105: Atomic Notes
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So here we are on a completely non-regularly scheduled recording time.
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Yep, no schedule.
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Well, you say that.
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There was, I wish I had the audio of our last recording session
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where you said to me, "What if we record every second Tuesday now?"
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Because as you said at the time, you've never heard me so happy, right?
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Like it was kind of like a moment where it was like almost unbelievable to me to hear you suggest that we set a time on our calendar that we could, as I think I said at the time, put a repeating rule on.
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I mean, yes, you did sound like the happiest boy in the world.
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And you were so happy.
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I found it surprising and not really quite what I was expecting.
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because if I know when we're recording,
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I know when the show's coming out
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and I can answer questions that I get
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and deal with administrative stuff
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that I need to deal with without either A,
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just randomly guessing or B,
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needing to pin you down for a minute to ask you, right?
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So like knowing is great, but nevertheless,
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our schedule was immediately broken the first time.
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We didn't even get to one of these scheduled recordings.
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Well, I mean, yeah, you are correct that I was trying to do is solve the problem of let's have something...
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Here, Myke, let me describe to you what the advantage of schedules are.
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Please, please, I need to know, it's so useful.
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It occurred to me that numerous times over the past many years,
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it's like, oh, it might be useful to have like a default recording day.
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That is the thing is really what I was thinking of is,
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let's have a day that if we don't say anything,
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we just know is the day that is the recording day.
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That's what I was aiming for.
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And that is the real genuine relief for me of knowing roughly when I can plan to,
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Because there are times, many times, where we'll have a date that we were going to do
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and we move it for some reason, like we did this one.
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And then the day before, I'm like, "Is he remembered?"
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Because history has proven that there are many times where we had a day, we moved a
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day because you've got something happening, and then you forget.
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Yeah, I think you have also developed a pretty good radar for when is Grey very busy with
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some self-contained project?
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As like, when is he extremely likely to have completely forgotten that the outside world
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Like, I think you've gotten a good sense for that over the years.
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So you're not wrong.
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Honestly, the last couple of weeks have been like a real good, like, you know, from the
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the time before you put out the Gray Was Wrong video to now,
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I can sense when you're off the radar a little bit, right?
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And at that time, it's like, fine.
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I know if something's urgent, I can flag you down,
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but otherwise I'm just gonna batch up my questions
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and we'll deal with them later on, right?
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- Yeah, exactly.
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- And so when that happens,
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I know that there is a strong likelihood
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that if I can tell that you're still in that mode,
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I need to like really triple confirm with you
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that you know we're recording.
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- Yes, yes, yeah, you're not wrong, you're not wrong at all.
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But yeah, so I was just been trying to do a bunch of,
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much more longer term planning
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and just thinking things through and I was like,
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"Oh, hey, what I would like for Cortex is just some,"
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like you said it exactly correctly, I was trying to think,
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"I want a repeating rule for this
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"that can just be the default
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if we don't say anything else.
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But then you are correct that we agreed on that
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and probably not, but two days later,
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like my whole life exploded and I was like,
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well, I'm gonna be shockingly busy until this thing is done.
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So it didn't even occur to me when I was like,
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we gotta move back that Cortex recording date,
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like this isn't happening.
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And I think the first thing you said to me is like,
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oh, you've already broken the schedule
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that you promised me instantly. - We didn't get to one.
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We didn't even get to one.
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I'm so sorry, Myke.
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- But look, I had notice.
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All I ever wanted was notice.
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You just mentioned something.
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I want to come back to the scheduling thing a little bit
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'cause you are doing some interesting stuff
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with scheduling at the moment in your life,
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which is very fascinating to me.
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You just put up a video called Weekend Wednesday.
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You've completely upended what a week looks like.
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So yes, you are doing some interesting things.
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- Yeah, well, you're also breaking the timeline here, Myke,
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because I haven't put it up yet.
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We're recording before it goes up.
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- I know, but we've specifically said we're gonna wait,
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although you've made that promise
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that you've made to me again a million times,
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where it's, I have a video that's coming out.
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Definitely coming out Tuesday.
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- Yeah, no, 100%, it's coming out Tuesday, Myke.
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- I believe that you believe it.
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- Right. - Right?
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Which is why when I just had to tell someone
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when the episode was coming out,
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I said, "Most likely Wednesday."
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Because it could be Thursday,
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because the video might not come out on Tuesday,
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because that's also like a thing that's happened many times
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and I'm not criticizing, right?
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But all I'm trying to prove in this discussion here is
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we're a good team because I know how you work, right?
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- It's very kind of you, yes.
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That's excellent.
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- I mean, but it's, you know,
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people work in different ways.
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Like, Cortex is a thing that you do,
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but you have a much more time consuming thing that you do.
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Podcasts are the thing that I do.
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Like, it's all different, right?
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Like, you know, this could easily be the other way around,
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but it's not.
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Like, this is just the way that it is,
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and I'm more flexible in my schedule than yours can be,
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because there are like much more dependencies.
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So like, anyway.
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But there was something you mentioned around,
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you were saying about like looking at your schedule
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and thinking about things.
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It pointed to something that I've been acutely aware of
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right now, and that I'm referring to as being pandemic busy,
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that I think could become a real problem.
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- What do you mean by pandemic busy?
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- Right, so I think a lot of people right now,
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because their lives have changed so much,
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they have different demands on their time,
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they're using their time in different ways,
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that people are starting to fill this time with stuff.
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Maybe they have a new project
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that they wanna work on, a side project,
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or they are taking on more responsibilities in their life
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in some way, whether it's with work
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or different family responsibilities
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or social responsibilities,
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that I'm worried that when life returns to normal,
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people are gonna be really overwhelmed
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because they've taken on so many things during the pandemic
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that their normal lives would not allow them to do.
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And I'm worried that this is gonna become a problem
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for people afterwards.
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I'm also really worried about the ergonomics concern I have about people,
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which is that like people working from home now,
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we spoke about this before not considering their ergonomics,
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think that they're totally fine because it didn't start hurting immediately.
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But it doesn't, it takes months to like,
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so like I feel like now we're in like the points like six months, right?
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Now we're in the time when people's bodies are going to start breaking if they
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weren't paying attention. That's like a whole other thing.
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But this is this new thing that I'm worried about.
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That's a good point. Yeah. For sure.
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There's a lot of really wonky home office setups where you're like,
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"Oh yeah, this stool and this card table is perfectly acceptable for me to work on."
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And then six months later, you're like, "Why is my back hurt so much?"
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Exactly. Or like, "Oh, I can just like stare down at my laptop the whole time.
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I don't need to elevate and get an external keyboard.
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Like that's not something I need."
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It's like, "No, that's something you definitely need."
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Okay. So, yeah.
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So pandemic busy, what I thought you meant by this is like,
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"Oh, people are just filling up their time with make work, you know,
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because they've got nothing to do."
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But so, so this is, it's actually a good point.
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So what's that rule?
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Like, you know, work expands to fill the time that you have or something like, it
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feels like this is a variation on people always have a certain number of projects
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or obligations in their life.
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And so like you, so you think people are filling back up to whatever their
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personal level of like, this is the optimal number of projects that I want to work on.
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They're filling up to whatever that is without considering the fact that they're
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You're gonna need a lot more slack in the system when, if, real life returns back and
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comes in with like, "Oh hey, remember commutes?
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Remember all the office stuff that you have to deal with?
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Remember social obligations?"
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So that's what you're concerned about, it's like people are loading up and it's gonna
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be like system shock later.
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It's a really interesting point.
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That's a really interesting point.
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- This goes into my personal theory,
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which like where I am right now in my life
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is believing things will go back to normal,
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but it's going to be a long time, right?
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Like that's where I am right now, right?
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Where it's like, I believe there will be
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a restored sense of normality in our future,
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but it's still a way away.
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Like it's still at least a year away, right?
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Like that's kind of where I am right now.
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And you know, like we can argue the specifics,
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but basically the idea of like,
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we don't think about lockdowns anymore, right?
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It's like a thing in our lives.
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And you know, like we start thinking about like,
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oh, we should work in offices.
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Now there is a whole other question,
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which I do want to get into more at some point in the future
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where I believe the office work is just going to change
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because of the economics of it,
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not because of the disease, right?
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Not because of the virus, right?
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So like there's a lot of companies now that are like,
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holy (beep) we're saving millions.
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how do we have these offices, right?
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And so like, I don't believe all corporate real estate
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will go away, but I think significant chunks of it will.
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'Cause there are always jobs
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that people work better in person,
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or there are always situations where like,
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there are people that can't work comfortably at home.
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It's not easy for them.
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Like they don't like it and it's good to have options.
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But I can imagine a situation where lots of big companies
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have maybe 50% of the office space that they had before.
