I’ve also played with NovaMind (App Store). The mind mapping software I’ve been using is MindNode Lite (App Store). A mind map is a diagram used to visually outline information. The final step in the workflow for adopting the lessons learned in a book is the mind map. ![]() This is really powerful for allowing you to continue to reference these highlights going forward. If you have the Kindle application for Macintosh, those links will automatically open the book in your Library and then take you to the passage. This is where I discovered something amazing: the highlights copied and pasted from Amazon to VoodooPad maintain their links on each highlight for Read more at location XXX. Within VoodooPad I edit the highlights and organize them back into chapters or correct any formatting errors. That Page is where I keep my notes for future reference and review. So, I just went to the My Highlights section, selected all of my highlights, and then copy and pasted them into a new VoodooPad Page. Unfortunately, Amazon doesn’t provide an easy way to download those highlights. Hopefully you realize that once you’ve finished a book, you can access your highlights at. While I’m reading my book on my Kindle device, whatever that happens to be at the moment, I highlight key passages. I’m never without my book library, and that’s important for the next step. Why? Because Amazon has done an outstanding job making sure that my Kindle format books are available on every electronic device I own: Kindle Paperwhite (duh), iPad, iPhone, Nexus 7 (Android), and my Macintosh. My eBook reader of choice is the Amazon Kindle. Alternatively, you can read an electronic version of the book, make electronic highlights, and then download them, that’s what I do. If you read using a physical book, you can highlight as you go, but then you have to go back, skim through the book finding your highlights, and type them into your computer. The really tough part of the above is collecting the highlights. Finally, the mind map is then a condensed version of the book that you can review periodically over a long period of time, fully integrating the book’s learnings into your life. You then process those notes into Rituals and a mind map. When finished, you collect those highlights into a single document. The project and its steps looked something like this (this is my modified version):Īs you read the book you highlight key passages that summarize concepts you want to remember. Reading one of their articles on OmniFocus I saw in the background a Project that outlined how to read a book and process it over a long period of time. ![]() These guys take Personal Productivity and make it a passion, so they have lots of great articles. Some time ago, as I was starting my Productivity learnings, I read a bunch of articles by Asian Efficiency. Dave Ramsey says, “Leaders Learn” and that’s what I’ve been doing recently. One area of Personal Productivity is Education. I can’t imagine how I got anything done in the past without my Daily Actions workflow. I wouldn't look twice at whatever else it is you develop.I’ve been on a bit of a Personal Productivity exploration for quite a while. Plausible: Please sell this app back to Flying Meat - you guys have destroyed what was a good app, killed whatever reputation it had when FM owned it, and made yourselves look like., I don't know, but not competent developers. EVERY TIME they sync data gets deleted, replaced by "Write about _ here," with "_" being the title of your note which VP just deleted. Never does.īoth the Mac and iOS versions are the same version (5.1.4) and are set to sync via Dropbox. Wow, how lame are these developers?!?! I keep trying the Mac version periodically before spending $40 to see if the sync gets fixed. I just enabled TouchID and can no longer get into the app. ![]() Update: Guess what? The TouchID bug "fix" is no fix at all. Thank you for rescuing it from being chained up and ignored in the backyard of Plausible. ![]() Better yet, they appear to not be Plausible under a different name! I’m bumping up 2 stars to give Primate the benefit of the doubt and the app another shot. According to the Primate Labs blog, they acquired Voodoo Pad from Plausible.
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