- Nov 2024
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www.linkedin.com www.linkedin.com
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for - Jesus Martin Gonzalez - anthropology - metacrisis - polycrisis - poverty of X
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www.theatlantic.com www.theatlantic.com
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X Is a White-Supremacist Site by [[Charlie Warzel]]
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The justifications—the lure of the community, the (now-limited) ability to bear witness to news in real time, and of the reach of one’s audience of followers—feel particularly weak today. X’s cultural impact is still real, but its promotional use is nonexistent. (A recent post linking to a story of mine generated 289,000 impressions and 12,900 interactions, but only 948 link clicks—a click rate of roughly 0.00328027682 percent.) NPR, which left the platform in April 2023, reported almost negligible declines in traffic referrals after abandoning the site.
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In its last report before Musk’s acquisition, in just the second half of 2021, Twitter suspended about 105,000 of the more than 5 million accounts reported for hateful conduct. In the first half of 2024, according to X, the social network received more than 66 million hateful-conduct reports, but suspended just 2,361 accounts. It’s not a perfect comparison, as the way X reports and analyzes data has changed under Musk, but the company is clearly taking action far less frequently.
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- Oct 2024
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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44:17 Private Balance + Government Balance + Foreign Balance = 0 (I-S)+(G-T)+(X-M)=0
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- Sep 2024
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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38239
DOI: 10.1186/s12915-024-01979-x
Resource: Addgene_38239
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_38239
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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60358
DOI: 10.1038/s41419-024-07012-x
Resource: Addgene_60358
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_60358
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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125593
DOI: 10.1038/s41419-024-06995-x
Resource: RRID:Addgene_125593
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_125593
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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8454
DOI: 10.1038/s44161-023-00411-x
Resource: RRID:Addgene_8454
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_8454
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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49386
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06729-x
Resource: RRID:Addgene_49386
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_49386
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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32481
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-52451-x
Resource: RRID:Addgene_32481
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_32481
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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12259
DOI: 10.1186/s11658-024-00638-x
Resource: RRID:Addgene_12259
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_12259
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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pSPCas9(BB)-2A-GFP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-71540-x
Resource: RRID:Addgene_48138
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:Addgene_48138
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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hairy-GAL4
DOI: 10.1186/s40168-017-0396-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @maulamb
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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www.reddit.com www.reddit.com
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www.franklin-christoph.com www.franklin-christoph.com
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https://www.franklin-christoph.com/
Among various fountain pens, notebooks, and other papers, they sell archival quality 3 x 5 inch index cards suited to fountain pen use.
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- Aug 2024
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link.springer.com link.springer.com
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RRID: CVCL_0320
DOI: 10.1007/s12013-024-01463-x
Resource: (RRID:CVCL_0320)
Curator: @dhovakimyan1
SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_0320
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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ptc-
DOI: 10.1186/s41065-024-00327-x
Resource: SCR_00645
Curator: @anisehay
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_00645
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52.53.155.43 52.53.155.43
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BDSC_ 50791
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-023-05660-x
Resource: RRID:BDSC_50791
Curator: @anisehay
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_50791
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- Jul 2024
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Bloomington
DOI: 10.1186/s12915-020-00933-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Bloomington
DOI: 10.1038/s41398-020-01149-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Bloomington
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-20898-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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9313
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26945-x
Resource: RRID:BDSC_9313
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_9313
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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26,818
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-12237-x
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Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_26818
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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28455
DOI: 10.1038/s41419-021-03444-x
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Curator: @anisehay
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_28455
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Methods
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-023-05717-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @mzhang007
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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36487
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22054-x
Resource: RRID:BDSC_36487
Curator: @mpairish
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_36487
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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BDSC #35227
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-24351-x
Resource: RRID:BDSC_35227
Curator: @anisehay
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_35227
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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39171
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-24505-x
Resource: RRID:BDSC_39171
Curator: @mpairish
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_39171
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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25684
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28268-x
Resource: RRID:BDSC_25684
Curator: @anisehay
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_25684
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BDSC #3751676
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28268-x
Resource: RRID:BDSC_37516
Curator: @anisehay
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_37516
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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54288
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26462-x
Resource: BDSC_54288
Curator: @mpairish
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_54288
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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3605
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-18203-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 3605,RRID:BDSC_3605)
Curator: @mpairish
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_3605
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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BDSC
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-022-03830-x
Resource: BDSC_43985
Curator: @mpairish
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_43985
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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BDSC #55139
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-022-03636-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 55139,RRID:BDSC_55139)
Curator: @AniH
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_55139
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BDSC #92983
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-022-03636-x
Resource: RRID:BDSC_92983
Curator: @AniH
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_92983
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BDSC #54751
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-022-03636-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 54751,RRID:BDSC_54751)
Curator: @AniH
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_54751
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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64349
DOI: 10.3758/s13428-020-01452-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 64349,RRID:BDSC_64349)
Curator: @bpowell22
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_64349
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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stock #2376
DOI: 10.1186/s12866-020-01848-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 2376,RRID:BDSC_2376)
Curator: @bpowell22
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_2376
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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UAS-DN-S6K (6911)
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-15617-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 6911,RRID:BDSC_6911)
Curator: @bpowell22
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_6911
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Df(2L)BSC144
DOI: 10.1007/s00412-020-00732-x
Resource: BDSC_9504
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_9504
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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5905
DOI: 10.1186/s43141-020-00079-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 5905,RRID:BDSC_5905)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_5905
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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3287
DOI: 10.1038/s41419-020-02850-x
Resource: BDSC_3287
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_3287
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Bloomington
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-19936-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 58755,RRID:BDSC_58755)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_58755
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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39247
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04191-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 39247,RRID:BDSC_39247)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_39247
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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BDSC
DOI: 10.1007/s11357-022-00555-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Bloomington
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-09703-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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5627
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-38287-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 5627,RRID:BDSC_5627)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_5627
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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8765
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-38813-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 8765,RRID:BDSC_8765)
Curator: @olekpark
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_8765
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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FBst0006836
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10874-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 6836,RRID:BDSC_6836)
Curator: @bandrow
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_6836
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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6284
DOI: 10.1186/s13072-019-0301-x
Resource: BDSC_6284
Curator: @bandrow
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_6284
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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BDSC #5873)
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-11115-x
Resource: BDSC_5873
Curator: @bpowell22
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_5873
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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w1118
DOI: 10.1038/s41418-019-0382-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 3605,RRID:BDSC_3605)
Curator: @bandrow
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_3605
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songmeanings.com songmeanings.com
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"And the rich get stitched up, when we get cut Man a heal dem broken bones in the bush with the wed mud" Rich are more advantaged than the mass middle class/poor. It's always the middle/lower classes who have to do the dirty work of the elites, it's because we gave our power away in the first place which is why we're treated like toy soldiers. this song is all about equality and self-empowerment in this aspect. Raises the importance of naturopathy science, how old and ancient herbal rememdies and medicinal practices are more advanced and provide better treatment than modern medicine. raises the issue of the supression of ancient medicinnal practices/herbs by corporate structures who just want to generate more income and improperly prescribe harmful substances/drugs to people. The EU is already banning natural herbs that cure all sorts of natural illnesses by natural/healthy means. "Can you read signs? can you read stars? Can you make peace? can you fight war? Can you milk cows, even though you drive cars? huh Can you survive, Against All Odds, Now?" reference to occult/esoteric wisdom - alchemism, astronomy/astrology, tarot reading. those questions are to make us self-reflect on what modern civilization and human beings can do compared to ancient civilizations and cultures. are we moving backwards or moving forwards towards progression mentally, spiritually, emnotionally and physically? are we surviving/beyond the need for survival.. or are we heading towards the path of self-destruction as a species?
Is there truth in this regarding medicine? Can we get more out of nature than media and common knowledge portrays? I am not certain, nor is this an area of research for me; but the truth is that it is fascinating to think about.
The larger point does make sense, too much people are focused on money for the sake of money. Money is supposed to be a means to an end; the end being the improvement of society; in the way things are currently set up.
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"Scholars teach in Universities and claim that they’re smart and cunning Tell them find a cure when we sneeze and that’s when their nose start running" the academic community and university is designed for very purpose of maintaining the “status quo”/ethics of research and the system/preventing progressive ideas from being explored until you can be trusted to know what the “truth” is apparently is to be known by those who came before you. Whoever says that in university your freedom/capacity of thought/speech/action is not limited is blind. Certain ideas are more preferable “healthy” to the system than others, and if you promote and engage with the more agreeable concepts you’ll get through your degree/get accepted by academic community easily. once again, scholars are still in the "problem, reaction and solution" paradigm, rather than focusing on preventions than cures. We've got a long way to go in the evolution of consciousness. PATIENCE.
True freedom of expression (a need for the soul as expressed by Simone Weil) must be given in academia as well; to write about that which you want to write about... Regardless of "social acceptance". A degree should be about objective knowledge and quality of knowledge, not the content of said knowledge.
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"The Earth was flat if you went too far you would fall off Now the Earth is round if the shape change again everybody woulda start laugh The average man can’t prove of most of the things that he chooses to speak of And still won’t research and find out the root of the truth that you seek of" commenting on how new structures/theories/inventions are always at conflict with old structures/theories/inventions that refuse to accept new ideas/truths because of mental conditioning (e.g. laugh) society is in to accept everything as fact and never question/research/evolve/change. this is very much predominant in science and history, for example, Galileo was condemned and died for the truth, Copernicus's model that the Earth rotated around the sun, a truth that contradicted biblical truth. it's like what camus was complaining about in the myth of sisyphus essay, where man faces an existential crisis of absurdism when there are no absolute truths and values in the world. humanity is suffering because we're working against eachother instead of working together in order to find out the truth of all things.