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So like that's like a thing
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that I think there will be changes,
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but the idea of like the way people live their lives,
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like I think it will return to a sense of normality,
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but we're still a way away from it,
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which is why this thing is concerning to me
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of like we still got a long time to go.
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People don't wanna be bored.
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People don't wanna be sitting around doing nothing.
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And or people see this as a time of like,
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look at this extra time I have.
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I have this project that I've always wanted to do.
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I've now saved two hours of my day every single day
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through not needing to commute.
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I can finally do that thing.
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and then they get used to that thing being in their life
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and then they need those two hours back.
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Like it's just like a,
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and this isn't me saying like don't do the thing, right?
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Because obviously we care like deeply on this show
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about people having projects, right?
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But I think it's something that we need to keep in mind.
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It started for me because for many reasons,
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some that we'll go into during this episode,
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I am in a very busy time right now.
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And it's just been a thing where I've thought, huh, I feel busy again.
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And so like, I've come to the conclusion that the stuff that I'm working on is
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short term and I would have just felt more busy and then I currently do, but
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it's about, I'm trying to not fall into the trap of I have a bit of extra time free.
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It's time to start a new podcast.
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Cause I mean, at least from what I know about your upcoming schedule, it does
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strike me that like, oh yes, this is just a busy time as there are busy times.
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So you don't think that there's anything in your personal life right now that you
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would identify as like, oh no, this is a pandemic busy project.
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There's like some social things have changed, but I think that they will just
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get replaced, but it's just a case of like looking around at the people in my life
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and looking at people like I see online and stuff and it's like, it's just been
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And like a little sexist term that's just been bubbling around in my brain a little
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bit that I think I want to return to at some point in the future, but I wanted to like
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float it by you to see if it like held.
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I keep hearing people say like 'oh because of the pandemic I'm like trying out this new
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hobby or whatever' which is awesome, great use of your time, but my concern is that there
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will then be a sense of overwhelm later.
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Yeah, I think you might be right.
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I'm just sort of mentally filing through all the cards in my head for the projects and things.
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I don't feel like there's anything for me that really sticks out as that,
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but the idea still feels pretty valid though. Like, "Oh, this is totally going to be a thing."
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Because, so like you were saying, I think it was in your Q&A video that you just put up / are going to put up.
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Have will put up.
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Have will. That you had a bunch of stuff on your calendar, right, which obviously got cleared off.
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but it's not like you're now not doing anything.
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- Yeah, yeah.
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- Right, so you are filling it with other things,
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and then there's just the question of,
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is this the less or more,
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or could I potentially go through this time
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and have come up with a really great idea
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that later on means way more work
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when I can go back to doing those projects again?
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- No, I mean, part of why I originally suggested,
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like, oh, let's have a default Cortex recording day,
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Even if it gets moved and talking about projects is I was aware suddenly of, oh, I need to really seriously sit down and plan and think about the order of a bunch of things that I was thinking I was going to work on.
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Like we've been long enough that I've recognized, oh, a bunch of these projects.
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They're not temporarily on hold and I'll get to them in a month.
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It's more like, okay, assume these projects simply cannot be done or cannot be finished.
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And if that's the case, you need to rethink in a really vague way,
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what does the rest of the year of videos look like?
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Like, which topics are you going to do or that kind of thing.
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So that's why I was in like a scheduling mood and thinking about it.
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It doesn't strike me as pandemic busy because this is always a thing that I do.
00:14:39
◼
►
And again, this is not like any target that I try to stick to.
00:14:44
◼
►
It's just the vague concept of what are the next four to six most probable main videos that are coming up?
00:14:52
◼
►
It's just a useful thing to think about.
00:14:55
◼
►
But you could see, I guess, if somebody thought like you,
00:14:58
◼
►
like enough, that someone worked like you enough,
00:15:01
◼
►
that they could be planning out their next six videos and then the travel starts again.
00:15:05
◼
►
So the four projects that they were working on before are now also in the hopper.
00:15:09
◼
►
Yes, exactly.
00:15:10
◼
►
The only thing that makes it different for me is that because of the way I structure my whole life,
00:15:15
◼
►
I'm able to then just push back and rearrange all of those projects.
00:15:20
◼
►
But yes, most people in most working situations,
00:15:23
◼
►
projects come with more clear and direct external dependencies and obligations.
00:15:29
◼
►
And so yes, I can totally see that you can very easily work yourself into way too many obligations
00:15:37
◼
►
that just cannot possibly fit into a normal person's life
00:15:41
◼
►
once a normal person's life returns.
00:15:44
◼
►
So, yeah. I think it's a really valid concept,
00:15:46
◼
►
and I think you're right to...
00:15:48
◼
►
I don't know, maybe this feels like the real danger zone time for this,
00:15:52
◼
►
of people having pandemic projects and taking on more right now,
00:15:56
◼
►
and then also real life returning maybe at some point on the horizon.
00:16:01
◼
►
Yeah, I think it's interesting.
00:16:02
◼
►
Because I don't know about you, but like, I feel like this is life now.
00:16:07
◼
►
Yeah, yeah, I do.
00:16:08
◼
►
I feel like I've adapted.
00:16:11
◼
►
And it doesn't mean that I'm taking my eye off the ball.
00:16:15
◼
►
What it means is like, we have our flow now, right?
00:16:18
◼
►
Like we know how we operate in life.
00:16:22
◼
►
And so I think it's the time it could for a lot of people where they were like,
00:16:26
◼
►
"All right, this is what I'm used to for now.
00:16:30
◼
►
So what changes?"
00:16:31
◼
►
where maybe people were spending time reassessing.
00:16:35
◼
►
I like your weekend Wednesday idea, by the way.
00:16:39
◼
►
I wished it was something that I could easily implement,
00:16:41
◼
►
but I have a lot of scheduled projects on Wednesdays.
00:16:44
◼
►
Right, yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:16:45
◼
►
Then I don't need to move.
00:16:46
◼
►
But similarly, though, I do always
00:16:48
◼
►
try to keep Thursday or Friday in a week pretty open
00:16:55
◼
►
so I can have a backup weekend day.
00:17:00
◼
►
that happened this very week, so I kept pretty much most of yesterday free because we're
00:17:07
◼
►
working today.
00:17:08
◼
►
Which is a Saturday.
00:17:09
◼
►
B: Yeah, I mean the weekend Wednesday thing for me is directly related to quarantine,
00:17:15
◼
►
and the evolution of the thought starts with a conversation you and I had at the very beginning
00:17:20
◼
►
of this whole thing where you were talking about taking the weekend really seriously.
00:17:25
◼
►
This was part of the whole like, "What day is it?
00:17:28
◼
►
What month is it?
00:17:29
◼
►
I have no idea."
00:17:31
◼
►
Like you lose sense of time.
00:17:32
◼
►
"Do I need a giant sign in my house that says Saturday?"
00:17:35
◼
►
I thought that was a really good point about take the weekends seriously.
00:17:40
◼
►
This is now a vital thing and it's also something I think just generally over the past many
00:17:46
◼
►
years of my working in my life, I've never really taken the weekends seriously.
00:17:51
◼
►
You know, this is always the problem of being a self-employed person is, you know, you can
00:17:55
◼
►
And you can just very easily end up always working or half working, which is even worse.
00:18:02
◼
►
So I totally like, I was like, oh yeah, you're 100% right.
00:18:06
◼
►
Keeping psychological distance between days on and days off is a thousand times more important
00:18:12
◼
►
now in the same way that like, exercise is mandatory.
00:18:15
◼
►
It doesn't matter what you think about it.
00:18:17
◼
►
Like you have to do this now.
00:18:19
◼
►
But it started this thought process because I've always like, whoever came up with the
00:18:25
◼
►
seven day week is the worst number. The seven day week is like incredibly frustrating. It's
00:18:30
◼
►
a prime number. It doesn't divide easily. I don't like it. Two thumbs down to the inventor
00:18:35
◼
►
of the seven day week. I found myself like taking the weekend seriously but getting increasingly
00:18:40
◼
►
annoyed by the amount of time is just wrong. And I've tried to come up with various schemes
00:18:46
◼
►
for, could I have a 12 day week that overlaps with the seven day week?
00:18:51
◼
►
You see, this is the thing that you are not allowed to keep doing.
00:18:55
◼
►
Well, I'll just change time.
00:18:58
◼
►
I'll live on a different time zone.
00:19:01
◼
►
You can't just keep trying to do these things.
00:19:05
◼
►
What do you mean?
00:19:07
◼
►
I live on a different time zone and my week lasts 12 and a half days.
00:19:12
◼
►
Well, okay. The problem is that the external world exists.
00:19:17
◼
►
And so you can have these great patterns where you have some very old calendars do this kind of thing
00:19:22
◼
►
where it's like, "Oh, we have three cycles. There's a three-day cycle and a nine-day cycle and a 12-day cycle."
