
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. :)
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Refer to advanced resources when skill-building for a solid short-term goal
When starting out to build a skill like programming, 3D modelling, digital art, or cooking, you can look first for expert-created resources. For example, when starting out to 3D model, you can look for speedsculpting videos or a competition that involves many talented people in the industry. In programming, you could look for devlogs, highly advanced competitions, fairly popular software projects, or a live coding session. You can then store the expert resources and Maintain your own digital library for future references.
The purpose of this is twofold: to serve as a solid short-term goal (as indicated by the title) and to create inspirations for your future projects. Another purpose of this is to Look for live sessions as another form of examples.
Of course, this does not entirely replace looking out for beginner-friendly resources and communities as an entryway. In fact, it is a bad idea to start learning with the advanced resources.
Also this could lead into actively consuming just the resources without the practice. Create roadmaps to stay on track.