See intellectual flexibility.
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I should also mention, that the notion of east/west in verse 1 is also reference to alternative history and sacred texts which reveal that human civilization rose from the east and now sets in the west. criticism against academics and scholars who are paid to rehash and propgandaise an official/revised history, which favours the winners. History is always written by the victors. this also ties into notions of the New world order (satan-west) in conflict with the old world order (God-east). My interpretation of Verse II: "Huh, we born not knowing, are we born knowing all? We growing wiser, are we just growing tall?" Notion of reincarnation ties into this i feel. if you do past-life regression therapy you attain knowledge of previous lives and experiences, the line symbolises an awakening - remembering life before life, life before birth, your life's purpose here on earth. God has a plan for everyone, this universe is intelligently designed as we can see in the fractal universe/mandelbrot set and the notion of consciousness. i see esoteric and occult wisdom in these lines, knowing all things/God consciousness in the notion of the "Akashic records/Library" - universal consciousness reflected in the entire design of this universe and all of creation. it's a scientific fact that memory/knowledge is stored in the universal design - cells/energy/wate, just as energy is not created nor destroyed but transferred.
Honestly, I can't make a lick of sense from what Mr. X is saying here lol.
At least the latter part. I understand the previous part.
Again, as Simone Weil says, media (and especially research) must contain impartial factual knowledge, not opinion and especially not propaganda. Truth is a vital need of the soul.
No amount of money should be able to buy your soul (making you spread misinformation). It's like making a deal with the devil.
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"So the ones in the west Will never move east And feel like they could be at home Dem get tricked by the beast But a where dem ago flee when the monster is fully grown?" commenting on the conflict between western and eastern nations. particularly the conflict between the U.S./Britain with Islamic nations of the Middle East. once again, the "beast" referring to satan, devil who exploits our differences to keep us fighting amongst eachother, destroying eachother. we don't come from the east, west, north or safe. we come from God, the source, from EARTH. Earth is our home and we're all earthers. by the time they realise this and understnd that they were pawns of the satanic occult groups such as the freemasons, elites or satanic illuminati, who generate order from choas - "as above so below", they can't hide or run from the problems they've helped to create in the first place. the beast is also synomynous with the "ego" - shadow/false self, you yourself are your own greatest enemy. here's a commentary on the ego, from the film "revolver": "The ego is the worst confidence trickster we could ever figure. "I am you". The problem is that the ego hides in the last place that you'd ever look within itself. It disguises its thoughts as your thoughts, its feelings as your feelings. "You think it's you". Peoples' need to protect their own egos knows no bounds. They will lie, cheat, steal, kill, do whatever it takes to maintain what we call ego boundaries. People have no clue that they're imprisoned. They don't know that there is an ego, they don't know the distinction. At first, it's difficult for the mind to accept that there's something beyond itself, that there's something of greater value and greater capacity for discerning truth than itself. In religion, the ego manifests as the devil. And of course no one realizes how smart the ego is, because it created the devil so you could blame someone else. In creating this imaginary external enemy, it usually made a real enemy for ourselves, and that becomes a real danger to the ego, but that's also the ego's creation. There is no such thing as an external enemy no matter what the voice in your head is telling you. All perception of an enemy is a projection of the ego as the enemy. In that sense, you could say that 100 percent of our external enemies are of our creation. "Your greatest enemy is your own inner perception, is your own ignorance, is your own ego"."
We are all united in being human and should act that way. Find common ground rather than focusing on differences. Don't be biased. A house divided will surely fall. A house united is strong.
When humanity is united as one, true societal advancement can happen.
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"Some of the worst paparazzis I've ever seen and I ever known Put the worst on display so the world can see And that's all they will ever show" similar to the role of the media. always feeding on the negativity/problems of the human race, human development, human actions, human consciousness but never providing a productive solution to these problems projecting people's fears, creating war propaganda. if you've been following the middle east revolution, you'd notice that news stations like fox lied about their coverage on the libyan war and revolution, generating false reports. fabricating lies as truth for the public to blindly consume as truth without questioning. it's like the media/journalists are energy vampires who amplify amplify and feed on negativity and fear. no news is good news. they never truly demonstrate a 60 minute news show on the positive developments, actions and solutions to the people because then it would lead to positive developments in human consciousness, our enlightement as a species because being shown positive things that human beings are doing and have done and will continue to do creates a sense of purpose for us all and unites us, inspires people rather than fear/negativity which keeps us feeling trapped, apathetic, angry, depressed... esp. in a state of victimisation as though we're not empowered to change or that nothing will change, that violence, poverty, world hunger, rape, war pillaging, theft... as if all these things are normal and natural when they're NOT. they're not okay and we shouldn't accept them as being part of reality, part of the norm because we know that it isn't. it's not natural and innate, since it's started by the actions made by conscious individuals and mentally capable human beings. it's man-made.
The media is opinionized and feeds on fads; what is in the mind of the people. They survive based on attention.
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"You buy a khaki pants And all of a sudden you say a Indiana Jones An' a thief out gold and thief out the scrolls and even the buried bones" criticism on how people change their appearances so easily, acclaim status/right just because they can conform to social appearances - doesn't mean that they actually are who they say they or they really mean what they do/represent. like those televangelists with their fake/unproductive compassion and care. what change are they really doing to help humanity as a whole, when they are truly only looking out for themselves and their own comfort/security, while projecting their own existence/ideologies on others. criticism on the right/ownership of ancient artifacts, knowledge and discoveries. people who claim to own knowledge or ancient artifacts are actually theives who are stealing and exploting humanity, what belongs to everyone.
Epictetus: "He who is properly grounded in life should not have to look for outside approval."
Also: "If you are ever tempted to look outside for approval, realize you have lost your integrity. If you need a witness, be your own."
Do not change as often as the winds... But do not be impervious to change either.
Nietzche: "The snake which cannot cast its skin has to die. As well the minds which are prevented from changing their opinions; they cease to be mind."
There is a balance to be held. Change opinion and outside projection only if applicably by rational thought based on thorough research and nuanced deep understanding. Be principled, yet flexible.
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"This is how the media pillages On the TV the picture is Savages in villages" criticism of the media, how it produces ratings/money from sensationalising/propagandasing/taking advantage of the absurdity of the human condition, the problems of humanity - creating trauma based mind control, programming our thoughts and controlling mass consciousness of society. projecting false/bias stereotypes, prejudice and perspectives on particular socio-cultural groups. Esp. creating prejudice against individuals and cultures who show the truth towards enlightenment and growth in human consciousness - keep the masses asleep/blinded to the truth of their existence as a whole, also their self-empowerment and enlightenment.
The control of knowledge (or how it is portrayed) means to control the thoughts of people. This goes against freedom. See Simone Weil: the media should give factual knowledge and leave interpretation to the people. Opinion should fall to a person themselves.
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"And the scientist still can't explain the pyramids, huh Evangelists making a living on the videos of ribs of the little kids Stereotyping the image of the images And this is what the image is" similar criticism of religious fundamentalists and secular groups who exploit our emotions - FEAR - esp. playing cards on our "differences", negativity, problems to project their own fears, ideologies and keep everyone in the game of the matrix - the game of polarities and paradigm wars on human consciousness/energy. refers to televangelists who exploit the problem of poverty and children who are dying of malnourishment of hunger to generate their own income. not really creating our productive change to create a long-term solution or fix to these problems. feigned/false compassion and care.
Worth noting for Christians: before responding on impulse (from a good heart) and paying to save children, take a moment to stop, reflect and analyse, is this a trustworthy organization and person? Will my money truly solve something, will it really help someone?
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"But save the animals in the zoo Cause the chimpanzee dem a make big money" another comment similar to the irony/absurdity of focusing on problems of the universe/space exploration rather than problems which affect humanity. we focus on saving other animals, yet we can't even save our own species? why? because of money.
Money should not be the deciding factor when it comes to determining which problems to solve and which to forego. In fact, anything that advances society as a whole, I'd argue should be free of charge. Is this possible? Not sure, but we as intellectuals should think about this.
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"Pay no mind to the youths Cause it's not like the future depends on it" sarcasm. esp. if you look at the music video, you'll notice Damian's sarcastic hand gesture, tone and facial experience. mocking the irony of how schools don't provide children with real knowledge of the world which is ironic because their generation will be the future keepers of humanity with old/new responsibilities and purposes to fulfil. once again, we're stuck in this repeitive cycle of stagnation - problem, reaction, solution. it's kind of what aristotle once said about knowledge and teaching: "This discovery of yours, this writing, you give your students not truth, but only the appearance of truth. They will read many things and will have learned nothing. They will therefore seem to know many things, when they are, for the most part, ignorant and hard to get along with, having the show of wisdom without the reality."
Interesting food for thought for the optimization of education: should we give students not just domain knowledge (in an efficient manner) but also intercultural and experiental knowledge of the world?
Not just related to personal development such as wealth creation and personal finance, but also how other civilizations work... Tolerance. Teach them philosophy as well.
Obviously in such a way that it is attracting and they are intrinsically motivated to go to school and learn.
