Learning by Failing: Optimizing my Evernote Workflows

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 7

  • @vladcampos
    @vladcampos  Před 28 dny

    🎁 If you are a supporter on Patreon or CZcams, there's an extra video for you.
    • Patreon: www.patreon.com/posts/new-additions-to-110039585
    • CZcams: czcams.com/video/gnkWdoMLxiY/video.html

  • @viniciuscandidos11
    @viniciuscandidos11 Před 27 dny +1

    Very good video, Vlad! I also think we should keep the things as simple as possible and usable.

  • @samsongomah1318
    @samsongomah1318 Před 28 dny

    Would be nice to see you do a video on your desktop widgets (which ones do you use and how do you place them on the desktop).

  • @samsongomah1318
    @samsongomah1318 Před 28 dny

    I tried stacking info into a single note, including emails, PDFs, etc., but the note would become unwieldy. Now, I create separate notebooks for each related set of notes. Once I am finished with the notes - for example, a short-term project is over - I will merge all the notes and move the combined note into my larger 'old' notebook (equivalent to an archive). I then delete the emptied notebook.
    Rather than having an archive of possibly dozens of notebooks, the contents of which I rarely look at, I prefer to merge old sets of notes and store them in the 'old' notebook.

  • @laurenceglazier
    @laurenceglazier Před 26 dny

    Thanks, a very creative approach. At present tasks cannot be filtered by tag, or I would consider trying it.

    • @vladcampos
      @vladcampos  Před 25 dny +1

      I would also like that. Fortunately, it is not critical to make my system work.

    • @laurenceglazier
      @laurenceglazier Před 24 dny

      @@vladcampos What do you do if you stop working on a project - make it inactive. Do you add tags, move the notes to the timeline, and remove the folder? If so what if you wanr to reactivate the project in the future? Do you create the project notebook all over again and move the tagged notes back to it? This can happen if you are researching a product, and decide to wait for a future version. Maybe there is a low-friction way to handle this use-case.