Stock of associations
2019-02-14
https://gyazo.com/24df596bb9879ec4519427145bc8ff28
What you write down will not disappear.
You can think further as you look at what you have written down.
Output sensations that are difficult to put into words in a non-verbal way
The output will not disappear and can be the subject of thought.
This assists in the discovery of structure
Link to written or copied and pasted text after the fact.
Bullet points are recommended when writing, a concept similar to the "in small pieces" writing method.
Write short sentences instead of trying to write long sentences from the beginning.
Turn phrases that "sound important" in your written or copied and pasted text into links.
Whether or not the linked page exists at this time is irrelevant.
Even if you can't verbalize why you think it's important, you can still make the link.
Link to associated pages, etc.
Even if you can't verbalize why you think it's relevant, you can still link it.
The output link will not disappear and can be the subject of thought.
The presence or absence of a linked page is indicated by color.
= You can follow one link and realize that there is something there.
2-hop link
= You can follow two links and notice what's there.
These features support associations
Currently (2019-02) my KJ method is done on paper and not searchable. I would like to digitize it.
relevance
log
I was going to write "Digitizing and searching", "Writing out method/KJ method", and "Scrapbox" as the "Three sacred tools of intellectual production", but I wrote that "Digitizing and searching" "strengthens the ability to find information and pull out detailed information from fragmented information" and "Writing out method/KJ method" "strengthens the ability to find patterns by writing information down in small units and then assembling it from the bottom up". I couldn't figure out what Scrapbox was supposed to enhance.
Kouta Uchida, the connection between the pieces of information?
I think scrapbox is like a long term KJ method.
What kind of intellectual capacity is enhanced by having an "information piece connection?
I thought that search enhances "the ability to recall details after keywords can be verbalized", while Scrapbox enhances "the ability to recall hooks before keywords can be verbalized", but keywords are explicitly linked, so I guess not!
Daiki Teramoto: Since Scrapbox is a tool that is also useful when you want to "write out and KJ method" and can "digitize and search", I thought that the third one should also be a purpose or method, not a tool. Languaging, diagramming, and so on.
Sure > Scrapbox is also useful when you want to do "how to write and KJ method" and a tool that allows you to "digitize and search".
>Taiki Teramoto: As for what Scrapbox strengthens, when I observe Nishio-san from the outside, I see him writing down "Scrapbox this later," which seems to me to be a way of "strengthening the motivation to record small bits of awareness in a public scrapbox". I think so.
I had been writing about this on my blog, Twitter, and Facebook before Scrapbox. When I see something scattered in the This day in the past function, etc., I put it in Scrapbox and add a link to it, and I feel the benefit is that "the scattered things reconnect and become a network". Kuikei Jun In Stock
Not even close.
If you just want to stock something, you can do it with a blog, Evernote, or a text file at hand, but for some reason I feel that Scrapbox has a value that goes beyond them.
The wiki-like feature seems to have some impact, but I'm still trying to verbalize what the heck that "ability to link between pages" is enhancing.
I'm not sure if this is a good idea or not, but I'm not sure........
Oh, right, you can stock subjective "associations".
Stocking associations increases the scope of associative search with the aid of 2-hop links.
relevance
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This page is auto-translated from /nishio/連想のストック using DeepL. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. I'm very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.