Raises a broader question: Is domain knowledge worth anything if you have no knowledge (or experience) about the world in itself? Can you be of any value if you do not know the world in such a manner?
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"An' a fly go a moon And can't find food for the starving tummies" criticism on how the wealth and resources used on space exploration - is something that humanity can't understand when those billions used for the scientific pursuit/understanding of the universe, can instead be used to feed and clothe the hungry, the impoverish - basically poverty and world hunger would cease. it's sort of like criticisng the fact that we have problems here on this planet that we all need to work together to solve as a species/planet, yet we're not prioritising those problems as our main repsonisbility, something we need to fix, instead the most intelligent bunch/resourceful are spending their energy/time/reousrces on solving the mysteries of the universe instead. it's commenting on the notion of the microcosm within the macrocosm. if we as a species, esp. the intelligent and resurceful of our lot focused on solving problems like poverty, world hunger, war, crime... solve problems that continue to stagnate our human evolution/progress/conciousness, we could put an end to hegelian dialectics of problem, reaction, solution... this repititive state of insanity - doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. why do we keep looking outside/external when we have problems in the inside/internal, in our very hearts, minds and homes.. on our own planet Earth? if we solved the problems at home, problems that create the suffering and keep just a few individuals privelaged/intelligent/resourceful over the rest of humanity who is stagnated and moving backwards and keeping humanity in a continous cycle of karma, the wheel of samsara of the human condition... then doesn't that mean that everyone as a whole is enlightened intelligent, resourceful? no one gets left behind and everyone becomes empowered self-sufficient, self-independent, self-enlightened, self-responsible...imagine each and every person self empowered now imagine the entire race of humanity self-empowered... that's billions of buddhas/christs - intellectuals, academics and enlightened individuals working together as a strong force of unity for a common cause. if we can fix those small problems that continue to keep humanity going backwards towards self-destructi, those small problems which greatly impact upon the bigger picture and schemes of things, then we can truly progress towards real change and together explore the universe as a human species. no one gets left behind.
This is a valid criticism (sorry Elon Musk)... By helping the other individual you in the end help society and therefore yourself.
We should be focusing on present problems that are closer to us before moving on to more abstract problems that have less value at present.
The same goes for ourselves. Try not to fix your family or neighborhood before you have fixed yourself (keep in mind diminishing returns). As Dan Koe said: "Your purpose is solving the most pressing problem you have right now." (not verbatim).
Try not to learn how to learn before your sleep schedule is excellent, before you know how to be productive and have habits.
Learning enablers first, THEN learning.
Fix first yourself, then your household, then the city, then the country, then the continent, etc. This does not have to be taken literally, but use it as a wise guidance. It's a principle rather than a law.
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"Some of the smartest dummies Can't read the language of Egyptian mummies" points to the notion of paradoxes, dualism, where even the most knowledgeable, creative, innovative, intelligent and academic can't interpret or make sense of ancient wisdom, the pun "language of the Egyptian mummies" refers to the language of the spiritual - life after death wisdom. the divine, infinite and eternal.
I will call the guy who gives a full theoretical analysis of this song, Mr. X.
Well, I wonder where Mr. X got all his analysis from first of all. Is it his interpretation? Or what is his source for the meaning of the song?
Is it therefore objectively true to the artist's intent or is it merely a (good) explanation that seeks to provoke thought?
I don't know how accurate this claim is as I have not yet dived deeply into ancient knowledge and compare it to modern interpretations of it, but I do feel like this hits a nail... Either Mr. X does or the artists.
It is quite logical that it is difficult to interpret ancient wisdom as wisdom often assumes the student or reader is familiar with common knowledge... However, what was common in ancient times might be rare currently, or even forgotten or used in different ways, making it very difficult to interpret and parse such texts without a high degree of mastery of background knowledge.
It's even harder for certain ancient times where everything was rooted in oral tradition without writing. People back then could've been generally wise, but without texts to refer to as primary sources it is virtually impossible to make sense of it.
Tags
- Patience Song
- Societal Advancement
- Media
- Money
- Freedom of Expression
- Learning
- Intercultural Knowledge
- Ancient Knowledge
- Productivity
- Intellectual Flexibility
- Problems
- Simone Weil
- Learning Enablers
- Damian Marley
- Epictetus
- Society
- Nas Marley
- Integrity
- Elon Musk
- Unity
- Infighting
- Research
- Critical Thinking
- Self-Thinking Society
- Success
- Truth
- Broad Education
- Poverty
- Dan Koe
- Christianity
- Purpose
- Friedrich Nietzche
- Intellectualism
- Reading
- Education
- Needs of the Soul
- Intellectual Honesty
- Academia
- Analytical Reading
- Medicine
- Outside Approval
- Impulse
- Domain Knowledge
- Reading Ancient Texts
- Mastery
- Mr X
Annotators
URL
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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1407-Gal4
DOI: 10.1186/s13064-020-00141-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @PeterEckmann
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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52.53.155.43 52.53.155.43
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BDSC #64088
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0444-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 64088,RRID:BDSC_64088)
Curator: @mzhang007
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_64088
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BDSC #64087
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0444-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 64087,RRID:BDSC_64087)
Curator: @mzhang007
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_64087
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BDSC #48072
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0444-x
Resource: BDSC_48072
Curator: @mzhang007
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_48072
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BDSC #48338
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0444-x
Resource: BDSC_48338
Curator: @mzhang007
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_48338
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BDSC #39247
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0444-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 39247,RRID:BDSC_39247)
Curator: @mzhang007
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_39247
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BDSC #52867
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0444-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 52867,RRID:BDSC_52867)
Curator: @mzhang007
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_52867
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BDSC #52869
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0444-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 52869,RRID:BDSC_52869)
Curator: @mzhang007
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_52869
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BDSC #44277
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0444-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 44277,RRID:BDSC_44277)
Curator: @mzhang007
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_44277
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Genotypes and their origins are listed in Supplemental Tables 2, 3.
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0444-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 64088,RRID:BDSC_64088)
Curator: @memartone
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_64088
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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RRID: IMSR_JAX:004353
DOI: 10.1186/s12974-024-03110-x
Resource: (IMSR Cat# JAX_004353,RRID:IMSR_JAX:004353)
Curator: @evieth
SciCrunch record: RRID:IMSR_JAX:004353
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Nos-Gal4 (BDSC, #4937)
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-46419-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 4937,RRID:BDSC_4937)
Curator: @memartone
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_4937
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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BDSC #35,787
DOI: 10.1186/s12964-024-01532-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 35787,RRID:BDSC_35787)
Curator: @DavidDeutsch
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_35787
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Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center #76,363
DOI: 10.1186/s12964-024-01532-x
Resource: BDSC_76363
Curator: @DavidDeutsch
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_76363
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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BL3605
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-53588-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 3605,RRID:BDSC_3605)
Curator: @mpairish
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_3605
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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CG13532 (91,332
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-024-10423-x
Resource: BDSC_91332
Curator: @bandrow
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_91332
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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RRID:CVCL_3509
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-024-03052-x
Resource: (BCRC Cat# 60067, RRID:CVCL_3509)
Curator: @evieth
SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_3509
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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RRID:IMSR JAX stock #001976
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-65454-x
Resource: (IMSR Cat# JAX_001976,RRID:IMSR_JAX:001976)
Curator: @evieth
SciCrunch record: RRID:IMSR_JAX:001976
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- Jun 2024
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languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu
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It's an interesting position and had me rethinking things a bit, but the way I look at it, the actions themselves are negative; it's their boundary conditions which are different. Take for instance embark/disembark. In pseudo-mathematical terms, I would tend to think they increment or decrement one's embarkedness, with an upper boundary of 1 (aboard), and a lower boundary of 0 (ashore). The non-existence of values >1 (super-aboard) or <0 (anti-aboard) shouldn't affect the relative polarity of the actions themselves. I think. Looking through the rest of the list, there's a variety of different boundary conditions. Prove/disprove would range from 1 to -1 (1=proven, 0=asserted but untested, -1=proven false), entangle/disentangle seems to range from 0 to infinity (because you can always be a little more entangled, can't you?), and please/displease is perhaps wholly unbounded (if we imagine that humanity has an infinite capacity for both suffering and joy).
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her first remark upon embarking would no doubt be "on a scale from one to on a boat, we're on a boat!
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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RRID: AB, #2,536,161
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-024-10423-x
Resource: (Thermo Fisher Scientific Cat# A28175, RRID:AB_2536161)
Curator: @evieth
SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2536161
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RRID:AB, #2,534,017
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-024-10423-x
Resource: (Thermo Fisher Scientific Cat# A10042, RRID:AB_2534017)
Curator: @evieth
SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2534017
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RRID: AB, #2,534,067
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-024-10423-x
Resource: (Thermo Fisher Scientific Cat# A-10691, RRID:AB_2534067)
Curator: @evieth
SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2534067
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RRID: AB, #528,456
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-024-10423-x
Resource: (DSHB Cat# ro-62C2A8 anti-rough, RRID:AB_528456)
Curator: @evieth
SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_528456
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RRID:AB, #2,889,995
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-024-10423-x
Resource: (Millipore Cat# AB356482, RRID:AB_2889995)
Curator: @evieth
SciCrunch record: RRID:AB_2889995
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center.
DOI: 10.1038/s43587-022-00312-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @DavidDeutsch
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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x.com x.com
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CBC News visited a prison colony outside of Kyiv, where some inmates are applying for a program that would see them released into Ukraine's struggling and depleted military. "Someone needs to defend the motherland," said one.
