![]() In earlier years, before Evernote went to a 10 GB upload limit per month, I could scan more documents than I could upload in a month. October to February is moving time (5 times in 10 years) where I scan like crazy to recycle paper and avoid moving atoms. After my “Aha! I should use Evernote as my reference fling system!” I broke my 14 month string of zero captured notes. So I’ve been an active user of Evernote for 105 months of the 119 months I’ve had an Evernote subscription. Member since May 2008 (119 calendar months), but did not start adding notes to Evernote until July 2009 when I listened to the passage of GETTING THINGS DONE covered in the previous post. The plural of anecdote is “data” and purpose of this article is to analyze the data on my Evernote journey, out loud and share the impressions of value in use over time. What tricks have you found, to help you “see the thinking” in your work? Share in comments please?Įvernote is great. No more throwing out a laboriously produced draft, because it “has gone out of focus,” no more writer’s block. So that by the time I am laying out arguments step by step, with a word processor, the “under brush” of local optima, have been cleared. Rough organizing allows me to explore how ideas fit together, seeing both local and global optima, in a pre-argument form. That is, easily connected and rearranged with other ideas. 3×5 cards capture ideas in a way that makes ideas modular. ![]() ![]() Allowing pre-thoughts to be captured, tamed, pre-digested, and gradually fit together. The anchors of GTD:Īll take the raw materials of thought, and pre-process them in some way. Seeing the thinking is the best thing about Getting Things Done, for me. This is about the process.” and “I didn’t come for the answer, I came to see the thinking.” GTD hook: 26) the responses that come back are “No way. When Fitzgerald does not correctly diagnose the first case in a “stump the professor session” Sanders asks “Aren’t you disappointed that she got it wrong?” (L660, p. Faith Fitzgerald, working through a diagnosis in front of a packed conference audience of enthusiastic MDs. Chapter 2 opens with a description of “the doyenne of diagnostic dilemmas,” Dr. Sanders came to medicine by way of covering mostly medicine news, mostly for CBS (Kindle L274). I’m an enthusiastic consumer of cheap book alerts from . One recent $1.99 Kindle book I am thoroughly enjoying is Every Patient Tells a Story, by Lisa Sanders MD.
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