Is it an old desk with two drawers and a few folders ?
Or is it a productivity enhancer that helps you process your thoughts, tasks and ideas into the world through well organised note taking in the year 2021 ?
I think it is obviously more like the latter, and as such, resembles an ergonomic cutting edge desk with multiple drawers and sheets and canvas and colors, for you to be well organised.
But since the first minutes that I've spent on this application (which actually changed my life for the better, thank you Evernote) I have asked myself one question, and now it is time to ask this question to the Evernote team :
I mean, I would understand if it was a physical desk; you can't put drawers inside drawers inside drawers inside drawers for optimal categorisation and organisation on a physical desk. But Evernote is virtual and this limitation is non existant, so why limit ourselves like that ? Is it a well thought decision ? Is it just that someone out there at some point just thought that two would be enough ? Is it a choice to stay simple for some reason ?
Its is the ONLY reason, but it is very important, because as a platform that has become a way to represent our minds, and as a platform that aims to help in organision of informations, it needs to adress the complxity of our minds, of our inner world, of our infinite chambers of inspirations and creations.
You have the excellent tag* feature of EN at your fingertips, but instead of exploring and employing it, you cry for the computer file structure of the 70ies and 80ies ? Last century 70ies/80ies, just to make sure you get the message.
(*) Tags can be layered as deep as you want. One piece of information can be tagged (= sorted into) multiple different categories, even unrelated ones. Tags can be applied and removed without moving the underlying information (note). Notebooks are better used to define shared content and access than logical order.
Not so old fashioned, more like the layers of notes, note books and stacks on the left are a good visual.
A visual interface like a good old "folder trees and linear hierarchy" acts like a mind map. It optimises memory and helps looking through your things.
If you don't know about mind maps, you can google it, they are a very nice tool that many people love to use in order to organise their thoughts.
(And you don't have to say that Evernote is not a mindmap and that I can go and get a mind map app if that is what I want.)
That is a good informative and constructive comment.
Thank you for suggesting a use of tags that I might have overlooked.
I know how to use tags but that's a good intervention nontheless, unlike the unquoted part of your reply.
The tag vs notebook argument has been going on since EN's inception. If you need multilevel hierarchy, you use tags. Simple as that.
For my use with 12K notes over about 11 years, I have rarely used tags, have many notebooks and stacks, and have rarely been unable to find anything quickly. The search capability of EN is such that if you dumped everything into one notebook and used no tags at all, you could still find what you needed.
I don't blame EN on what it has, it is all super good. But since they have a place on the forums to suggest things I thought I just might use it, and it was a good idea cause now I've learned from DTLow that tags can be used as a "parent-child hierarchy", which actually does adresse the issue !
In UDK you could add notes in your levels. I use them a lot to communicate design tasks when handing off to another team member, but I also use them for myself as a kind of sticky note to remind me of an element or task I need to come back to. Is there a similar type of actor in UE4? Ideally I need the ability to not only place it where I want in a level but it also has to allow me to type out a note that can be refereed to at a later time. In my example I used the term sticky note.
A virtual sticky note system could be a cool thing. In fact, it might even be cool to create an interface for this system for usability purposes. I envision an option in the view menu that would turn on or off sticky notes. When turned on the right side of your viewport has a list of current unresolved sticky notes, like a quest tracker UI in a MMORPG.
Until (and if) my feature request becomes a reality in the editor it would be super cool if the text section of the current notes actor was a block paragraph size and not a single line. Currently very difficult to read a note with such a small field.
From my understanding so far, Wiley is a no-no for Level 3, you should only use it for last minute revision. Schweser seems good, goes through the material more throughly than Wiley and made available multiple examples to back the concept. So, for me, it is Schweser + CFA Corriculum.
Used Schweser notes, and the live early start classes. Felt that the live classes were very beneficial as all the questions we went over and were assigned as homework were directly from the CFAI text. Did no questions out of the Schweser book and only did CFAI tests, BB, and EOC. Felt the Schweser practice tests were poorly worded and overly confusing.
For me I used mainly Schweser. I used CFA books for end of the chapter questions and reread the summary while I was reviewing. In addition to this, I used all the questions on the CFA website and past years exams.
i used same thing for Level 2 attempt and failed big time. only after my first stint with Level 2 i realized, that it was different ball of game and needed different strategy to study and pass, and what practice questions and mocks meant.
I have been taking typewritten notes and the process is quite slow. I can only clear about 3 to 4 pages of CFAI material per half an hour. Sometimes if the content is very dense, I can only clear 1 page per half an hour.
I also asked myself if I should continue this practice. However, if i were to just read the material, things may not get into my head. Oh well, I guess I have to be selective in whatever I type, in order to speed up the learning.
Personally, when I wrote level 1 a month back I just sat down in the waiting area, ate lunch, talked to some friends on facebook and on the phone, and relaxed. You will be writing 6 hours of tests that day, and in my opinion I think the break time is more well spend relaxing instead of stressing out.
On the other, it takes away from your opportunity to chill out, rest, and recharge a bit. And on a long, involved exam like the CFA one, my sense is that a lot of people just get tired at the end. And points earned/lost at the end of the afternoon session count just as much as those gotten first thing in the morning one.
I hear you, but I disagree with you. If you review some of your notes in the lunch time and few questions show up from some of those areas in the PM Session of the exam , it could make a difference between a Pass and a Fail. But this is just my 1 cent and what works for me. Something else might work for others.
I am just not sure if we understand the same by that. For me version control means to browse through manually saved versions of a note. If at all an automatic saving of versions (f.e. in intervalls) is implementedi i hope that it can be disabled
My main feedback having used the Bear v2 beta is that note version history is a killer missing feature. On iOS especially I sometimes unintentionally make changes to notes or accidentally delete notes and it is incredibly frustrating to try and figure out how to get back to a known good state. Google docs is another good example of version history done right.
How about manual snapshots for specific notes then? Considering all the baggage that comes with implicit versioning I think this would be a more pragmatic alternative and would naturally solve the conundrum with storage cost by giving the choice to the user.
Hello- I have set the Notes security on a security profile to be user level for the entire line. However, when the user is on an opportunity they can see notes (in the social pane) that were created by other users. The user is the owner of the opportunity. We are on CRM 2016 on premise. The use case is that the user's manager needs to attach documents into the notes on the opportunity that show details as to why the manager approved the size of the opportunity. However this attachment (and notes) should not be visible to the user. Is there some other security changes I need to make in order to make this use case possible?
To accomplish this, I have created a Generic Inquiry based on the SOLine table to show the line-level record notes and files. In the GI summary area, there is a dropdown that allows you to indicate which record the notes column should refer to.
I tried this approach but it does not show any output even though there are attached files and notes. I am also basing this inquiry on a custom table created so is that why line files and notes are not visible?
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