Mainly on the SUSE cloud native fundamentals scholarship program from
Udacity along with various CLI programs I learnt to use over the days
trying to complete it piecewise...
Offhand comment, it is pretty nice so far.
I just realized they're just another category of notes. Not much
deviation from the "traditional" notes aside that they're isolated from
all of the notes. It is better to store them under one umbrella than
making a new category of notes. It also makes for a quicker reference
since some of them mostly go through them first.
Ehh... Why I didn't think of those things but here we are. They are
going to stay for a little while.
Also, there's a slight shift in how I want use my wiki now. Instead of
trying to craft every note into a set of evergreen notes. While Andy
Matuschak's notes are very practical, it also focuses too much
on crafting evergreen notes (a bit too much). Or maybe that was just my
impression? Either way, I'll let some of my thoughts to drift if it able
to link somewhere in the notes. I think I'm getting the point of
Luhmann's original use of Zettelkasten as a research partner.
In this case, it's mostly about the additional perspectives on how
learning works from the act of managing your information through various
note-taking methods.
I also restructured the note on org-babel and moved as its own note on
the hierarchical notebook. I think summarizing a tool and giving my own
comments about it is a nicer way of describing it. Plus, I can freely
link between any other types of note so I figured it would be better.
That said, I should be picky on how to make org-roam entries. And also
org-roam v2 is better, after all. :)
The deck is going to be divided into years instead. I find it very
limiting to take Anki sessions with topics. It slowly turns into
memorizing answers through pattern matching, almost like the quizzes I
find in most MOOCs in Coursera; it's not great.
An additional benefit is I get to jump between context, creating some
bit of pressure. It'll most likely end up similarly to pattern matching
but as long as I keep surprises for my future self and know how to use
Anki's filtering feature, I think it's going to be better.
The notes are mainly extracted from the daily fleeting notes which
clutter some of the more important thoughts. I figured it would be
better to create Dendron-inspired hierarchical notes.
Also, some of the notes are updated. I also started to create my visual
aids for whatever reason. ;p
The review for note-related topics is going to be reduced from this
point because it's time to dedicate this month for learning a new skill
to put this in use.
Even if they're not supposed to be used with anki-editor, they are a
great way to include questions in my notes. Though, I don't know how to
best include them other than straight up linking them.
Specifically about consuming information and note-taking. It is just a
simple realization about those things. Quite simple but I think it is a
good important reminder for my future self here.
While making the note more complete in terms of metadata, it's redundant
because it's supposed to be a personal wiki. Only one person is the
assumed owner of them.