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Sync to Paper

66 pointsby rg81about 12 years ago

9 comments

skoreabout 12 years ago
Huge fan of paper as well. I think Merlin Mann called it the "ultimate ubiquitous capture".<p>A lot of people just keep thick journals, but I like A6 cards that I compile into slim exercise books. I just capture anything that comes to mind on a card[1] and let them sit on a pile. Then, after some time, enough stuff has accumulated and I review the cards and compile them.[1]<p>It has the sweet spot of not having to commit to something big (meaning it circumvents the urge to make it perfect, usually preventing you from writing it down in the first place), is reasonably flexible if you use masking tape to glue in the cards (there are some books that I could take apart completely and reuse) and can be stashed and sorted easily.[2]<p>[0] <a href="https://plus.google.com/photos/111011776153281260419/albums/5774980113163525217/5774980173127280498" rel="nofollow">https://plus.google.com/photos/111011776153281260419/albums/...</a><p>[1] <a href="https://plus.google.com/photos/111011776153281260419/albums/5833097033292752561/5833097035081483170" rel="nofollow">https://plus.google.com/photos/111011776153281260419/albums/...</a><p>[2] <a href="https://plus.google.com/photos/111011776153281260419/albums/5833327148912323025/5833327151210469890" rel="nofollow">https://plus.google.com/photos/111011776153281260419/albums/...</a>
itstrizabout 12 years ago
The other part of this that I find helpful is that using paper is faster for many things, like small UI sketches, than using a PC. I also find that writing things down makes me think about the problem, whereas I can type up notes without paying attention to what I'm doing.
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jamesjporterabout 12 years ago
Whiteboards are my preferred method for this sort of thing. The building I work in is actually awesome for this; the safety shields (mol bio lab) at the end of everyone's desks double as whiteboards and the windows are write-on-able as well.<p>I also know a guy who used to have a piece of whiteboard paper glued the back of his laptop so he could close it and quickly sketch something out if he needed to, his desk is also covered in the stuff.
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dan-gabout 12 years ago
I am a huge proponent of this -- I rarely start a project without sketching something out on paper first. It helps me get my thoughts straight.<p>In a similar vein, I was reading an interview with Donald Knuth the other day, and while I can't find that exact instance, he was quoted saying:<p>&#62; "The speed at which I write by hand is almost perfectly synchronized with the speed at which I think. I type faster than I think so I have to stop, and that interrupts the flow."<p>-- from (PDF warning) <a href="http://jmlr.csail.mit.edu/reviewing-papers/knuth_mathematical_writing.pdf" rel="nofollow">http://jmlr.csail.mit.edu/reviewing-papers/knuth_mathematica...</a>
Daizabout 12 years ago
Having some paper and a pen can certainly do wonders - just last week I was working on something involving a lot of trigonometry (collision detection in a game), and being able to visualize and think about it on paper helped <i>a lot.</i> Quick visualizations are probably one of the best use-cases in general.
andrewflnrabout 12 years ago
For me at least, part of it is getting a fresh start on the idea. Rewriting stuff usually makes it clearer. Temporariness and the unlimited feeling of paper help with freeing up your mind to just let stuff loose.<p>Among other problems though is that sometimes the stuff you write turns out not to be that temporary, and that's often the times when rewriting it in digital form is useless. I'm trying to figure out how to design a digital tool that's better than paper in these respects.
claudiusabout 12 years ago
&#62; Writing things down on paper is also painful<p>Training helps here definitely.<p>&#62; You can also see more of it at one time.<p>And this is probably the most important property of paper to me. You can have five to six full A4 pages easily visible, which, with appropriate handwriting, cover the content of ten to twelve 1.5 x 3 m² blackboard or God-knows-how-many notebook displays.
greenyodaabout 12 years ago
Paper is great for thinking because it doesn't distract you or interrupt you.
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epynonymousabout 12 years ago
i was thinking that this article would be about dropbox and 3d printing! agree with the author about his points, however, the title really got me thinking, what if you could store things to paper, it's a relatively cheap medium, take qr codes as an example, stored to paper (or image file), reproducible via bit for bit. tun out of hd space? print
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