00:19:27
◼
►
And different combinations of the cycles mean different things.
00:19:30
◼
►
And it's like, "Oh, look at this. I think you could actually design something that works pretty well for actual human time."
00:19:36
◼
►
So it's like, "But guess what? Seven's a prime number, so f*ck you."
00:19:40
◼
►
Like, nothing you can possibly invent is ever gonna line up with the 7-day schedule on any kind of scale.
00:19:48
◼
►
You know, it's just like, it just mathematically doesn't work no matter how much you try.
00:19:52
◼
►
Although I've tried many times to somehow defeat prime numbers, like I don't know what I was thinking.
00:19:58
◼
►
But yeah, so while I was taking the weekend really seriously, I just kept thinking that
00:20:02
◼
►
everything about this traditional work week doesn't work, but is there something that I can fix?
00:20:08
◼
►
And for me at least, realizing that I find I rarely really need the two days in a row off,
00:20:16
◼
►
and that the two days off are sort of, they're ineffective being back to back.
00:20:22
◼
►
And so I thought, "Okay, weekend Wednesday is going to be a weekend day,
00:20:26
◼
►
and I'm going to take that work day and put it on Saturday, so that I have two days of work,
00:20:31
◼
►
one day off, three days of work, one day off, and just repeat that cycle over and over again."
00:20:37
◼
►
And I have to say, it's- it has been- I've been doing it basically the whole quarantine,
00:20:42
◼
►
and I love it.
00:20:44
◼
►
Like I just- I find it is perfect as much as can be done within the constraints of a
00:20:50
◼
►
seven day week.
00:20:52
◼
►
This little pattern I think is about as optimal, at least for me, as I can possibly make it.
00:20:58
◼
►
And so, uh, yeah, that's why I made like this little light grey video where I want to like
00:21:02
◼
►
propagandize this concept.
00:21:04
◼
►
And like, obviously, this is not going to work for 99.9% of people on the planet.
00:21:08
◼
►
But I think there are enough people
00:21:10
◼
►
who, if they're able to have some control over their schedule,
00:21:13
◼
►
might benefit from trying something like this out.
00:21:16
◼
►
You know, because again, there's not
00:21:18
◼
►
there's not an infinite number of different types of people.
00:21:20
◼
►
I think this could really work for some self-employed people or for some students.
00:21:25
◼
►
And yeah, I've just absolutely loved this new schedule and I think
00:21:29
◼
►
this is going to last for the rest of my life.
00:21:32
◼
►
I suspect, well beyond quarantine at least.
00:21:34
◼
►
- So what day did you, you removed Saturday, right?
00:21:37
◼
►
- Yeah, so Saturday is a work day.
00:21:38
◼
►
- Right, okay. - That's what happened.
00:21:41
◼
►
- I think the thing that I liked about it the most,
00:21:43
◼
►
which is a very good point of like, if you work Saturday,
00:21:47
◼
►
that is like a day when you can put in things
00:21:51
◼
►
where you don't wanna be disrupted.
00:21:54
◼
►
- Yeah. - Because nobody else
00:21:55
◼
►
is working, so they'll leave you alone.
00:21:57
◼
►
- Yeah, yeah, and I mean, a little bit of this
00:22:01
◼
►
comes out from back when I was being a teacher,
00:22:04
◼
►
like you have these days where you're supposed to put in
00:22:06
◼
►
like a certain amount of time before the school year starts up
00:22:09
◼
►
and I would always try to strategize about like,
00:22:11
◼
►
I want to go in on the days when no one else is there
00:22:14
◼
►
and you can get 10,000 times more done
00:22:16
◼
►
when no one else is around.
00:22:18
◼
►
And I also find like even for me,
00:22:21
◼
►
it's been useful to have a day where it's just like
00:22:25
◼
►
the possibility of the outside world interrupting you
00:22:28
◼
►
is much lower, like with work-related stuff,
00:22:32
◼
►
if you make Saturday a work day.
00:22:35
◼
►
And yeah, it's been really, really great.
00:22:40
◼
►
And I find that the cycle feels just about right.
00:22:45
◼
►
I don't have the feeling,
00:22:48
◼
►
like I did when I was taking the weekend seriously,
00:22:51
◼
►
but still doing five days in a row of real work,
00:22:56
◼
►
feeling like Thursday afternoon to Friday felt like really unoptimal time. Like, I'm
00:23:04
◼
►
still working, but I'm working at a lower percent efficiency than otherwise. And so
00:23:10
◼
►
I think like having a weekend Wednesday day as a break day really feels like it keeps
00:23:16
◼
►
the efficiency up much higher for all of the other work days. Although, again, because
00:23:21
◼
►
I haven't actually put that video up yet and we're recording ahead of time, this is one
00:23:25
◼
►
of those videos that I'm a little worried about how is this going to be received. I
00:23:29
◼
►
don't know if everybody's going to totally hate this.
00:23:31
◼
►
Look at you. You can change your work.
00:23:36
◼
►
This is totally like, "Well, that's great for CGP Grey." Obviously, there's no big company
00:23:44
◼
►
in the world that would ever do it because too many people would hate it. But again,
00:23:47
◼
►
I'm thinking of some of the teams of people that I know in YouTube and Educationland where
00:23:55
◼
►
they're like small teams of people? I could totally see a small team of people trying
00:23:59
◼
►
it out and thinking like, "Oh, this actually works."
00:24:03
◼
►
Flexible time exists. Yeah, flexible time exists.
00:24:06
◼
►
It's a thing that lots of companies do. Yeah, and even the people that I work with
00:24:11
◼
►
are very happy to have some concept of like, "When is he around? When is he not around?"
00:24:17
◼
►
So even here, I don't enforce a schedule on anybody, but just knowing what days is
00:24:23
◼
►
gray working or what days is gray not working. Even within like with that or even within
00:24:30
◼
►
my own like personal life just with my family, I'm surprised at how everybody is thrilled
00:24:34
◼
►
to know like what days is he on and what days is he off.
00:24:38
◼
►
Yeah imagine if it was possible to like share a bit of a schedule with people.
00:24:43
◼
►
What are you trying to get at? It can make them happier. Collaborate and
00:24:47
◼
►
work with them. What are you trying to get at here? I don't
00:24:51
◼
►
understand the point you're trying to make.
00:24:58
◼
►
This episode of Cortex is brought to you by Setapp.
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Once again, go to setapp.com to see how it fits in with your workflow.
00:26:21
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Our thanks to Setapp for their support of this show and all of Relay FM.
00:26:26
◼
►
Cortexmerch.com
00:26:30
◼
►
We have a limited quantity available now of what I'm referring to in my mind as the doomed
00:26:35
◼
►
reprint of the theme system journal.
00:26:37
◼
►
Oh, it's very serious sounding.
00:26:38
◼
►
Well, this order was placed in... November?
00:26:43
◼
►
- Oh God, what, no, that can't be true.
00:26:44
◼
►
That cannot be true.
00:26:46
◼
►
- I had the order in before Lunar New Year.
00:26:49
◼
►
That was the goal.
00:26:52
◼
►
I put this order in, I believe, at the end of 2019.
00:26:57
◼
►
- Did 2019 even happen?
00:27:00
◼
►
Was 2019 real?
00:27:01
◼
►
I just feel so long ago, okay.
00:27:03
◼
►
- At that point, I really couldn't remember
00:27:06
◼
►
what year was last year.
00:27:08
◼
►
I really could not remember that.
00:27:10
◼
►
So I put this order in in either maybe like December
00:27:13
◼
►
or maybe January of this year,
00:27:15
◼
►
but the idea was to beat Luna New Year.
00:27:17
◼
►
And for anybody that doesn't remember,
00:27:21
◼
►
coronavirus hit in China during Luna New Year,
00:27:24
◼
►
like that was when it spread,
00:27:26
◼
►
because that was people coming together,
00:27:29
◼
►
and that was that, right?
00:27:30
◼
►
So it is kind of like when I look back on it now
00:27:33
◼
►
with hindsight, it's like not a funny haha,
00:27:37
◼
►
but like a funny thing.
00:27:38
◼
►
Like I was very aware, more aware of coronavirus
00:27:41
◼
►
than most people because our notebooks were delayed.
00:27:45
◼
►
- But I never thought, right, like nobody did,
00:27:48
◼
►
I never thought that this would happen, you know?
00:27:52
◼
►
I have no concept of it, of something like this.
00:27:54
◼
►
It was just like, oh, maybe it'll be like swine flu,
00:27:57
◼
►
I guess, no.
00:27:59
◼
►
Anyway, so this reprint is the order that has been
00:28:03
◼
►
in the works for the best part of eight months.
00:28:06
◼
►
And the other thing is, I cannot find the energy
00:28:10
◼
►
to actually talk about all of this,
00:28:12
◼
►
but it wasn't just this.
