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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.
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Create evergreen notes with a digital garden
A digital garden is a your space for creating carefully crafted Evergreen notes. Unlike a traditional blog where it concerns the final output, a digital garden cares more on the process of creating notes even if it's incomplete. Creating one encourages to roam:Start small and improve later when it comes to your notes. Your notes will start as a seedling, then grow as you develop more insight, and turn into a fully-developed evergreen note.
Examples of a digital garden includes Andy Matuschak's, Maggie Appleton's, and Anne-Laure De Cunff's. 1
There are many ways on creating a digital garden but here's my ideal type of a digital garden:
- Features Bidirectional links between notes as well as listing referenced notes at the bottom.
- Focuses on creating a graph of evergreen notes that can easily interrelate to one another.
- Composes of different notes of different maturity level: either an incomplete seedling of a note, a partially complete note, or a fully-developed evergreen note.
- Sports a note-taking workflow along with a publication workflow (e.g., web, PDf documents).
- Easily creates evergreen notes for technical concepts so that I can easily linked concepts common to resources (e.g., books, courses, documents).
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In other words, a digital garden is a properly developed wiki.