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URL
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x.com x.com
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Pres. Biden declined to applaud the Supreme Court for its decision on regulation of the abortion pill mifepristone — which preserved access to the medication nationwide — instead reminding voters that the fight for women's reproductive freedom is not over.
新闻。拜登拒绝赞扬最高法院对堕胎药米非司酮监管的决定——该决定保留了全国范围内获得该药物的机会——而是提醒选民,争取妇女生育自由的斗争尚未结束。
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regulation
在这句话中,"regulation" 是一个名词,指的是对某事物或活动的管理、控制或规定。
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applaud
在这个句子中,"applaud" 是一个动词,意思是“鼓掌”或“赞扬”。但是,它在这里被用作引申义,表示对某个决定或行动表示赞同或支持。句子中说总统拜登“declined to applaud”,意思是拜登选择不表达对最高法院决定的支持或赞同。
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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ter94-RNAi (35608)
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06246-x
Resource: BDSC_35608
Curator: @DavidDeutsch
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_35608
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(#25709, BDSC)
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06246-x
Resource: (BDSC Cat# 25709,RRID:BDSC_25709)
Curator: @DavidDeutsch
SciCrunch record: RRID:BDSC_25709
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-27329-x
Resource: Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (RRID:SCR_006457)
Curator: @DavidDeutsch
SciCrunch record: RRID:SCR_006457
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- May 2024
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link.springer.com link.springer.com
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HEK293
DOI: 10.1007/s13577-024-01074-x
Resource: (IZSLER Cat# BS CL 129, RRID:CVCL_0045)
Curator: @AniH
SciCrunch record: RRID:CVCL_0045
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www.reddit.com www.reddit.com
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I have run across Jeff Shelton's Analog system (originally via Kickstarter) before. Thanks for the reminder.
There's also a slew of others, especially for folks looking at commercially preprinted cards (though I tend to think they're overpriced compared to blank cards): - The Hipster PDA (Parietal Disgorgement Aid) https://web.archive.org/web/20040906150523/https://merlin.blogs.com/43folders/2004/09/introducing_the.html - Pile of Index Cards (PoIC) https://www.flickr.com/photos/hawkexpress/albums/72157594200490122/ - Levenger https://www.levenger.com/products/triple-decker-pocket-planner?variant=42485422424213 (among others they carry including pocket briefcases) - Notsu https://notsubrand.com/ - Baronfig / Strategist: https://baronfig.com/products/strategist?variant=39787199529043 - Jeff Shelton's Analog system https://ugmonk.com/ - 3x5 Life https://www.3x5life.com/ - Foglietto https://www.nerosnotes.co.uk/collections/foglietto - Jot & Mark https://amzn.to/3Qs26Je
Am I missing any significant or influential examples, particularly branded ones?
Hubnote for 3 x 5" index cards for productivity
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- Mar 2024
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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TERUG IN DE TIJD: Project X, hoe kon het in 2012 zo misgaan in Haren?
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Annotators
URL
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- Feb 2024
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Local file Local file
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Not so the tenth-century John of Gorze, who issaid to have pored continuously over the psalms with a soft buzzing‘in morem apis’: in the manner of a bee.8
quoted portion via:<br /> John of St Arnulf, ‘Vita Joannis abbatis Gorziensis’, Patrologia Latina, 137.280D.
relationship to collecting like the bees (rhetoric)
relationship to humming and rocking practices of Hassidic readers/learners/memorizers
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www.levenger.com www.levenger.com
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https://www.levenger.com/products/vintage-library-catalog-cards-set-of-50?variant=43444256243861
These don't have the pre-drilled holes, but at least are still offered, though at the price gouging cost of $14.50 for 50 (in 2024).
Cost per card: $0.29
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www.levenger.com www.levenger.com
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https://www.levenger.com/products/card-catalog-box?variant=43007544066197
A bit on the small side, but has a built in pen holder:
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www.demco.com www.demco.com
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https://www.demco.com/demco-reg-permalife-catalog-cards
The old school Library of Congress card catalog cards with the red ruling.
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Local file Local file
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The volunteer ‘Readers’ were instructed to write out the words andsentences on small 4 x 6-inch pieces of paper, known as ‘slips’.
Volunteer 'Readers' for the Oxford English Dictionary were encouraged to write down interesting headwords along with their appearances in-situ along with the associated bibliographical information. The recommended paper size was 4 x 6-inch pieces of paper which were commonly called 'slips'.
(Double check this against the historical requests from James Murray.)
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- Jan 2024
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shop.canvascorpbrands.com shop.canvascorpbrands.com
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- Dec 2023
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www.avery.com www.avery.com
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Avery Templates for 4 x 6" products:
- Avery 8386 postcards 2 per sheet (template compatibility 5889)
- Avery 5292 Shipping Labels 1 per Sheet White (template compatibility 5454, 5614)
- Avery 5454 Print or Write Multi-Use Labels 6" x 4" 1 per Sheet White (template compatibility 5292, 5614)
- Avery 5389 Postcards 4" x 6" 2 per Sheet White (template compatibility 15389)
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archive.org archive.org
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Ron White recommends taking notes on 3 x 5 inch index cards. One should place the Dewey Decimal or Library of Congress catalog number in the upper left of their bibliography card and in the upper right corner one should number their cards consecutively (1, 2, 3, etc.). White indicates the importance of these numbers is primarily that they are unique, presumably so one can refer to them or reorder them if they are put out of order. (p46-7)
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web.archive.org web.archive.org
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It was written in a book that 5x3 cards have an aspect ratio close to the golden ratio (1.618) .
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the 2ch site that inspired Hawk Sugano's Pile of Index Cards method
ᔥ[[hawkexpress]] in How to link between Cards
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www.ebay.com www.ebay.com
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https://www.ebay.com/itm/305300436363
Vintage Imperial card catalog for 5 x 8" index cards
Listed for auction in December 2023. After 14 bids, sold for $158.50 on 2023-12-11. Seems rare for these to actually sell by auction.
Cost per drawer: $39.63.
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www.amazon.com www.amazon.com
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https://www.amazon.com/Antiracist-Deck-Meaningful-Conversations-Justice/dp/0593234847
Kendi, Ibram X. The Antiracist Deck: 100 Meaningful Conversations on Power, Equity, and Justice. One World, 2022.
A zettelkasten for creating conversations (randomly) around power, equity, and justice.
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- Nov 2023
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www.maxtonandcompany.com www.maxtonandcompany.com
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https://www.maxtonandcompany.com/alfion
Maxton & Company also carries Notsu cards.
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www.ebay.com www.ebay.com
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https://www.ebay.com/itm/305189692899
The Merchants Box Co. manufactured a variety of wooden index card boxes in the 1960s.
I've seen some marked 1960 and 1962. Dates of manufacture? Sizes? Definitely 4x6".
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Local file Local file
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As to the mechanics of research, I take notes on four-by-six indexcards, reminding myself about once an hour of a rule I read long agoin a research manual, “Never write on the back of anything.”
Barbara Tuchman took her notes on four-by-six inch index cards.
She repeated the oft-advised mantra to only write on one side of a sheet.
What manual did she read this in? She specifically puts quotes on "Never write on the back of anything." so perhaps it might be something that could be tracked down?
Who was the earliest version of this quote? And was it always towards the idea of cutting up slips or pages and not wanting to lose material on the back? or did it also (later? when?) include ease-of-use and user interface features even when not cutting things up?
At what point did double sided become a thing for personal printed materials? Certainly out of a duty to minimize materials, but it also needed the ability to duplex print pages or photocopy them that way.
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www.calendarsquick.com www.calendarsquick.com
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PDF Index Card Calendars 4 little templates for printing directly to 3 x 5 and 4 x 6 index cards (with the dates already filled in). Perfect for the Hipster PDA and other compact GTD organizational systems.
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- Oct 2023
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twitter.com twitter.comTwitter1
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Wikipedia is inherently hierarchical and therefore subject to the biases of higher ranking editors, independent of their merits.
True, but it should never be taken as the authoritative voice and there are ways to annotate on the internet :)
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www.lrb.co.uk www.lrb.co.uk
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The famous OED slips – 4 x 6 inch pieces of paper, some pre-filled with title and publication details – were to be completed by readers, whose task was to write down instances and examples of words in need of definition.
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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frank danielle at the 1:29 american film institute 1:30 who was dean of the school uh center for 1:33 advanced film studies 1:34 and he taught a way to do it 1:39 um you get yourself a pack of three by 1:42 five cards 1:44 and you write a scene 1:47 on each card and when you have 70 scenes 1:52 you have uh a feature film 1:56 so on each card you write the heading of 1:58 the scene 1:59 and then the next card the second scene 2:00 the third scene four scenes so you have 2:03 70 cards 2:04 each with the name of the scene then you 2:07 flesh out each of the cards 2:09 and walk away you got a script
David Lynch described the method from Frank Daniel (1926-1996) of the American Film Institute and Dean of advanced film studies who taught students to plot out their screenplays using 3 x 5" index cards. One would write out a total of 70 cards each with scene headings. Once fleshed out, one would have a complete screenplay.
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- Sep 2023
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notsubrand.com notsubrand.com
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Notsu has a variety of 3 x 5" index card products for productivity and planning.
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docdrop.org docdrop.org
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sui A
play the note on this string
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- Aug 2023
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www.ebay.com www.ebay.com
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https://www.ebay.com/itm/195958563431
A relatively uncommon 5 x 8" index card box from Yawman & Erbe.