00:28:14
◼
►
There were also multiple issues with this reprint.
00:28:19
◼
►
This was the one where, Gray, you may remember this,
00:28:22
◼
►
where they, I think I told you about it.
00:28:23
◼
►
I don't know if I've told this story on the show,
00:28:25
◼
►
where I was sent a box of samples, of 50 samples,
00:28:30
◼
►
and only three arrived.
00:28:31
◼
►
-Oh, right, yeah.
00:28:32
◼
►
-And then two days later, the rest arrived
00:28:34
◼
►
because the box was damaged.
00:28:36
◼
►
But it's like, there's just been,
00:28:37
◼
►
this entire reprint has been a comedy of errors,
00:28:40
◼
►
but they are available now.
00:28:42
◼
►
You can go to cortexmerch.com.
00:28:43
◼
►
We still have a small amount left.
00:28:45
◼
►
So if you do want one, get one.
00:28:48
◼
►
And I will say, just like we are working
00:28:50
◼
►
on the second edition, this will most likely be
00:28:53
◼
►
the last reprint of the current version of the book.
00:28:58
◼
►
So the second version of the book,
00:29:00
◼
►
the structure is the same,
00:29:01
◼
►
but there are some features that we're adding,
00:29:04
◼
►
and I'm changing some stuff about the way it's printed
00:29:07
◼
►
to make the process more manageable, I'll say.
00:29:12
◼
►
But I'll talk about that later on.
00:29:14
◼
►
But yeah, so you can get them now at cortexmerch.com.
00:29:18
◼
►
- If you want a journal, get a journal right now.
00:29:24
◼
►
- I remember how hard it was to get them printed
00:29:26
◼
►
the first time and I'm basically restarting the process.
00:29:29
◼
►
- Yeah, look, we all know, oh look,
00:29:32
◼
►
Cortex Journal is going through a chip transition,
00:29:34
◼
►
you know, so should I get the next one
00:29:36
◼
►
or should I get the now one?
00:29:37
◼
►
Get the now one.
00:29:38
◼
►
- Get the now one.
00:29:39
◼
►
- Like I'm telling you that right now, man.
00:29:41
◼
►
You want a journal, you better buy it right now.
00:29:43
◼
►
- If you are using one and coming towards the end of it,
00:29:46
◼
►
or if you think you might be interested,
00:29:48
◼
►
you should buy one of these,
00:29:50
◼
►
because there will be more hopefully this year,
00:29:54
◼
►
but like who the (beep) knows, right?
00:29:58
◼
►
It's difficult to deal with.
00:29:59
◼
►
- Yeah, we're working on it,
00:30:01
◼
►
but it's hard to make promises,
00:30:06
◼
►
it's hard to have estimates.
00:30:08
◼
►
- Considering the amount of these that we have sold
00:30:11
◼
►
and the amount of times that we've had them for sale,
00:30:15
◼
►
it would seem like maybe this is like a little thing
00:30:20
◼
►
that we work on.
00:30:21
◼
►
I'm not kidding, I spend time every single day
00:30:26
◼
►
on this project, right?
00:30:28
◼
►
every day I'm doing something on this project.
00:30:32
◼
►
- It is, this is a very hard business to run.
00:30:36
◼
►
- Yeah, I mean, we said a year ago, like,
00:30:38
◼
►
oh, you can totally understand now
00:30:40
◼
►
how anybody who manufactures a physical product,
00:30:43
◼
►
it takes so much longer than you think.
00:30:45
◼
►
And this has been a real lesson in that of,
00:30:48
◼
►
you think, oh, why can't they just make another,
00:30:51
◼
►
it's like, oh, no, no.
00:30:53
◼
►
When you start talking about supply chains and factories
00:30:56
◼
►
and all the rest of it, it's so hard.
00:30:57
◼
►
- It's not as easy as just you wanting to do it.
00:31:02
◼
►
But like, you know, basically the work that I'm putting in
00:31:04
◼
►
now is from having spent a lot of time learning
00:31:07
◼
►
over the last year and a bit, right?
00:31:10
◼
►
And so I feel like I'm in so much of a better place now
00:31:13
◼
►
than I was a year ago, in trying to understand
00:31:15
◼
►
how to make this stuff work.
00:31:17
◼
►
And I feel like I'm taking what I've learned
00:31:20
◼
►
and putting it into the second edition,
00:31:22
◼
►
but the plan being of making this a more,
00:31:26
◼
►
Sustainable isn't the word, but like a running,
00:31:29
◼
►
constantly running product, which it hasn't been.
00:31:33
◼
►
- Yeah, the way I describe it is,
00:31:34
◼
►
you're trying to smooth out the variance.
00:31:36
◼
►
I love, like, we don't want big shipments occasionally.
00:31:41
◼
►
Like, we wanna be able to figure out
00:31:42
◼
►
how to make this more of a regular thing.
00:31:44
◼
►
That's the main goal. - It's like if somebody goes
00:31:46
◼
►
to cortexmerch.com on July 29th to buy a journal,
00:31:50
◼
►
I just want there to be one for them, right?
00:31:53
◼
►
- It's such a simple thing. (laughs)
00:31:54
◼
►
- That's the plan.
00:31:55
◼
►
Because then, once we finally get that done,
00:31:58
◼
►
I can turn my attention to other projects
00:32:01
◼
►
that I've wanted to work on for two years, right?
00:32:04
◼
►
That are related to the Cortex brand company,
00:32:07
◼
►
but the entire output of the Cortex brand company
00:32:11
◼
►
is just soaked up by the theme system journal.
00:32:16
◼
►
- So anyway, cortexmerch.com.
00:32:19
◼
►
- So I have been on a bit of a quest
00:32:24
◼
►
real-time collaboration. So my mind has been taken up by note-taking, but I noticed that
00:32:31
◼
►
you'd put something in our document about note-taking as well.
00:32:34
◼
►
Oh, okay. You know, listeners, I've just been through a big thing. Like, we're recording,
00:32:41
◼
►
I guess it's a little more than two weeks after I put up that whole like "CGP Grey was wrong" video,
00:32:46
◼
►
where I was partly like re-evaluating my entire process of working.
00:32:51
◼
►
Yeah, if I can give it a one sentence summary.
00:32:54
◼
►
Let's just say there was an error in the research process of a video
00:32:58
◼
►
and then you made what I think is a very good video about your process,
00:33:03
◼
►
which people can find in the show notes.
00:33:05
◼
►
I'll put a link to it if they haven't seen it already.
00:33:07
◼
►
So it's been like, it's been quite a two weeks is what it's been.
00:33:12
◼
►
Or it's three weeks now actually.
00:33:13
◼
►
And so as part of like the internal post-mortem of that project,
00:33:20
◼
►
It's funny, I realized at one point, like, so I basically, um, like I took a week off of all writing projects.
00:33:27
◼
►
I decided, "Okay, after this, what I can't do is I can't just..."
00:33:33
◼
►
You know, "Oh, well, that was an interesting, terrible experience, like, let me just dive right into whatever the next video is going to be."
00:33:39
◼
►
I felt like, "Okay, now I need to take some time off here, and now that the correction has been made, and like, all of that has been done,
00:33:47
◼
►
I need to like just sort of think about the actual process, what it's going to look like
00:33:54
◼
►
going forward or be able to think without a time constraint on like what might I want
00:34:00
◼
►
to change or you know, how my things be different.
00:34:02
◼
►
And it was funny at some point I realized, oh, I'm doing the thing that I think people
00:34:08
◼
►
think I spend all of my time doing, which is thinking about productivity, right?
00:34:14
◼
►
And trying new apps and systems.
00:34:16
◼
►
- Yeah, and trying new apps and systems,
00:34:18
◼
►
and it just struck me three days into the project
00:34:21
◼
►
as a really funny thing.
00:34:22
◼
►
- This is the phenomenon,
00:34:24
◼
►
this is a long, I'm going a long way around here,
00:34:26
◼
►
all right, to make a point.
00:34:27
◼
►
- No, no, go.
00:34:28
◼
►
- This is the phenomenon that people talk about
00:34:31
◼
►
that causes FOMO with Instagram influencers.
00:34:34
◼
►
- What do you mean?
00:34:35
◼
►
- Where you as a consumer only see what they show you.
00:34:40
◼
►
- Right, right.
00:34:41
◼
►
- So what an influencer shows you.
00:34:42
◼
►
So it looks like they're traveling all the time
00:34:46
◼
►
because they just show you
00:34:47
◼
►
that they're traveling all the time.
00:34:49
◼
►
Well, for me and you, with productivity tools,
00:34:52
◼
►
we always tell the cortexans we have every tool that we use,
00:34:56
◼
►
but that doesn't mean all we do is try new tools, right?
00:35:01
◼
►
So every time we do it, we tell you about it,
00:35:04
◼
►
so it feels like we do it a lot.
