![]() ![]() I don’t have any Range related project, so here I’m just processing the book from start to finish instead of looking for anything in particular. #NOTATIONAL VELOCITY APP REVIEW SERIES#I uploaded another episode of the video series where I document how someone might process reading notes from a book after reading it. I’m picking up speed as early style decisions are settled, but there’s still a ton of stuff to do. Working on the Zettelkasten Online Courseįor about two weeks now, I’m almost exclusively working on the upcoming Zettelkasten Online Course, providing text feedback on the script and creating presentation slides. In the Zettelkasten sub-universe I hang out, people begin to bring up more and more public thinking places, personal wikis, shared Zettelkästen, and what people seem to now call digital gardens. That’s the sweetest part of it: how it accelerates my writing.Ĭheck out the intro and see how simple the actual implementation is.ĭigital Gardening: A Renaissance of Open Thinking and Curated Writing on the Web Also, by using my Zettelkasten properly, I “accidentally” prepare blog posts for this site: every note is self-contained and written in a semi-publishable manner, so I could just copy and paste notes together to make an article. I use something like it for 11+ years now and the amount of cross-connections is very cool. In other words, it’s a way to add layers of abstractions to your thinking and writing. But instead of merely cartographing what is in the world, you create new stuff from the things you collect, building up layers upon layers of ideas by connecting what you already have, and then making a big hypertext from it.Īt first you have atomic ideas, then you begin to link them and think and write about their connection. Sascha wrote an introduction to the Zettelkasten Method, and after months of editing and polishing, we finally published in online! Late in 2020, on the Zettelkasten Forum brought up Monodraw – think OmniGraffle, but with ASCII box art! I know that #IndieSupportWeeks were supposedly a thing that ended in early 2020, but I don’t see why we shouldn’t continue shouting-out to the devs of apps we use everyday. How long does it take to become a true SwiftUI master? How far am I on my own way to mastery? □ Let’s quantify and have a wild guess! I start this introspective journey by looking at another topic I feel like I could become quite the expert, even though I am painfully aware of how much I still don’t know – Text Kit. I suggest giving it a read.SwiftUI Isn't Easy to Get Into: My Road From Headache Towards Mastery Macosxguru wrote a nice review of The Archive. For now, I’m too invested in Bear to change. ![]() #NOTATIONAL VELOCITY APP REVIEW ARCHIVE#If I hadn’t moved my notes from nvALT to Bear last year I would definitely consider using The Archive as my notes app. I found it to be a very nice and an improvement over nvALT. I downloaded and played with The Archive for a few days. The developers acknowledge that debt explicitly. ![]() The Archive is the first application to come along that is really making me reconsider moving my note collection out of Dropbox. As both of these applications lost their luster as macOS advanced, I left them behind in a favor of less buggy and more versatile tools. The Archive is designed around what Notational Velocity and later nvALT brought to the Mac: Fast, reliable search with ease of creation. If you have used Brett Terpstra’s nvALT this app will look very familiar to you. There’s a new notes app out called the The Archive. ![]()
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