Listed for $61.50 on 2023-08-31
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kingjim.us kingjim.us
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FLATTY WORKS A6 SIZE horizontal# 5460 H4.8×W6.8×D1.4inMaterial Cotton
https://kingjim.us/flatty-works<br /> Flatty Works A6 size horizontal case<br /> ~$24.00
Acquired green version 2023-04-07<br /> https://boffosocko.com/2023/04/20/review-of-king-jim-a6-size-horizontal-flatty-works-case-5460/
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www.lochby.com www.lochby.com
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https://www.lochby.com/collections/frontpage/products/venture-pouch<br /> Lochby Venture Pouch<br /> $44.00
Acquired one of these in early 2023 on sale?
several internal sections including for pens. <br /> will easily fit a handful or so of 4 x 6" index cards for quick travel
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www.rickshawbags.com www.rickshawbags.com
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Rickshaw Bags, Traveler's Notebook Case $59.00
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www.jetpens.com www.jetpens.com
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https://www.jetpens.com/Delfonics-Carrying-Bag-M-A5-Dark-Denim/pd/37102
Delfonics Carrying Bag - M (A5) - Dark Denim<br /> $36.00
Perhaps a bit large, but could be used as a mini-portable office to hold a variety of things including 4 x 6" index cards for work on the go.
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www.jetpens.com www.jetpens.com
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https://www.jetpens.com/Lihit-Lab-Altna-Carrying-Sleeve-Small-Gray/pd/24824<br /> Lihit Lab Altna Carrying Sleeve - Small - Gray<br /> $30.50
B6 is 4.9 x 6.9 inches, so just slightly larger than 4 x 6 inches
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www.jetpens.com www.jetpens.com
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https://www.jetpens.com/Lihit-Lab-Smart-Fit-Carrying-Pouch-A6-Olive/pd/12378
Lihit Lab Smart Fit Carrying Pouch - A6 - Olive<br /> $21.50
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www.jetpens.com www.jetpens.com
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https://www.jetpens.com/Delfonics-Carrying-Bag-S-A6-Dark-Blue/pd/38393<br /> Delfonics Carrying Bag - S (A6) - Dark Blue $32.00
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www.jetpens.com www.jetpens.com
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https://www.jetpens.com/Kleid-Mesh-Carry-Pouch-Mini-Charcoal/pd/37439
Meant for A6 notebooks, but would likely fit 4 x 6" index cards. $17.00
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www.lesswrong.com www.lesswrong.com
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Writing on small cards forces certain habits which would be good even for larger paper, but which I didn’t consider until the small cards made them necessary. It forces ideas to be broken up into simple pieces, which helps to clarify them. Breaking up ideas forces you to link them together explicitly, rather than relying on the linear structure of a notebook to link together chains of thought.
A statement of the common "one idea per card" (or per note). He doesn't state it, but links to an article whose title is "One Thought Per Note".
Who else has use this or similar phrasing in the historical record? - Beatrice Webb certainly came pretty close. - Others?
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one early reader of this write-up decided to use half 3x5 cards, so that they’d fit in mtg deck boxes.
First reference I've seen for someone suggesting using half size 3 x 5" index cards so that they could use commercially available Magic: The Gathering (MTG) boxes.
Oxford and possibly other manufacturers already make 1/2 size 3 x 5" index cards.
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www.attorneyatwork.com www.attorneyatwork.com
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https://www.attorneyatwork.com/analog-attorney-5-best-index-cards/
Article about general usefulness of index cards written by a lawyer and for them, though not specific to them as a subgroup.
Makes not of Nock's Dot-Dash cards which were apparently 3 x 5" dash gridded cards similar to Midori's grid notebooks. The website for the company is no longer active. Archived site: https://web.archive.org/web/20171007102414/https://nockco.com/paper/dotdash-3-x-5-note-cards
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- Jul 2023
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developers.google.com developers.google.com
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- Title
- One Billion Happy
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Author
- Mo Gawdat
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Description
- Mo Gawdat was former chief business officer at Google X, Google's innovation center.
- Mo left Google after seeing the rapid pace of AI development was going to lead to a progress trap in which
- the risk of AI destroying human civilization is becoming real because AI will be learning from too many unhappy people whose trauma AI will learn and incorporate into its algorithms
- Hence, human happiness becomes paramount to prevent this catastrophe from happening
- See Ronald Wright's prescient quote
- Title
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www.reddit.com www.reddit.com
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"I keep a dated diary of sorts on index cards, though they rarely go past one card a day."This is something I haven't heard of before. So, you journal/diary on index cards, one per day?
reply to u/taurusnoises (Bob Doto) at tk
Yep, for almost a full year now on 4x6" index cards. (Receipts for the kids: https://boffosocko.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/wp-1688411021709-scaled.jpg)
Previously I'd used a Hobonichi Cousin (page per day) journal for this. (Perhaps I should have stayed with the A6 size instead of the larger A5 for consistency?) Decades ago (around 1988ish?) I had started using a 2 page per day DayTimer pocket planners (essentially pre-printed/timed index cards spiral bound into monthly booklets which they actually shipped in index card-like plastic boxes for storage/archival purposes). Technically I've been doing a version of this for a really long time in one form or another.
It generally includes a schedule, to do lists (bullet journal style), and various fleeting notes/journaling similar to the older Memindex format, just done on larger cards for extra space. I generally either fold them in half for pocket storage for the day or carry about in groups for the coming week(s) when I'm away from my desk for extended periods (also with custom blank index card notebooks/pads).
I won't go into the fact that in the 90's I had a 5,000+ person rolodex... or an index card (in the entertainment they called them buck slips) with the phone numbers and names of \~100 people I dealt with regularly when early brick cell phones didn't have great (or any) storage/functionality.
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- Jun 2023
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www.ebay.com www.ebay.com
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Most older card indexes are common enough, but I thought I'd tip off anyone who is all in on 5x8" index cards and may be looking for a permanent home for their growing collection that there's a reasonably rare, but lovely looking Yawman & Erbe card catalog for sale right now.
Syndication link: https://www.reddit.com/r/antinet/comments/14jlk69/beautiful_18_drawer_yawman_erbe_card_catalog/
Tags
Annotators
URL
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spectrum.ieee.org spectrum.ieee.org
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www.imdb.com www.imdb.com
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https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1568150/
Based on having watched the documentary Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work and the depictions of Rivers' card index in the film and using her hands and a lateral file for scale, her cards seem to have been 3 x 5" index cards.
cross reference: https://hypothes.is/a/RvLTZjCQEe2uuaNwpTBNuA
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www.atlasstationers.com www.atlasstationers.com
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At 9¢/card these are very expensive in comparison to bulk cards which usually can be found for 1-2¢/card. The difference however is in the luxuriousness of the silky smooth texture. Whether you're writing with your favorite fountain pen or a carefully chosen pencil. I don't know if these are the same brand of Bristol cards that Vladimir Nabokov used for his writing, but one could easily image him using such lovely material.
These provide a very smooth writing experience for fountain pens, gel pens and pencils. I particularly love the way my Tennessee Reds and Blackwing 602s glide over their surface. In comparison to some Japanese stationery, I'd put these cards somewhere between tsuru tsuru (slippery) and sara sara (smooth). If you're looking for a toothier paper, you'll definitely want to look elsewhere. They take fountain pens pretty well with no feathering or ghosting. My juiciest fountain pen dries in about 15 seconds, while a drier extra fine is dry in about 7 seconds, so it may take some care not to smear ink if you're on the messier end of the spectrum.
Pencil erases reasonably well, though there may be some minimal residual ghosting here. At 205 gsm, they've got a satisfying thickness unseen in most index cards and one is unlikely to rip or crinkle them when erasing. They're also thick enough that the wettest Sharpie won't bleed much less ghost through. You have to hold a card up to a backlight to see the appearance of any ghosting through it and even then, not well.
For the sticklers used to using standard 4 x 6" index cards, one should take note that the dimensions of these are slightly shorter in both dimensions—they're closer to 3.94" x 5.91". This means that you might have to take some care that while flipping through mixed company of cards your Exacompta can potentially hide between larger imperial sized cards. They're also close to, but not quite A6 in size either (105 x 148.5 mm or 4.1 x 5.8 inches).
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blog.ayjay.org blog.ayjay.org
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circulation is the lifeblood of reading.
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- May 2023
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www.levenger.com www.levenger.com
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- Set of 52 weekly 3 x 5 accordion tri-folded cards - Undated planner with ruled lines and shaded blank areas for writing appointments, notes or lists on each day of the week - Thick and substantial 250-gsm card stock - Friendly to all types of ink - Unfolded, 9W x 5H
A 9 x 5" card that folds in three to make a 3 x 5" card for planning out one's entire week.
This is quite clever with respect the space of cards like Analog and 3x5 Life.
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www.levenger.com www.levenger.com
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Slightly different than today/next/someday, Levenger sells 90 today/tomorrow/someday 3 x 5" index cards for $14.50 (or $10.00 on sale).
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www.3x5life.com www.3x5life.com
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What's included in the 3x5 Life System: 6 months of Daily cards **Schedule version** (186 cards) Monthly/Year Goal Cards (1 year of cards) Habit Tracker Cards (1 year of cards) Weekly Review Cards (1 year of cards) Storage Box with 3x5 logo on lid Monthly dividers to keep your storage box organized Mobile Phone Sleeve Stainless Steel Stand MINI COURSE: Outlining how best to utilize the system
via: https://www.3x5life.com/collections/frontpage/products/3x5-life-system-with-mini-course
They apparently offer a mini course outlining the system.