00:35:05
◼
►
- Yeah, it is a very funny selection effect that,
00:35:11
◼
►
I mean, it's easily got to be 99% of the things
00:35:16
◼
►
that I ever try or think about relating to productivity
00:35:19
◼
►
are discussed on the show, right?
00:35:22
◼
►
- But I'm not spending 99% of all time.
00:35:26
◼
►
- Yeah, it's just funny.
00:35:28
◼
►
And I think this is also unlike the influencer effect,
00:35:31
◼
►
which is just a pure selection effect.
00:35:33
◼
►
I also just think like the topic of work
00:35:36
◼
►
is always endlessly interesting to me.
00:35:38
◼
►
Like I always, when I meet new people,
00:35:39
◼
►
I do always love to ask them like,
00:35:41
◼
►
"Oh, how do you work and how does it go?"
00:35:43
◼
►
Because people are just so wildly different.
00:35:47
◼
►
Like, one big slider that people end on different parts of
00:35:52
◼
►
is the, like, how much do you need scaffolding
00:35:55
◼
►
to assist you with your work
00:35:57
◼
►
versus how much are you like Nike
00:36:00
◼
►
and you can just do it, right?
00:36:01
◼
►
And I think that there's often, like, a lot of confusion
00:36:06
◼
►
between those two groups, like, not understanding each other.
00:36:09
◼
►
And so I think the people who are more
00:36:11
◼
►
on the just do it end of the spectrum,
00:36:13
◼
►
then get like doubly frustrated with,
00:36:16
◼
►
this person talks about productivity all the time,
00:36:19
◼
►
you know, and it's just like,
00:36:21
◼
►
there's like an additional layer here
00:36:23
◼
►
on top of the selection effect.
00:36:25
◼
►
But it also just like really made me smile
00:36:28
◼
►
when the thought popped into my head.
00:36:29
◼
►
I was like, oh, here I am, I'm reading a bunch of stuff
00:36:33
◼
►
on particularly note-taking was what was my main focus.
00:36:37
◼
►
But I was like, I just realized like,
00:36:38
◼
►
I am the picture right now of what people think I am.
00:36:42
◼
►
I'm like, I've got two iPads in front of me.
00:36:45
◼
►
I'm taking notes on one of those iPads.
00:36:48
◼
►
I've got a whole bunch of index cards spread
00:36:50
◼
►
across my kitchen table and there's pens.
00:36:53
◼
►
It was just a funny moment to become self-aware.
00:36:57
◼
►
Oh, this is the thing.
00:36:58
◼
►
- You were all like, gray prime.
00:37:01
◼
►
- Yeah, exactly.
00:37:02
◼
►
It was like, I am the idea in people's heads of what I am.
00:37:06
◼
►
It's just like, okay, this is silly.
00:37:08
◼
►
But yeah, I have to say, like, it was a really interesting...
00:37:11
◼
►
I'm sort of coming to the end of that time now and booting back up the writing project.
00:37:16
◼
►
So I'm not 100% settled on it.
00:37:18
◼
►
So this is still a little bit of, like, thoughts and progress on a thing.
00:37:21
◼
►
But one of the areas that I just sort of recognized as, like, what really needs rethinking
00:37:28
◼
►
is how do I take notes, right?
00:37:32
◼
►
Like, so when I'm working on a project,
00:37:34
◼
►
how do I organize the information related to that project?
00:37:41
◼
►
- And this is, we've always talked about it,
00:37:42
◼
►
the section of the show with the best show art
00:37:46
◼
►
of any of them ever core, right, is for years,
00:37:50
◼
►
I've used Evernote as the place that is like
00:37:55
◼
►
all of my notes, and so for all topics,
00:37:59
◼
►
anything that I think is interesting,
00:38:00
◼
►
like I just save webpages and PDFs and books
00:38:04
◼
►
like everything goes into Evernote and like all of it is tagged with what is vaguely the
00:38:09
◼
►
topic that it's related to.
00:38:11
◼
►
And I've just like I realized I've never really thought about that system since I first started
00:38:18
◼
►
doing it you know nine years ago or whatever.
00:38:22
◼
►
I've just never mentally reevaluated it.
00:38:25
◼
►
What do you mean?
00:38:26
◼
►
I mean we've spoken about you wanting to leave Evernote a bunch of times.
00:38:29
◼
►
Okay so no so so here here's what I mean by like not reevaluating it.
00:38:33
◼
►
So people are like, "Hey, have you heard the good news about Microsoft OneNote?
00:38:37
◼
►
I don't know if you've ever heard of a thing called Dev and Think, but this exists."
00:38:42
◼
►
That's a totally different sort of question of, are you frustrated with Evernote?
00:38:46
◼
►
Are there problems with the app that you don't like?
00:38:48
◼
►
That kind of thing.
00:38:49
◼
►
Ah, so that was always more the application not being suited to the process.
00:38:55
◼
►
But what you weren't considering was the process.
00:38:59
◼
►
How do I save a piece of information?
00:39:01
◼
►
Where is it stored?
00:39:02
◼
►
How is it tagged?
00:39:03
◼
►
What are these pieces of information?
00:39:05
◼
►
Yeah, it's actually a little tricky to even articulate, but I guess what I would say is
00:39:11
◼
►
this is like on all of my projects, I would just have a huge pile of like, here's all
00:39:19
◼
►
the primary sources related to whatever this topic is, you know, so and I would work through
00:39:25
◼
►
those things and like I would write a script based on them.
00:39:28
◼
►
But okay, so here let me back up and talk about like the story of like Gray's history
00:39:37
◼
►
with the concept of notes right and taking notes right so I've always thought that like
00:39:47
◼
►
the way people think about notes in particularly like a school situation is that notes are
00:39:53
◼
►
totally worthless has always been my experience like I don't understand why this happens. I have a
00:40:01
◼
►
I have a particularly weird situation with this because I literally never took notes in school
00:40:07
◼
►
because as we found out later I was not able to read the board for some reason I snuck through
00:40:13
◼
►
the entire eye testing system and it was never noticed until I was well into high school that
00:40:19
◼
►
that my vision was not good enough to actually see the board.
00:40:23
◼
►
And so I always had the experience of...
00:40:26
◼
►
Yeah, you sit in school and you know, you listen to the teacher and then you know, you
00:40:31
◼
►
take the test based on like what you can remember or what's in the textbook.
00:40:36
◼
►
What did you think the board was for then?
00:40:38
◼
►
Okay, that's an excellent question, Myke.
00:40:44
◼
►
I don't want to get off on like an entire side tangent of this, but I have in the past
00:40:49
◼
►
year really become increasingly fascinated with this concept of how people cannot notice
00:40:56
◼
►
the things in life that they don't notice, right? Or like how brains can be different
00:41:00
◼
►
and you're just completely unaware of something. And so what did I think the board was for
00:41:07
◼
►
is a fantastic question. And like the best answer I can give is I guess I thought that
00:41:15
◼
►
this was like the teacher was working out things for themselves. Like, you know, when
00:41:20
◼
►
you're doing a math problem, you have to write it down.
00:41:23
◼
►
- It's their own reference material. - Yeah, like the board was for the teacher,
00:41:28
◼
►
I guess, you know. But I think the deeper truth of it was, because I couldn't see the
00:41:37
◼
►
board, I just didn't consider it, right? Like, it just wasn't really in my world. And there's
00:41:44
◼
►
also happen to be a perfect storm of things because the way the New York State education
00:41:49
◼
►
system works is that everything is based around a series of like extremely automated standardized
00:41:56
◼
►
tests. You know, like everything is multiple choice, even physics tests, like they're all
00:42:01
◼
►
multiple choice as much as can be humanly automated is. And so as a student, you have
00:42:06
◼
►
a really clear target. There are these standardized tests, there's like books about how to pass
00:42:13
◼
►
them, all of the classes are oriented towards that, there's very little human subjectivity,
00:42:20
◼
►
and so the effect of like the particularities of individual teachers was greatly lessened
00:42:26
◼
►
under that system. Which also means that like it doesn't matter so much if you're just preparing
00:42:32
◼
►
for the English Regents exam or the Math Regents exam, like that's just a thing that you can
00:42:35
◼
►
do and no one cares. None of the teachers cared about your notebooks, because like that
00:42:40
◼
►
I was entirely like, "Hey kid, this is your problem.
00:42:42
◼
►
All we care about is how well you're doing
00:42:44
◼
►
on our practice standardized tests."
00:42:48
◼
►
So that's also how on earth did I get through this
00:42:50
◼
►
without being noticed.
00:42:51
◼
►
- And also, I guess there's also elements
00:42:54
◼
►
of random chance in it, because you had to always be
00:42:59
◼
►
in every class far enough away from the board
00:43:04
◼
►
that you could never read it.
