you know
this shows that you can use a
combination of tags to
indicate in your digital workshop where
you want to go and work
and then gtd that's getting things done
that's a book by david allen which is
quite famous
for from a knowledge working perspective
just because it talks about
you know being very productive if that's
your vibe
so this is where the to do doing done
comes in using
kanban styles as well i think i think
david allen actually introduced
inbox i'm gonna come clean you i haven't
read the book but i i worked in an
organization that like
revered his work so i think i've got a
lot of it by osmosis i hope
but the other thing is that it's also
very flexible like you know you need to
make the method work for yourself
then lumens methodology what i see
popularized in how to take smart notes
by sanke irens
this idea of moving from fleeting or
literature
or to permanent maybe maybe the
literature's even in the wrong place
here but idea of moving from fleeting
to permanent nodes just shows us like
moving things along the process
what's coming next i realize i probably
am able to add more value if i spend
more time writing so hopefully i'll be
able to spend some more time writing
and then i want what i want to really
look at is queries and indentation
because this is starting to emerge to me
as like a really important
and and cool thing cool way of working
and that's why i say the magic
like i really like the ability of
querying a database it just
completely transforms the way that you
work because you can be super
scatterbrained
use your tags and then magic and then
you know speaking to that point managing
or at least trying to manage your
professional life
so a couple of my colleagues are
starting to use logsy so i'd love to
make a video that is applicable to
to them further resources for this video
linking your thinking videos
i will link to those below nick does a
really good job he just seems to be very
authentic and i like his vibe
maybe one day i can be like him and then
jamie mills has this course
which is roman tangled um it's it's the
first
part of it is free i'd highly recommend
looking through that if this
this sort of interested you because he
also looks at
ways of structuring and working and
doing things in a repeatable way and
yeah this course is very well laid out
so with that said i
look forward to seeing you back here
soon thank you so much for your support
once again
i'm really enjoying this it's a lot of
hard work but i appreciate the feedback
and the comments that i'm getting
so hopefully i'll continue to make some
good videos
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