Reason for using Obsidian: > In the age of information overload and increasing censorship, it is crucial to future-proof your knowledge by creating a personal memex or knowledge management system. A memex, as envisioned by Vannevar Bush, is a device that stores and retrieves vast amounts of information, supplementing human memory. By building a digital memex, you can own your data, access it offline, quickly capture information, sync across devices, and easily search and interconnect knowledge. This system enhances working memory, reduces cognitive overload, and allows you to monetize what you know in the knowledge economy. Obsidian, an open-source application, is an ideal tool for creating a personal knowledge management system due to its flexibility, bi-directional linking, and integrations with other productivity apps.
Future-proofing Your Knowledge in the Age of Information Overload
A memex is a hypothetical device described by Vannevar Bush in his 1945 article “As We May Think”. It stands for "memory extension" and is considered a precursor to the concept of hypertext and the World Wide Web. The memex was envisioned as a mechanical device that could store and retrieve vast amounts of information by interconnecting documents, books, communications, records, annotations, and personal notes. It aimed to supplement human memory and facilitate information organization and retrieval.
All information should be easily searchable and interconnected to optimize resurfacing of knowledge with “exceeding speed and flexibility”.
Because of the information overload we experience every day in the digital world, we tend to forget where to find information we encountered even within the same day of seeing it. This is a problem everyone experiences to varying degrees.
Building a PKM system allows you to outsource valuable information into a centralized location, reducing cognitive overload.
Generating the notes in Markdown makes them future-proof. Even if Obsidian dies and for some reason you can no longer download the application, you’ll still be able to read, write and edit your notes with literally any computer.
Evergreen notes turn ideas into objects that you can manipulate
Evergreen notes turn ideas into objects. By turning ideas into objects you can manipulate them, combine them, stack them. You don’t need to hold them all in your head at the same time.
Evergreen notes allow you to think about complex ideas by building them up from smaller composable ideas.
Writing summaries is more important than reading more books — Andreas Fragner