One wonders how much "why" they offer?
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www.3x5life.com www.3x5life.com
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Compare with other products in this category: - Analog (Jeff Sheldon productivity system) - Memindex - Bullet Journal - Frictionless Capture Cards - Pile of Index Cards
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www.penaddict.com www.penaddict.com
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The Frictionless Tools offered by Aaron Mahnke of Frictionless
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www.thecramped.com www.thecramped.com
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Frictionless Tools Capture Cards – Red — These are my index cards of choice. More sturdy than the standard variety. I like the grid design. Takes fountain pen ink better too. Unfortunately, they are no longer available. I purchased several packages before they stopped being sold.
Frictionless Tools' Capture Cards were custom 3 x 5" index cards, printed in vertical orientation with a square grid pattern on most of the card. The top was usually split in half between equal grey and red rectangles for titles/dates/headings and a slightly thinner single long rectangle as a footer at the bottom.
Patrick Rhone indicates on 2018-01-24 that they had quit manufacturing them by that date.
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www.itu.int www.itu.int
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www.kickstarter.com www.kickstarter.com
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Each Analog Card Pack include 50 cards - enough cards to get you through an entire month (with a few extras in case you need to start over). 35 Today Cards 10 Next Cards 5 Someday Cards
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- wikipedia:en=Cross-site_request_forgery
- hsts
- wikipedia:en=Session_hijacking
- http:header=strict-transport-security
- http:header=x-content-type-options
- wikipedia:en=Clickjacking
- http
- wikipedia:en=Man-in-the-middle_attack
- http:header=referrer-policy
- sri
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- wikipedia:en=Data_breach
- http:header=x-frame-options
- csp
- http:header=content-security-policy
Annotators
URL
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www.ebay.com www.ebay.com
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4" x 6" Card File Cabinet
Overall measurements for Steelmaster Index Card file for 4 x 6" index cards are 16” deep x 12.25” wide x 5.25” tall.
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www.reddit.com www.reddit.com
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How big is your ZettelKasten? .t3_13b0b5c._2FCtq-QzlfuN-SwVMUZMM3 { --postTitle-VisitedLinkColor: #9b9b9b; --postTitleLink-VisitedLinkColor: #9b9b9b; --postBodyLink-VisitedLinkColor: #989898; }
reply to u/jordynfly at https://www.reddit.com/r/Zettelkasten/comments/13b0b5c/how_big_is_your_zettelkasten/
The idea of notes per day comes up occasionally, here's some discussion on the last go-round: https://www.reddit.com/r/Zettelkasten/comments/11z08fq/comment/jdbnchv/?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=web2x&context=3
Many people, especially when getting started, get wrapped up in the idea of doing this for "increased productivity" or the goal of being as prolific as Niklas Luhmann. I would submit (and think others would back me up anecdotally) that there's far more to the practice than raw (or measurable) productivity as the single, driving value. Perhaps approach it as a way to sharpen and improve your thinking instead? If you're seeing life-like behavior already, that's a good sign of appreciating some of the hidden benefits which are difficult to describe and which are likely more valuable than the "productivity" goals many may have.
I've noted before that S.D. Goitein had 1/3 less index cards than Luhmann over an equivalent research lifetime, but produced a 1/3 more written output (in terms of books and journal articles). Others like Aby Warburg and Gotthard Deutsch (70,000 notes) had significant practices, but their writing output was marginal at best, though their impact and influence were outsized, in part, I would suggest as a result of their zettelkasten work.
Others like Roland Barthes (generally low card output of \~12,500) and Deutsch also used their fichier boîte/card index/zettelkasten as teaching tools, so while their written outputs may have varied considerably, their teaching practices were incredibly influential for the students and generations they encountered afterwards.
This being said, I'll share my current easily countable lower bound dating roughly from 2016 as:
- 15,200 notes
- 32,000+ links
- 2.1M words
(Having a zk in digital form makes it reasonably easy to do these sorts of counts versus analog methods of note making.)
Some additional pathways to learning and practicing, including my own, can be found here: https://www.reddit.com/r/Zettelkasten/comments/11ay28d/how_did_you_teach_yourself_zettelkasten/
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micro.blog micro.blog
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For $1,900.00 ?
reply to rogerscrafford at tk
Fine furniture comes at a fine price. 🗃️🤩 I suspect that it won't sell for quite a while and one could potentially make an offer at a fraction of that to take it off their hands. It might bear considering that if one had a practice large enough to fill half or more, then that price probably wouldn't seem too steep for the long term security and value of the contents.
On a price per card of storage for some of the cheaper cardboard or metal boxes you're going to pay about $0.02-0.03 per card, but you'd need about 14 of those to equal this and those aren't always easy to stack and access regularly. With this, even at the full $1,900, you're looking at storage costs of $0.10/card, but you've got a lot more ease of use which will save you a lot of time and headache as more than adequate compensation, particularly if you're regularly using the approximately 20,400 index cards it would hold. Not everyone has the same esthetic, but I suspect that most would find that this will look a lot nicer in your office than 14 cheap cardboard boxes. That many index cards even at discount rates are going to cost you about $825 just in cards much less beautiful, convenient, and highly usable storage.
Even for some of the more prolific zettelkasten users, this sort of storage is about 20 years of use and if you compare it with $96/year for Notion or $130/year for Evernote, you're probably on par for cost either way, but at least with the wooden option, you don't have to worry about your note storage provider going out of business a few years down the line. Even if you go the "free" Obsidian route, with computers/storage/backups over time, you're probably not going to come out ahead in the long run. It's not all apples to apples comparison and there are differences in some of the affordances, but on balance and put into some perspective, it's probably not the steep investment it may seem.
And as an added bonus, while you're slowly filling up drawers, as a writer you might appreciate the slowly decreasing wine/whiskey bottle storage over time? A 5 x 8 drawer ought to fit three bottles of wine or as many fifths of Scotch. It'll definitely accommodate a couple of magnums of Jack Daniels. 🥃🍸🍷My experience also tells me that an old fashioned glass can make a convenient following block in card index boxes.
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- Apr 2023
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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Catalog cards were 2 by 5 inches (5 cm × 13 cm); the Harvard College size.
Early library card catalogs used cards that were 2 x 5" cards, the Harvard College size, before the standardization of 3 x 5" index cards.
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zettelkasten.de zettelkasten.de
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The result of working with this technique for a long time is a kind of second memory, an alter ego with which you can always communicate. It has, similar to our own memory, no pre-planned comprehensive order, no hierarchy, and surely no linear structure like a book. And by that very fact, it is alive independently of its author. The entire note collection can only be described as a mess, but at least it is a mess with a non-arbitrary internal structure.
Luhmann attributes (an independent) life to his zettelkasten. It is effectuated by internal branching, opportunities for links or connections, and a register as well as lack of pre-planned comprehensive order, lack of hierarchy, and lack of linear structure.
Which of these is necessary for other types of "life"? Can any be removed? Compare with other systems.
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- Mar 2023
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www.shopbrodart.com www.shopbrodart.com
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Brodart Full-Length Single Charging Tray<br /> Full- length charging tray with 1,000-card capacity<br /> Price: $96.32
- Adjustable steel follower block with automatic lock
- Felt pads on tray bottom protect desktop
- Full-length charging tray for countertop use
- 4"H x 4"W x 16"D
- Holds 1,000 5"H x 3"W cards
- Includes antimicrobial finish
- Made in the USA
See also: https://hypothes.is/a/ao89RMQmEe2zIvsu3lf6kw for a smaller version
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www.shopbrodart.com www.shopbrodart.com
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Brodart Mini Single Charging Tray Mini single charging tray with 600-card capacity More Info Price: $76.76
- Adjustable steel follower block with automatic lock
- Felt pads on tray bottom protect desktop
- Mini charging tray fits on your lap
- 4"H x 4"W x 8"D
- Holds 600 5"H x 3"W cards
- Includes antimicrobial finish
- Made in the USA
This could be used for a modern day Memindex box for portrait oriented 3 x 5" index cards.
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books.googleusercontent.com books.googleusercontent.comcontent1
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2 3-4 x 4 3-4 inches in size, made of seal grain , real sealor Russia leather, in a thoro
Memindex dimensions mentioned in a 1904 advertisement<br /> cards: 2 3/4 x 4 1/2 inches<br /> case: 2 3/4 x 4 3/4 inches
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www.ebay.com www.ebay.com
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1930s Wilson Memindex Co Index Card Organizer Pre Rolodex Ad Price List Brochure
archived page: https://web.archive.org/web/20230310010450/https://www.ebay.com/itm/165910049390
Includes price lists
List of cards includes: - Dated tab cards for a year from any desired. - Blank tab cards for jottings arranged by subject. - These were sold in 1/2 or 1/3 cut formats - Pocket Alphabets for jottings arranged by letter. - Cash Account Cards [without tabs]. - Extra Record Cards for permanent memoranda. - Monthly Guides for quick reference to future dates. - Blank Guides for filing records by subject.. - Alphabet Guides for filing alphabetically.
Memindex sales brochures recommended the 3 x 5" cards (which had apparently been standardized by 1930 compared to the 5 1/2" width from earlier versions around 1906) because they could be used with other 3 x 5" index card systems.
