Highlights

id990022805

note taking for me is still pretty simple: I start with a goal, I record key information and insights, and then I organize it and refer back to those notes as needed.

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id990022875

There’s a lot of work that goes into optimizing a passive feed to actually have useful stuff instead of ragebait, and the social media landscape’s ever-changing algorithm doesn’t help, but I do my best to curate my feeds so that when I don’t have the time or bandwidth to sink into a book I’m still doing something vaguely useful instead of just winding myself up about whatever.

Es parte de lo que he escrito en mi idea de Dieta Digital.

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id990022952

My habit is to highlight anything I want to see again, and ignore the rest. If I’m in a hurry, I’ll grab the whole paragraph, but otherwise I try to focus on something more targeted. I try to leave myself a note about why I grabbed the quote

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id990023023

it is helpful to have a tagging schema that is customized to your preferences and reasons for reading. What are you interested in? What motivates you to take notes on books at all?

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id990023281

Most of the time, though, my heavy AI usage comes after I’m done. I use Reader to “chat” with my documents and highlights to find things I vaguely remember, using what amounts to fancy semantic search. I use other LLMs to actually organize the big pile of notes I’m left with at the end of a book.

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id990023362

Organizing all of this is time-consuming but not terribly intellectual. I’m just following directions from my past self as I review a huge pile of highlights and annotations.

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id990024799

I have a couple of reasons for preferring Obsidian, but for the specific task of making >100 headers with a LLM, the main one is that I am a paranoid soul. Obsidian makes it very easy to check that the LLM hasn’t corrupted my file with gibberish with one wonderful plugin: Version History Diff by Obsidian moderator Koala, which is the primary reason I feel safe using LLMs for this sort of task on such a big file. Here’s an example change, taken from my notes on *The Rise and Reign of the Mammals*by Steve Brusatte… all 15,000 words of them.

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id990025355

Next, I’ll move the file out of my Readwise database and into its own special “annotated” folder.

Esto evita el problema que se generarĂ­a al borrar toda las notas creadas por la exportaciĂłn bruta de Readwise en Obsidian, cosa que a veces es necesario hacer si se quiere actualizar el formato.

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