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Little black notebooks
created by
amien
(
thing
) by
amien
(6.4 mon)
(
print
)
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(
I like it!
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Fri Oct 25 2002 at 9:04:13
I use little black notebooks for managing pretty much everything in my life besides phone numbers and
email
. For those I use my mobile and pine respectively. Unlike many people, phone numbers and email addresses are not the most significant part of my
personal information management
. I started using dedicated notepads in late 1999 and was up to #15 by the beginning of 2003. I'm shockingly disorganised by nature, and have an even worse memory. I forget everything. So each morning I write out a list of the things I'm doing for the day next to unchecked boxes that I grow and fill in as the day goes on. I've also got a paper date-diary for event scheduling and helping me to trigger my morning routine. These aids lurk throughout the day and make me feel guilty the next day when I realise I've failed to reference them. Sometimes.
I tried using a
Palm
Vx for a while, but find the entry is too slow and unreliable, and plain text sucks for representing unpolished thoughts. I had great ideas for improving the interface for being more
notepad
-like but the palm 'development experience' sucks.
Even if I'd coded my ideas I suspect I'd have given up on the palm tho. There's something very dependable and personal about a
note book
- you can 'jot', which is altogether different to just 'writing'. When you write you do it to produce a stream of polished text. But when you jot, you do it as much to develop an idea as you do to keep a record of it. Jotting is messy and constructive.
The act of using a pen and the way you use it incites thoughts more effectively than
typing
as well (for me at least). You can represent things in pen much more effectively than in
plain text
- the
resolution
of what you can fit into a spot you can view and comprehend in one hit is many times higher than
plain text
on a computer can offer.
You can also flip through a little black notebook. Back and forwards. Getting to where you want to quickly, and using fingers to save your place and crease corners into markings. And quick navigation like that is important. When you're
brainstorming
(and that sort of thing) you tend to spend more time navigating than you do writing - something for which a
pen and paper
is much faster than even
gvim
(which I'm pretty rapid in) or the mouse in a web browser.
Plain text does have a benefit for when you're getting things *right* - but for brainstorming and tracking your life, pen and paper are best. It's more portable and durable than most PIMs too.
I like to think of myself as a bit of a novelist
a month a year
. When I write I map out my ideas on paper and then hammer them out in vim and cvs. I find the notepads are also great for building up plot ideas with messy notes and lines all over. Between festivals, I write down ideas that come to me in the other eleven months a year. That way when I get stuck for words I can flip through old notepads until I find something that will mould into what I'm writing about.
My little black notebooks are special. They cost a little bit more than your standard
notebook
, but it's worth it. 300 pages. Sturdy metal spiral binding and a strong plastic cover. They flip over the top and are apparently
Australian
owned but made in
China
by a company called 'Quill'. I've deviated from them a couple of times - my first notebook had a paper front, and for #14 I've experimented with a side-bound plastic covered notepad with slightly bigger (A5) pages. But trying that was just a phase - I'll returning back to my old favourites and their slim pages once I'm through this book.
printable version
chaos
flip
black ops
The Little Library of Sexual Positions
A5
Quill
Notebook
Technical Documentation as Erotica
Persistence
I Know a Song That Gets on Everybody's Nerves
Lord Vetinari
I wanted to write a poem that you would understand
Jane, the Stand Alone Bitch
Mac-on-linux
diary
VIM
The mysterious notebook of an (ex-?) angst-ridden teenager
nostalgia
Donnie Darko
Black Books
erasable pens
palm
The picture she drew in my notebook
Corwin
St-Emilion
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