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One of the biggest challenges faced by fans of personal knowledge management (PKM) is that their note-taking apps become choked with too many notes that they capture but never use again. Collections are a potentially useful way to think about notes and personal knowledge management. Ideas get lost in notes and folders.
Seneca found that this tended to make the fear manageable enough for him to take action. If you have not done this before, I encourage you to try something new and use mindmapping to explore Fear Setting. Get out some paper and pens or your favorite mindmapping tool. This is the next main branch of your mindmap.
Let’s take an example: Diagramming, infographic and visual collaboration tools enable you to make mindmaps, as one of the many types of diagrams they support. But they don’t do so as well as a native mindmapping tool. Tool types in the Visual Thinking Tool Comparison Chart are: Mindmapping.
Something purpose built to curate my knowledge library, without doubling as a to-do list or project management tool. This last part’s key – we are combining the focus and intentionality of a PKM (personal knowledge management) tool with the serendipity and aliveness of a social space. Azout: Canvas is now live on Sublime!
Project managers and user experience (UX) designers use wireframe modeling to illustrate their initial ideas regarding how a product, app, or website will look and function. This stage of wireframing is most effective for considering various concepts and collecting feedback, similar to mindmapping activities.
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