00:43:05
◼
►
- Okay, so I have the answer to this question,
00:43:08
◼
►
which is that, at least in my high school,
00:43:10
◼
►
you were always allowed to pick your seats.
00:43:12
◼
►
That first day of class,
00:43:14
◼
►
it was always my goal to sit in the back corner.
00:43:16
◼
►
One of the two back corners was like,
00:43:17
◼
►
that is my prime target,
00:43:18
◼
►
and then as close as I can get to that
00:43:20
◼
►
is what I was always aiming for.
00:43:22
◼
►
So there wasn't the random chance of like,
00:43:24
◼
►
oh, I'm in the front in some classes.
00:43:26
◼
►
I was never in the front.
00:43:27
◼
►
- It's like you sit in the front one day,
00:43:29
◼
►
and it's like, whoa,
00:43:31
◼
►
like all the formulations start passing
00:43:33
◼
►
in front of your eyes.
00:43:34
◼
►
What is this incredible source of information?
00:43:37
◼
►
Well, again, I just think there's a way in which it's just not obvious to you if you don't know.
00:43:43
◼
►
The other thing for me was like, I didn't know you could see people's faces right across the street.
00:43:49
◼
►
So it never occurred to me that humans can identify other humans by their face at greater distances.
00:43:55
◼
►
When I got glasses for the first time, I kind of equated it like going from standard definition to high definition.
00:44:01
◼
►
There were just signs that I didn't read and I just figured you couldn't read them until you got a little bit closer.
00:44:08
◼
►
Right, exactly.
00:44:09
◼
►
My vision is not as bad as yours, clearly, but I can understand that a little bit, but there is just this...
00:44:16
◼
►
I mean, it's kind of hilarious really that you're just like, "What bored?"
00:44:23
◼
►
What are you talking about?
00:44:24
◼
►
Yeah, it just didn't exist in my world.
00:44:26
◼
►
And I think this is like just one of several kinds of examples where like you have no reason
00:44:35
◼
►
to notice a deficiency.
00:44:37
◼
►
My like other example of this is colorblindness.
00:44:39
◼
►
You know, like for people who are colorblind, once you have like a set of tests, this is
00:44:45
◼
►
a very easy thing to identify, but people can go a long time without knowing that they're
00:44:50
◼
►
colorblind because it just like, how does this concept enter your mind?
00:44:55
◼
►
if it's not like brought out in an AB testing kind of situation you can just think like
00:45:02
◼
►
oh other people are better at distinguishing these two things but like it just doesn't
00:45:06
◼
►
really cross your mind right like why would it but yeah so in high school I was like oh
00:45:12
◼
►
notes serve no purpose and even after I got my glasses you know I didn't like start taking
00:45:18
◼
►
notes then I just thought like oh look at all the stuff the teachers writing on the
00:45:22
◼
►
How academically interesting is that but you know, like I don't I'm not gonna start this now
00:45:28
◼
►
And then when I went into college as a general statement
00:45:31
◼
►
Like all of my physics professors provided class notes because their their whole thing was like hey what we're doing here is really hard
00:45:39
◼
►
Pay attention and think it through like don't waste your time writing notes in class. And so
00:45:46
◼
►
That ended up being like my first
00:45:49
◼
►
formal exposure to notes was like, "Don't bother, like, we're gonna give you notes,
00:45:54
◼
►
you know, you're grown up now, we don't have to, we don't have to like do this pretend game."
00:45:58
◼
►
When I became a teacher myself, I attempted to replicate creating class notes for my students
00:46:05
◼
►
and then I was immediately told by the school like, "You can't just give,
00:46:09
◼
►
you can't just give notes to your students." In the UK system, it's incredibly important that
00:46:15
◼
►
all of the students are like little tiny mimeograph machines like they have to write down all of all
00:46:21
◼
►
of the things that you say in class word for word and so my experience as a teacher was like
00:46:26
◼
►
this whole note system is fraudulent I have to make kids write down notes so that the school
00:46:33
◼
►
doesn't fire me because the school cares about when the inspectors come we have a bunch of
00:46:40
◼
►
notebooks to demonstrate that learning has occurred to the inspectors because obviously
00:46:45
◼
►
like no one can learn anything if you haven't had like written documentation of that having
00:46:51
◼
►
occurred. So this is like a funny way of saying that like I have an entire lifetime of academic
00:46:59
◼
►
experience that told me taking notes is a kind of nonsensical busywork and whenever
00:47:08
◼
►
like looking at productivity materials like reading books or watching videos about like
00:47:12
◼
►
how people are productive, I was always really puzzled at the parts where people are like
00:47:19
◼
►
"oh I read a book and I take these you know these detailed notes on like what the book
00:47:25
◼
►
was or like what are the important ideas" and I like I just always found that odd like
00:47:31
◼
►
I don't understand what this is and I thought it was a kind of I don't know like a kind
00:47:37
◼
►
of cargo-culting, like "oh this is a thing that you learned in school about how people
00:47:42
◼
►
learn." You know, but you're learning when you read the book and then you remember the
00:47:47
◼
►
things that are in the book, like then you know these notes aren't doing anything except
00:47:51
◼
►
they're like just a repeated behavior. So all of this brings to like "oh what was I
00:47:56
◼
►
doing when I'm making videos?" and the answer is like "oh I'm reading tons of stuff and
00:48:01
◼
►
and I'm remembering things, and the key skill is like, be able to remember where the information
00:48:07
◼
►
that you need is.
00:48:09
◼
►
Like you can just be like, "Okay, yeah, I read this thing in this article, like let
00:48:13
◼
►
me go back and check where that was."
00:48:15
◼
►
Or like I'd read through books and I'd do highlights, and then I would import those
00:48:18
◼
►
highlights and surrounding information into Evernote, and it's like, "Okay, great.
00:48:22
◼
►
Now I've got a version of this book that instead of having to reread 300 pages, I've pulled
00:48:28
◼
►
out like, "Here are the 20 key pages that are related to whatever it is that I'm working
00:48:34
◼
►
So there's a way in which like, I can reread this book in minutes, like not reread this
00:48:39
◼
►
book over the course of days, right?
00:48:41
◼
►
So like, this is kind of what Evernote was to me.
00:48:45
◼
►
It was a really big pile of mostly primary sources with occasionally really brief, in
00:48:54
◼
►
quotes "notes" at the top of these primary sources, which would be me just like very
00:49:00
◼
►
briefly perhaps summarising like "oh what was the important thing in this one" or like
00:49:04
◼
►
"this is the one that talks about that piece of information" like that's what that's whatever
00:49:08
◼
►
note was for me. Does that make sense?
00:49:11
◼
►
Yeah I mean I will say I don't think that when you're saying like the like notes part
00:49:16
◼
►
like it's not notes like that's not thinking of sources right like that if I was doing
00:49:21
◼
►
what you were doing that's what I would do.
00:49:23
◼
►
Okay, but so I almost wish we were recording this episode like two weeks from now because
00:49:28
◼
►
I think I could articulate some of this stuff better.
00:49:30
◼
►
- Well that's what follow-ups for. - Yeah, but I think one of the key concepts
00:49:36
◼
►
I've had here is like, partly, even writing little summaries to yourself is like not what
00:49:44
◼
►
Evernote is for. Evernote really should be like a library of primary sources only. There
00:49:54
◼
►
is a useful layer of what we can call notes that can exist on top of this. And like, and
00:50:03
◼
►
that's what I've been exploring this past week is, okay, let me try to get out of my
00:50:08
◼
►
head all of this like academic cruft that has built up in my head about like what notes
00:50:15
◼
►
are and try to re like re approach this topic. So this would be as I'm trying to follow here.
00:50:22
◼
►
The idea here is instead of attaching all of the notes to sources you have notes about
00:50:29
◼
►
some projects topics certain things and if needed to you can say like oh I got it from
00:50:36
◼
►
here and then later then you can go back to Evernote and you can find the source if you
00:50:40
◼
►
need it, is that right?
00:50:41
◼
►
LINDEN: Yeah, that's partly what I'm talking about, you know, because again, like one of
00:50:45
◼
►
the things where it's like, why do I think notes were sort of weird?
00:50:48
◼
►
Like I very rarely would make what people call like margin notes in books, because it
00:50:55
◼
►
always seemed to me like, I don't know, it just seems sort of pointless, like I don't
00:51:01
◼
►
understand what it is, and I do think that there is something pointless about them.
00:51:05
◼
►
- Kinda hides the information.
00:51:06
◼
►
- Yeah, so this is exactly it,
00:51:08
◼
►
like it strikes me as a sort of busy work of like,
00:51:11
◼
►
if you're writing this note,
00:51:13
◼
►
shouldn't that note be in the project that you're working on
00:51:19
◼
►
because otherwise, like,
00:51:20
◼
►
how are you ever going to access that again?
00:51:23
◼
►
- You have to read the book again.
