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65 points dennisy | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.439s | source

Each day I (and I assume most knowledge workers, devs, creatives) read many articles, papers, code snippets, AI responses, discord messages etc.

At the end of the day some of this information is most likely lodged in your brain and the digital version can be discarded. However some of it should be retained manually in some system - or at least I feel it should.

What approaches do people use to consolidate and store this information to allow all tabs etc to be closed for the next work day?

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parliament32 ◴[] No.43979069[source]
You don't, because information hoarding is only slightly less bad than real-life hoarding.

Be honest with yourself: other than the occasional search, when is the last time you referred to notes you took X years ago? And for the search-cases, how outdated was that information? Is the sequence of commands you painstakingly saved a decade ago for how to rebuild an array in megaraid really relevant anymore? Could you not have just, ya know, just googled it next time you needed it? Is your written-out explanation for how heat pumps work from that time you were re-doing your home heating system really useful.. when you can just have a conversation with Gemini about it now?

Less is more.

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1. pillefitz ◴[] No.43981204[source]
Working in management, OneNote is my second brain I couldn't do without. Pages of meeting notes everyday, documentation of internal processes etc., all of which I regularly look up.
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2. alexdig ◴[] No.43983831[source]
In your experience, how is OneNote more useful over a simple markdown file with your daily notes? The latter is what I'm using and I wonder if I'm missing something by not using OneNote or even Miro.

I imagine attaching files in-line is one of these things, but maybe there's other stuff you can't do without?