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6 votes
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The gifts we want to give in 2018
5 votes -
The invisible experiences of first-time Gen-X mothers
4 votes -
Period-tracking apps are not for women
28 votes -
When Asian women are harassed for marrying non-Asian men
20 votes -
A generation in Japan faces a lonely death
19 votes -
How we turned our apartment block into a community
8 votes -
Binary skin - Exploring Japan’s virtual YouTuber phenomenon
17 votes -
Why is my university forcing me to see colleagues as "customers"?
8 votes -
Note-taking, bookmarks, reminders and todos: What do you use to organize your life?
I find myself on a bit of an unending quest to organize my own thoughts, especially since my work evolved into multiple streams on different projects. I have been looking for a tool to help me...
I find myself on a bit of an unending quest to organize my own thoughts, especially since my work evolved into multiple streams on different projects.
I have been looking for a tool to help me organize myself and focus on the things I want to do. More specifically, I keep wanting to improve my ability to remember things: Be able to remember faster, longer, recall more reliably, categorize, filter and export those things, etc.
Links, reading material, "watch later" material, todo lists, contacts, phone numbers/emails, identities, what I know about people, reminders, highlights, emails to respond to, work logging, etc. The more I think about it, the more I have this need for a tool that essentially acts as a permanent second brain.I feel like I've tried everything. Note-taking apps like Keep, orgmode, wikis, journals, disorganized text files, issue trackers, Pocket, gmail itself, calendar reminders, even Magic. Nothing quite works. The issues I most consistently hit are:
- The method is not good enough at ingesting abstract data. Examples: Anything calendar-bound is not good at storing anything that isn't related to a point in time. Pocket cannot store things that aren't links to web pages.
- The method is far too cumbersome to be able to braindump into it or too impractical to retrieve data from. Examples: Wikis, Keep and other object-based note-taking systems are unfilterable unless you take a ton of time to attach a lot of metadata to each note. Magic is too asynchronous as you sometimes wait several minutes for responses (and it also gets far too expensive to use at the level I'd like).
Despite trying everything, I don't know if I want to build that tool myself, because I think it probably already exists somewhere (and it might be down to me not knowing how to use the things that are already out there). Although if someone does feel inspired to build that, hit me up. :)
My current flow looks like a frankenstein mix of Keep/Gmail/Calendar, which at least integrate with one another, and a ton of proprietary or dissociated methods (including Pocket, Discord, Spreadsheets/Drive, Magic, Kayak, 1Password and a ton of duplicate files and documents). Then it just becomes a matter of remembering what type of information is where, and how to best find it.
So Tildes, what do you use?
23 votes -
69-year-old Dutch man seeks to change his legal age to forty-nine
21 votes -
Parable of the Polygons
10 votes -
SPLC lawsuit: Family detained, searched in Mississippi because they ‘looked’ Latino
9 votes -
Reddit founder warns 'hustle porn' is 'most toxic, dangerous thing in tech'
31 votes -
Wealthy White people in Atlanta suburb tried to secede from their Black-led town. They failed.
16 votes -
Survival of the mediocre mediocre
5 votes -
The strange and curious tale of the last true hermit
9 votes -
The strangest form of White flight
11 votes -
Family matters: Why a 27-year-old Canadian woman chose to be single and pregnant
5 votes -
My father says he’s a ‘targeted individual.’ Maybe we all are
7 votes -
Tallahassee yoga shooter was a far-right misogynist who railed against women and minorities online
14 votes -
US elementary school staff dresses up as Mexicans and MAGA border wall for Halloween
17 votes -
How I lent my $4,500 camera kit for $95 and had it ‘legally stolen’
21 votes -
Modern STEM toys don't do a good job of educating because they're just toys, not tools
11 votes -
What role should victim impact statements play in Canadian courts?
5 votes -
Why we should believe in ghosts
7 votes -
'Journalism while brown': Why Sunny Dhillon quit The Globe and Mail
6 votes -
The time bandits of Southern California
4 votes -
The backlash against overtourism
13 votes -
Are/were you addicted to anything?
Are you or were you ever addicted to alcohol, drugs, food, etc? If you are, how do you manage? Do you want to quit? If you quit, how? What/who helped you? What were your realisations?
29 votes -
Has Australia finally been won over by Halloween?
9 votes -
How the daughter of an African revolutionary learned about racism in a Canadian playground
9 votes -
How old is too old for trick-or-treating?
18 votes -
Living beneath the ground in an Australian desert
10 votes -
How to remember anything forever-ish
12 votes -
Why parenting is both the toughest and most rewarding gig
7 votes -
Alienation is the most powerful online brand
10 votes -
Mum's voice makes better smoke alarm for children
3 votes -
Why Ontario police have charged a fortune teller under an antiquated 'witchcraft' law
8 votes -
Winners take all: The elite charade of changing the world
7 votes -
A novel way to prevent email overload
11 votes -
China's hidden camps. What's happened to the vanished Uighurs of Xinjiang?
9 votes -
Former CIA chief explains how spies use disguises
9 votes -
The FBI of the National Park Service
7 votes -
Baby box safety doubts raised by experts
5 votes -
Indonesian policewomen measured through 'purity and beauty', subjected to virginity testing
13 votes -
The bad behavior of the richest: what I learned from wealth managers
16 votes -
Your Real Biological Clock is You’re Going to Die
9 votes -
The people who moved to Chernobyl
8 votes -
Why aren't most women represented in the last names of their children?
14 votes