00:51:25
◼
►
So this is where like my script,
00:51:27
◼
►
my like quote script document,
00:51:30
◼
►
often started with lots of like,
00:51:34
◼
►
what would be margin notes in some sense, like just kind of got thrown into the script document.
00:51:38
◼
►
It's like, okay, well this is the place where they go because I actually need to work with them.
00:51:41
◼
►
So I guess what I'll say is like one of the places where I found useful information
00:51:47
◼
►
to start and that got me kind of like thinking about it in the right way is...
00:51:54
◼
►
I almost hesitate to mention it because you know again like we have...
00:51:57
◼
►
There's like the notion nation.
00:51:59
◼
►
- Notion nation represent.
00:52:01
◼
►
There's the Rome heads, like there's all these different groups.
00:52:06
◼
►
The Rome rovers? The Rome rovers?
00:52:08
◼
►
Rome enthusiasts?
00:52:09
◼
►
Yeah, something like that.
00:52:10
◼
►
There's a better one in there somewhere. We can come up with that.
00:52:12
◼
►
Yeah, somewhere it is.
00:52:14
◼
►
Rome riders, like you let us know what it is.
00:52:17
◼
►
What about romanticists?
00:52:20
◼
►
That's terrible. I rate that zero out of a thousand, that's awful.
00:52:25
◼
►
Alright, I mean come on, you could have just gone ten.
00:52:28
◼
►
I don't know, maybe the romanticists really like that kind of terrible pun.
00:52:32
◼
►
You just used it, it's now canon.
00:52:35
◼
►
This episode of Cortex is brought to you by ExpressVPN.
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and all of Relay FM.
00:54:00
◼
►
So there's also a thing which is like trying to say like, oh, what are all these people
00:54:04
◼
►
up to? Like this has become this popular genre and figuring things out. And so anyway, like
00:54:07
◼
►
while wandering around the internet, I found another like really, really niche, like sub
00:54:15
◼
►
sub-community of this kind of thing, which I'm going to call the Zettelzehleztze.
00:54:21
◼
►
So I came across this note-taking system which is called Zettelkasten.
00:54:29
◼
►
And I refuse Z-E-T-T-L-E-K-A-S-T-E-N.
00:54:40
◼
►
Is this German?
00:54:42
◼
►
It is German.
00:54:44
◼
►
And some of the Zettel zealots will insist that you should say it in German, so it should
00:54:50
◼
►
be "Tze Zettel", and it's like, no.
00:54:53
◼
►
Hard passed.
00:54:54
◼
►
I have this with Edina, it's like because of her surname, Niamh Tzu.
00:54:59
◼
►
Yeah, that T-S sound.
00:55:01
◼
►
She would say to me, "It's the 'z' sound in pizza, so it's 'zettelkasten', I guess.
00:55:08
◼
►
Something like that."
00:55:09
◼
►
And now every German just laughed at me.
00:55:12
◼
►
I know the sound, like I have the same thing with Dutch where like there's sounds that
00:55:15
◼
►
I can hear in it and like I can identify that sound but I just I cannot reproduce it properly.
00:55:20
◼
►
So anyway I'm gonna say Zettelkasten and there's like this community of like Zettel
00:55:25
◼
►
zealots but there's there's some interesting stuff in here and like I don't want to get
00:55:29
◼
►
into the whole thing.
00:55:30
◼
►
Is this an app? I can't... it doesn't look like it's an app.
00:55:33
◼
►
Oh Myke you're gonna make me get into the whole thing.
00:55:35
◼
►
It's a system right?
00:55:37
◼
►
It's a system, right?
00:55:38
◼
►
It's a system.
00:55:39
◼
►
And the best way I can sort of explain it is like with anything, I'm not really interested
00:55:45
◼
►
in the system itself.
00:55:48
◼
►
It's like, "Oh, there was a person who invented the system and he wrote a million books because
00:55:55
◼
►
And it's like, "Okay, great."
00:55:56
◼
►
Like all that lore, whatever.
00:55:57
◼
►
Like I'm just here as like a value vampire to just extract whatever happens to be useful
00:56:02
◼
►
to me from this system of yours, right?
00:56:05
◼
►
And one of the key concepts that I've come across, which just like, it was never clear
00:56:11
◼
►
in my mind, was this distinction between sources and notes.
00:56:19
◼
►
And so this is what I'm getting at with like, with Evernote.
00:56:23
◼
►
It's like, the moment you're writing anything in Evernote, like that's the wrong place for
00:56:30
◼
►
Evernote is where primary sources exist.
00:56:34
◼
►
And your script is the place where, like, the script is the project.
00:56:40
◼
►
That, you know, that should be like the words that you're going to record into a microphone
00:56:44
◼
►
to turn into a video.
00:56:46
◼
►
But there does additionally exist a category of useful writing, which we can call notes.
00:56:53
◼
►
And the- one of the valuable ideas that I've extracted from the Zettelkasten system is-
00:57:02
◼
►
It just fits in perfectly with stuff that I've done before of like, okay, you're thinking
00:57:07
◼
►
of notes like when you were in school and you're supposed to have like a three ring
00:57:10
◼
►
binder that tells you everything you ever wanted to never know about the English Civil
00:57:16
◼
►
Or whatever.
00:57:17
◼
►
It's like, no, forget that.
00:57:18
◼
►
Instead, what you want are like index cards.
00:57:22
◼
►
Think of it in a physical way.
00:57:24
◼
►
You've got a whole bunch of index cards and each index card is a note and each note should
00:57:30
◼
►
be a single idea about this topic.
00:57:36
◼
►
Or it should be a single summary of a primary source that exists elsewhere.
00:57:43
◼
►
And these are your notes on the topic.
00:57:46
◼
►
And coming across this I felt like, "Oh, this is a huge relief!"
00:57:50
◼
►
Because it felt like two things.
00:57:52
◼
►
One, it reminded me of forever ago coming across Getting Things Done, where it was really
00:58:00
◼
►
important for someone to create this distinction of you have to-do lists, but there's two things
00:58:08
◼
►
There's projects and there's actions and like a lot of your problem around to-do lists is
00:58:13
◼
►
that you're not drawing this distinction in your mind.
00:58:17
◼
►
And I think like I'd never had this just pointed out in a clear way of like primary sources
00:58:25
◼
►
and notes, and that notes exist as like atomic individual ideas.
00:58:34
◼
►
You're not trying to like recreate a whole book with your notes.
00:58:38
◼
►
You're trying to have like a stack of index cards with information about this topic that
00:58:42
◼
►
you can look at.
00:58:44
◼
►
And this has been incredibly helpful.
00:58:46
◼
►
And it was also like, oh, this is perfect.
00:58:49
◼
►
Because I realized like quite naturally, this is a thing that I've sort of done many times
00:58:55
◼
►
when I'm stuck with a project, which is okay, stop looking at it on your computer, you know,
00:59:01
◼
►
write out some of the basic ideas on index cards and like put them on a table in front
00:59:05
◼
►
of you and sort of think about it for a while and like, you know, as we've discussed many
00:59:09
◼
►
times being able to work with paper is often quite clarifying when you're having problems
00:59:15
◼
►
in a digital system.
00:59:16
◼
►
I think I'm struggling to understand a little bit.
00:59:19
◼
►
Yes, please, here's the thing, please ask questions because it's also helpful to me
00:59:24
◼
►
at this point to clarify because like a lot of this stuff is still not perfectly settled
00:59:28
◼
►
in my mind but I feel like I'm on the right track with a really important reevaluation
00:59:35
◼
►
of how the system works going forward that I haven't reevaluated in like a long time
00:59:40
◼
►
in this way.
00:59:41
◼
►
All right so I have two things I want to do.
00:59:44
◼
►
One is I think I've found a summary of the method on Wikipedia but I'll leave that
00:59:47
◼
►
for a minute.
00:59:49
◼
►
Right I'll leave that for a minute because I might not need to get to this.
00:59:51
◼
►
We're gonna tell you right now, don't read anything about it. It won't help you.
00:59:55
◼
►
Right, so then I'm trying to understand then what this new system is for you and
01:00:00
◼
►
why Zettelkasten is involved at all. Because, alright, let's say you've read a
01:00:05
◼
►
research paper and there are things in that research paper that you want to
01:00:10
◼
►
remember. They're like notes that you want to take, right? Where do they go?
01:00:14
◼
►
Don't worry about the app or whatever but like do you have a separate place
01:00:18
◼
►
place right now that you'll put quotes and thoughts in?
01:00:21
◼
►
So yeah, right now, since I'm still in the playing around with it phase, but let's talk
01:00:28
◼
►
about the idea in the abstract, right?
01:00:30
◼
►
So as you're reading through some primary source, when something that's interesting
01:00:34
◼
►
comes along, one of the ideas is like, okay, by hand, write a summary of that on a little
01:00:44
◼
►
And so it's like, okay, Liberty Island got bigger over time.