In the 1930s Wilson Memindex Company sold more of their vest pocket sized 2 1/4 x 4 1/2" systems than 3 x 5" systems.
Some of the difference between the vest sized and regular sized systems choice was based on the size of the particular user's handwriting. It was recommended that those with larger handwriting use the larger cards.
By the 1930's at least the Memindex tag line "An Automatic Memory" was being used, which also gave an indication of the ubiquity of automatization of industrialized life.
The Memindex has proved its success in more than one hundred kinds of business. Highly recommended by men in executive positions, merchants, manufacturers, managers, .... etc.
Notice the gendering of users specifically as men here.
Features: - Sunday cards were sold separately and by my reading were full length tabs rather than 1/6 tabs like the other six days of the week - Lids were custom fit to the bases and needed to be ordered together - The Memindex Jr. held 400 cards versus the larger 9 inch standard trays which had space for 800 cards and block (presumably a block to hold them up or at an angle when partially empty).
The Memindex Jr., according to a price sheet in the 1930s, was used "extensively as an advertising gift".
The Memindex system had cards available in bundles of 100 that were labeled with the heading "Things to Keep in Sight".
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312 Oak Midget Tray WWeesCoverEquipped same as]No.324,price.55CTohold cards14x3.No.423.Equippedasabove,tohold65Ccards 24x4, priceNo. 533. Standard size.to hold card 3x5, equip-ped as above,price..........No. 7- Nickel ....PrepaidinU. S.onreceiptofpriceNo. 324OakMidgetTraytheCoverWeis75cNo. 644. To hold cards4x6,equipped$1.10(StyleNos.312,423.533and644)asabove......(Style No. 324,213.335and446.)Send for catalog showing many other time-saving office devices. Our goods are soldyour dealer does not carry our line we can supply you direct from the factory.To hold cards 24x4. lengthof tray2%in..equippedwithAtoZindexand100record cards 45cNo. 213. To hold cards 14x3in,, lenght of tray 24in..equipped asabove40cNo.335.Standardsize,tohold3x5 cards.equipped asabove50c80cNo. 446. To hold 4x6 cards,equipped asabove.Any of these trays sent pre-paid in U. S. on receipt ofpriceby stationers everywhere. IfNo. 6 Union St.The WeisManufacturing Co.,Monroe,Mich.,U. S.A.Please mention SYSTEM when writing to advertisers
Notice the 1 1/4" x 3" cards, 2 1/4 x 4" cards in addition to the 3 x 5" and 4 x 6".
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boffosocko.com boffosocko.com
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The width of the drawers of both McDowell & Craig and Steelcase desks is just wide enough to accommodate two rows of 4 x 6" index cards side by side with enough space that one might insert a sizeable, but thin divider between them
I suspect that this is a specific design choice in a world in which card indexes often featured in the office environment of the mid-twenty first century.
Were other manufacturers so inclined to do this? Is there any evidence that this was by design? Did people use it for this? Was there a standard drawer width?
The metal inserts to section off the desk drawer area could have also been used for this sort of purpose and had cut outs to allow for expanding and contracting the interior space.
Keep in mind that some of these tanker desks were also manufactured with specific spaces or areas intended for typewriters or for storing them.
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www.reddit.com www.reddit.com
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Analog Supplies
I should mention that the Stockroom Plus 4 x 6" cards I got a while back are great with even my juiciest fountain pens. They're some of the least expensive gridded cards I've been able to find and are a fraction of the cost of the Exacompta.
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zettelkasten.de zettelkasten.de
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A Zettelkasten is a system of notes that fit the criteria of being a system. Being alive vs. being a machine is a good metaphor to understand the difference. A Zettelkasten is alive, a conventional note taking system is a machine.
I'm not the only one to think of zettelkasten as "living"...
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- Feb 2023
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spectator.org spectator.org
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One of his secrets was a stack of 4 x 6 inch note cards that he compiled over the span of four decades.
Though other sources like the CBS News article look like 3 x 5" index cards, John Hunt indicates that Ronald Reagan used 4 x 6" inch cards for his notes.
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www.cbsnews.com www.cbsnews.com
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It turns out he had a secret arsenal: stacks of 3x5 index cards filled with one-liners, which he kept in his desk to append to speeches.
Ronald Reagan used 3 x 5" index cards.
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abcnews.go.com abcnews.go.com
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Tesla will offer a software update free of charge to customers, the agency said.
Aren't these updates pushed over the air?
So now every time someone releases a software update, media is going to call it a recall? 🤔
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www.edwinwenink.xyz www.edwinwenink.xyzAbout1
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Here’s a basic hermeneutic insight for you: interpretation requires a form of application which renews the interpretandum by engaging it in a new context. Yes, “something in it anarchives” itself, but that’s also the seed for the old to enter into something new and to stay “alive”.
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www.reddit.com www.reddit.com
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First, I am a big fan of Chris’ posts. He is our best historian. Second, I did not challenge his ideas but asked for clarification about some terms which I believe are of general interest. Chris is well-positioned to answer my questions. Third, statistical mechanics is more about microscopic systems that do not evolve. As we know, ideas (from concepts to theories) evolve and generally emerge from previous ideas. Emergence is the key concept here. I suggested Phenomics as a potential metaphor because it represents well the emergence of some systems (phenotypes) from pre-existing ones (genotypes).
reply to u/New-Investigator-623 at https://www.reddit.com/r/antinet/comments/10r6uwp/comment/j6wy4mf/?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=web2x&context=3
Ideas, concepts, propositions, et al. in this context are just the nebulous dictionary definitions. Their roots and modern usage have so much baggage now that attempting to separate them into more technical meanings is difficult unless you've got a solid reason to do so. I certainly don't here. If you want to go down some of the rabbit hole on the differences, you might appreciate Winston Perez' work on concept modeling which he outlines with respect to innovation and creativity here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGQ-dW7yfPc.
I debated on a more basic framing of chemistry or microbiology versus statistical mechanics or even the closely related statistical thermodynamics, but for the analogy here, I think it works even if it may scare some off as "too hard". With about 20 linear feet of books in my library dedicated to biology, physics, math, engineering with a lot of direct focus on evolutionary theory, complexity theory, and information theory I would suggest that the underlying physics of statistical mechanics and related thermodynamics is precisely what allows the conditions for systems to evolve and emerge, for this is exactly what biological (and other) systems have done. For those intrigued, perhaps Stuart Kauffman's Origins of Order (if you're technically minded) or At Home in the Universe (if you're less technically oriented) are interesting with respect to complexity and emergence. There's also an interesting similar analogy to be made between a zettelkasten system and the systems described in Peter Hoffman's book Life's Rachet. I think that if carefully circumscribed, one could define a zettelkasten to be "alive". That's a bigger thesis for another time. I was also trying to stay away from the broad idea of "atomic" and drawing attention to "atomic notes" as a concept. I'm still waiting for some bright physicist to talk about sub-atomic notes and what that might mean... I see where you're going with phenomics, but chemistry and statistical mechanics were already further afield than the intended audience who already have issues with "The Two Cultures". Getting into phenomics was just a bridge too far... not to mention, vastly more difficult to attempt to draw(!!!). 😉 Besides, I didn't want Carol Greider dropping into my DMs asking me why didn't I include telomeres or chancing an uncomfortable LAX-BWI flight and a train/cab ride into Baltimore with Peter Agre who's popped up next to me on more than one occasion.
Honestly, I was much less satisfied with the nebulousness of "solution of life"... fortunately no one seems to be complaining about that or their inability to grapple with catalysis. 🤷🏼
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- Jan 2023
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www.imdb.com www.imdb.com
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www.reddit.com www.reddit.com
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thebaffler.com thebaffler.com
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emergentism. The argument here is that once a certain level of complexity is reached, there is a kind of qualitative leap where completely new sorts of physical laws can “emerge”—ones that are premised on, but cannot be reduced to, what came before.
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But in the new full-blown capitalist version of evolution, where the drive for accumulation had no limits, life was no longer an end in itself, but a mere instrument for the propagation of DNA sequences—and so the very existence of play was something of a scandal.
Could refuting the idea of accumulation without limits (and thus capitalism for capitalism's sake) help give humans more focus on what is useful/valuable?
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To exercise one’s capacities to their fullest extent is to take pleasure in one’s own existence, and with sociable creatures, such pleasures are proportionally magnified when performed in company. From the Russian perspective, this does not need to be explained. It is simply what life is. We don’t have to explain why creatures desire to be alive. Life is an end in itself. And if what being alive actually consists of is having powers—to run, jump, fight, fly through the air—then surely the exercise of such powers as an end in itself does not have to be explained either. It’s just an extension of the same principle.
I'm not sure I like that Graeber waves away the question "why play?" here. I don't think there's an equivalency to the "why life?" question.
It will take some additional thinking to build something up to refute this idea however.
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forum.gettingthingsdone.com forum.gettingthingsdone.com
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May 19, 2004 #1 Hello everyone here at the forum. I want to thank everyone here for all of the helpful and informative advice on GTD. I am a beginner in the field of GTD and wish to give back some of what I have received. What is posted below is not much of tips-and-tricks I found it very helpful in understanding GTD. The paragraphs posted below are from the book Lila, by Robert Pirsig. Some of you may have read the book and some may have not. It’s an outstanding read on philosophy. Robert Pirsig wrote his philosophy using what David Allen does, basically getting everything out of his head. I found Robert Pirsigs writing on it fascinating and it gave me a wider perspective in using GTD. I hope you all enjoy it, and by all means check out the book, Lila: An Inquiry Into Morals. Thanks everyone. arthur
Arthur introduces the topic of Robert Pirsig and slips into the GTD conversation on 2004-05-19.
Was this a precursor link to the Pile of Index Cards in 2006?
Note that there doesn't seem to be any discussion of any of the methods with respect to direct knowledge management until the very end in which arthur returns almost four months later to describe a 4 x 6" card index with various topics he's using for filing away his knowledge on cards. He's essentially recreated the index card based commonplace book suggested by Robert Pirsig in Lila.
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About twenty thousand of those cards are 3 × 5 inches and seven thousand 5 × 8 inches.
Goitein's zettelkasten is comprised of about 20,000 3 x 5" index cards and 7,000 5 x 8" index cards.
Link to: https://hypothes.is/a/TEiQ5H1rEe2_Amfzi4XXmg
While not directly confirmed (yet), due to the seeming correspondence of the number of cards and their corpus descriptions, it's likely that the 20,000 3 x 5" cards were his notes covering individual topics while the 7,000 5 x 8" cards were his notes and descriptions of a single fragment from the Cairo Geniza.
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www.amazon.com www.amazon.com
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https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08BZWJDHN/
Example of a modern day waste book for keeping track of one's accounting.
dimensions 3.5 x 5"
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www.niemanlab.org www.niemanlab.org
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More news organizations will realize they are in the business of impact, not eyeballs
Journalistic outlets should be in the business of creating impact and not scrounging merely for eyeballs and exposure.
Exposure may be useful for advertising revenue with respect to surveillance capitalism, but if you're not informing along the way, not making a measurable impact, then you're not living, not making a change.
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www.govinfo.gov www.govinfo.gov
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TIPOFF was created in 1987 for the express purpose of using biographic information drawn from intelligence products for watchlisting purposes. In 1987 TIPOFF began keeping track of suspected terrorists literally with a shoebox and 3 by 5 cards. Since then the program has evolved into a sophisticated interagency counterterrorism tool specifically designed to enhance the security of our nation's borders.
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- Dec 2022
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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The drawers are jammed with jokes typed on 4-by-6-inch cards — 52 drawers, stacked waist-high, like a card catalog of a certain comedian’s life’s work, a library of laughs.
Joan Rivers had an index card catalog with 52 drawers of 4-by-6-inch index cards containing jokes she'd accumulated over her lifetime of work. She had 18 2 drawer stackable steel files that were common during the mid-1900s. Rather than using paper inserts with the label frames on the card catalogs, she used a tape-based label maker to designate her drawers.
Scott Currie, who worked with Melissa Rivers on a book about her mother, Joan Rivers, at the comedian’s former Manhattan office. Many of her papers are stored there.Credit...Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times
Note carefully that the article says 52 drawers, but the image in the article shows a portion of what can be surmised to be 18 2-drawer cabinets for a total of 36 drawers. (14 2-drawer cabinets are pictured, but based on size and perspective, there's one row of 4 2-drawer boxes not shown.)
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johnmount.github.io johnmount.github.io
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If we consider organizations (universities, corporations, governments and so on) as organisms (a view I do not agree with) we can argue some increase in intelligence and institutional memory through record keeping and information technology. But, in my opinion, organizations don’t have significant emergent reasoning capabilities that aren’t really more properly attributed to their members.
What does Hidalgo have to say with respect to this quote? Can we push this argument?
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www.allocine.fr www.allocine.fr
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facundomaciasescritor.wordpress.com facundomaciasescritor.wordpress.com
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No es magia.
I love that he points this out explicitly.
Some don't see the underlying processes of complexity within note taking methods and as a result ascribe magical properties to what are emergent properties or combinatorial creativity.
See also: The Ghost in the Machine zettel from Luhmann
Somehow there's an odd dichotomy between the boredom of such a simple method and people seeing magic within it at the same time. This is very similar to those who feel that life must be divinely created despite the evidence brought by evolutionary and complexity theory. In this arena, there is a lot more evolved complexity which makes the system harder to see compared to the simpler zettelkasten process.
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directlyyours.com directlyyours.com
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1346-4 025719134648 BDY13464 BDY-13464 BDY 13464 Buddy Products Black Single Drawer Card File, 4 x 6, 1346-4
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I have about fourteen or sixteen weeks to do this, so I'm breaking the course into an "intro" section that covers some basic stuff like affordances, and other insights into how tech functions. There's a section on AI which is nothing but critical appraisals on AI from a variety of areas. And there's a section on Social Media, which is the most well formed section in terms of readings.
https://zirk.us/@shengokai/109440759945863989
If the individuals in an environment don't understand or perceive the affordances available to them, can the interactions between them and the environment make it seem as if the environment possesses agency?
cross reference: James J. Gibson book The Senses Considered as Perceptual Systems (1966)
People often indicate that social media "causes" outcomes among groups of people who use it. Eg: Social media (via algorithmic suggestions of fringe content) causes people to become radicalized.
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-Wp0sLpnMY
PVA Glue used in bookbinding, but isn't inexpensive.
- Tacky glue - okay
- rubber cement - not great
- elmer's glue - not great, tears esp. for 2 layers
- Mod podge - pulls nicely and strong
- mod podge hard shell - cracks, not great
- PVA Glue - the best of the group
Recommendations in order: PVA, Tacky Glue, Mod Podge (regular)
Brush on top edge and do two coats. Don't get it down between sheets.
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- Nov 2022
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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Victor Margolin's note taking and writing process
- Collecting materials and bibliographies in files based on categories (for chapters)
- Reads material, excerpts/note making on 5 x 7" note cards
- Generally with a title (based on visual in video)
- excerpts have page number references (much like literature notes, the refinement linking and outlining happens separately later in his mapping and writing processes)
- filed in a box with tabbed index cards by chapter number with name
- video indicates that he does write on both sides of cards breaking the usual rule to write only on one side
- Uses large pad of newsprint (roughly 18" x 24" based on visualization) to map out each chapter in visual form using his cards in a non-linear way. Out of the diagrams and clusters he creates a linear narrative form.
- Tapes diagrams to wall
- Writes in text editor on computer as he references the index cards and the visual map.
"I've developed a way of working to make this huge project of a world history of design manageable."<br /> —Victor Margolin
Notice here that Victor Margolin doesn't indicate that it was a process that he was taught, but rather "I've developed". Of course he was likely taught or influenced on the method, particularly as a historian, and that what he really means to communicate is that this is how he's evolved that process.
"I begin with a large amount of information." <br /> —Victor Margolin
"As I begin to write a story begins to emerge because, in fact, I've already rehearsed this story in several different ways by getting the information for the cards, mapping it out and of course the writing is then the third way of telling the story the one that will ultimately result in the finished chapters."<br /> —Victor Margolin
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https://www.ikea.com/us/en/p/kuggis-box-with-lid-transparent-black-00514033/#content
7 x 10.25 x 6"
This is big enough and just about the perfect size for 4 x 6" index cards. The lid has a slight indent to make it easily stackable.
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www.amazon.com www.amazon.com
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www.shopbrodart.com www.shopbrodart.com
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These should easily fit 4 x 6" index cards as well as card dividers with taller tabs which commercially don't often get taller than 4 1/2".
See also microfiche divider guides.
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- cardboard boxes
- boxes
- microfiche
- microfiche boxes
- Brodart
- archival materials
- zettelkasten boxes
- 4 x 6" index cards
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www.instagram.com www.instagram.com
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https://www.instagram.com/p/CeWV6xBuZUN/?hl=en
Ryan Holiday in the past has made custom 4 x 6" index cards for taking notes for his individual projects.
Pictured: A custom slip with 11 light gray lines, small margins all around, and at the top the printed words: "Courage. Temperance. Justice. Wisdom."
<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Billy Oppenheimer, research assistant to Ryan Holiday</span> in The Notecard System: Capture, Organize, and Use Everything You Read, Watch, and Listen To - Billy Oppenheimer (<time class='dt-published'>11/03/2022 16:53:44</time>)</cite></small>
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I used to do this sort of practice before, but I used buckslips instead.
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- Oct 2022
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Local file Local file
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he three-by-five inch slipsof thin paper eventually filled about eighty wooden file drawers.And he classified the notes day by day, under topical-chronologicalheadings that eventually extended from 4639 B.C. to 1949, theyear after his death.
Frederic L. Paxson kept a collection of 3 x 5 " slips of thin paper that filled eighty wooden file drawers which he organized using topical-chronologic headings spanning 4639 BCE to 1949.
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www.flotsamandfork.com www.flotsamandfork.com
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Local file Local file
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The most important thing about research is to know when to stop.How does one recognize the moment? When I was eighteen orthereabouts, my mother told me that when out with a young man Ishould always leave a half-hour before I wanted to. Although I wasnot sure how this might be accomplished, I recognized the advice assound, and exactly the same rule applies to research. One must stopbefore one has finished; otherwise, one will never stop and neverfinish.
Barbara Tuchman analogized stopping one's research to going out on a date: one should leave off a half-hour before you really want to.
Liink to: This sounds suspiciously like advice about when to start writing, but slightly in reverse: https://hypothes.is/a/WeoX9DUOEe2-HxsJf2P8vw
One might also liken these processes to the idea of divergence and convergence as described by Tiago Forte and others.
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