01:00:47
◼
►
It's like, oh, okay, well, that's interesting.
01:00:48
◼
►
Like, that's an interesting piece of information.
01:00:50
◼
►
So like Liberty Island is three times larger than it was 200 years ago.
01:00:56
◼
►
It's like a note on this topic.
01:00:58
◼
►
And that can just live on an index card because this is like the smallest condensation of
01:01:06
◼
►
a single idea.
01:01:07
◼
►
And so it's like, okay, that just goes.
01:01:09
◼
►
And as you keep reading through sources, it's like, oh, there was a Supreme Court case in
01:01:15
◼
►
1800 about this dispute. Okay. So then you go and you read that Supreme Court case, you
01:01:21
◼
►
find out like some piece of information and again like you'll write down a discrete fact
01:01:26
◼
►
on on this. It's like no documentation exists for why the island got bigger.
01:01:32
◼
►
I don't mean to be a d**n here, but like this is like how I studied history. Right. Which
01:01:39
◼
►
was just like I had a notebook and what I did was write down facts, figures, and tiny
01:01:43
◼
►
pieces of information when I was in school so I could pass the test. And I say that as in such
01:01:49
◼
►
a way as like I don't want to make fun of you not being able to see the board.
01:01:52
◼
►
No, no, like, I mean, man, like, don't, don't get me wrong. Like this, this is a,
01:02:00
◼
►
that's why this is like such a weird topic for me because it's like, and it's also just been,
01:02:05
◼
►
is why I mentioned at the beginning, like, how can you not notice a thing that you're missing? Right?
01:02:11
◼
►
is it really is like every time, you know,
01:02:15
◼
►
you ever watch, I'd ever watch a video
01:02:17
◼
►
and someone's like, "Here's how I use, you know, Roam
01:02:20
◼
►
and I'm gonna take a bunch of notes on a thing."
01:02:21
◼
►
I was just like, "What are you even doing?
01:02:23
◼
►
Like, I don't understand why you feel the need
01:02:26
◼
►
to write all this stuff over again."
01:02:28
◼
►
- This is so fascinating to me.
01:02:30
◼
►
This is fascinating.
01:02:32
◼
►
I can't get my head around how someone who does what you do
01:02:37
◼
►
didn't really do this.
01:02:39
◼
►
I guess you were more like highlighting things, right?
01:02:42
◼
►
'Cause you always talk about the highlights
01:02:44
◼
►
of the Kindle books, right?
01:02:47
◼
►
- Yeah, so highlighting in Kindle books
01:02:49
◼
►
and importing books into Kindle,
01:02:51
◼
►
this is also one of the reasons why I was always like,
01:02:53
◼
►
I cannot possibly leave Evernote.
01:02:55
◼
►
- Because of all the, oh my God.
01:02:57
◼
►
- Because of the highlights
01:02:58
◼
►
and the ability to import books into Evernote.
01:03:00
◼
►
- This is incredible, the scales are falling from my eyes.
01:03:03
◼
►
Right now, I get it way more.
01:03:07
◼
►
It always felt to me, and I'm sure now this is why people would always say,
01:03:11
◼
►
"Why you should have moved to f***ing 1 note? What's wrong with you?"
01:03:14
◼
►
It wasn't the system.
01:03:17
◼
►
It was the actual application.
01:03:20
◼
►
The data was there.
01:03:22
◼
►
What else were you going to do?
01:03:23
◼
►
Like, you couldn't move because you weren't moving notes.
01:03:28
◼
►
You were moving massive pieces of information that had notes in them,
01:03:33
◼
►
which were more like underlines of stuff
01:03:36
◼
►
rather than you seeing a thing
01:03:39
◼
►
and being like, "Right, I'll write that one down."
01:03:41
◼
►
- Yeah, and again, like the thing,
01:03:43
◼
►
again, it's like, there's just this way
01:03:47
◼
►
in which I've never really thought about what I was doing.
01:03:50
◼
►
But part of the reason why over the years
01:03:51
◼
►
I've talked about highlights
01:03:53
◼
►
is because of this key thing of like,
01:03:57
◼
►
I need to be able to highlight the important things
01:04:00
◼
►
because when I come back to whatever this is, I need to be able to reread this entire
01:04:05
◼
►
book in 20 minutes, right? And that like, and that's what I need to be able to do, and
01:04:08
◼
►
that's whatever it is.
01:04:09
◼
►
- Right, but that's like the wrong thing. What you needed was, "Oh, I just gotta go to the
01:04:14
◼
►
notes on this subject. I don't need to go back to the book."
01:04:18
◼
►
- The other thing that I would say is like, what I was working with is a memory of primary
01:04:27
◼
►
Like whenever I'm working on any project, it's like, okay, I've got a folder in Evernote,
01:04:32
◼
►
you know, which is like, oh, here's all the primary sources about whatever this topic
01:04:36
◼
►
But I'm also able to remember very well like, oh, I read this thing in that thing.
01:04:40
◼
►
Like let me go back and just double check whatever these numbers are.
01:04:42
◼
►
Right, but this is one of those four systems because you're relying on your memory.
01:04:49
◼
►
Oh, I know, right?
01:04:50
◼
►
More than you needed to.
01:04:52
◼
►
Because if you're having to remember where to go to find the information, the system's
01:05:00
◼
►
Because what you need is just the one place that all the information is on one topic,
01:05:06
◼
►
rather than "here's a folder of 20 research papers, all I have to do is remember which
01:05:12
◼
►
research paper to go to."
01:05:13
◼
►
Right, yeah.
01:05:14
◼
►
And it's also a way in which like, it's just very interesting like you see how you
01:05:19
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work and I've just never thought about it and I've been doing this for years and just
01:05:23
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►
kind of build it up.
01:05:24
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►
I cannot believe it's taken us six years nearly to get to this. Like, because this is like
01:05:30
◼
►
when, you know, obviously a big thing, but like I'm sure you can see how like it's fundamental,
01:05:34
◼
►
right? Like this is this part of your system, whether it's the old way or the new ways is
01:05:40
◼
►
like a fundamental part of the way that your research has done. And just for some reason
01:05:46
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►
We have never understood with each other that this was a thing.
01:05:51
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►
I had always just taken as read what you were doing and had never really thought that you
01:05:56
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didn't like...
01:05:57
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►
So like for me, right, I would have a note.
01:06:00
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►
Let's imagine that I was making a video about the history of Nintendo.
01:06:05
◼
►
I would have a note that was like the history of Nintendo and in that note would have subheadings
01:06:11
◼
►
with like, here's something about the NES, here's something about the SNES and like all
01:06:15
◼
►
all of the little pieces of information
01:06:18
◼
►
that I would find out from watching videos,
01:06:20
◼
►
reading articles, and I would just bring them in.
01:06:23
◼
►
That's my system.
01:06:24
◼
►
But if I was working on your system,
01:06:26
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►
my assumption would be I would save all of that stuff
01:06:28
◼
►
to a place and make inline notes in separate places
01:06:33
◼
►
about those sources.
01:06:35
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►
So if I was reading an article,
01:06:37
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►
I would make notes on the article.
01:06:38
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►
Or if I was reading a video,
01:06:40
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►
maybe like notes in a comment like in the video,
01:06:42
◼
►
maybe I'd save a link to it in Evernote or whatever.
01:06:45
◼
►
But then when it comes to me to then write the script,
01:06:47
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►
I have to be like, all right, so now I need to go back,
01:06:50
◼
►
oh, I know there was something in the NES
01:06:51
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and this one and this one.
01:06:53
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►
But in the system that I always have had,
01:06:57
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all of the NES stuff would be in one place, right?
01:06:59
◼
►
Like I feel like if I'm following correctly,
01:07:02
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►
that's kind of like the difference.
01:07:05
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►
'Cause you were saying about taking a quote unquote
01:07:07
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►
index card and putting in piece of information on it, right?
01:07:11
◼
►
What are these index cards in a digital system?
01:07:14
◼
►
Well, okay, so here's also part of the reason why I like,
01:07:17
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►
like what are people doing with these notes?
01:07:18
◼
►
I don't understand.
01:07:19
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►
Is because even when you start talking about like,
01:07:22
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►
oh, I'm gonna write an outline,
01:07:24
◼
►
you know, we're talking about here's an A4 piece of paper
01:07:26
◼
►
and it's gonna be filled with information about Nintendo.
01:07:28
◼
►
You know, they were founded in, what is it?
01:07:30
◼
►
It's always like 1897 or something, it's great.
01:07:32
◼
►
They were a playing card company in 1897, you know, whatever.
01:07:36
◼
►
That kind of stuff, that always feels to me like,
01:07:38
◼
►
why aren't you just writing a script if you're doing this?
01:07:41
◼
►
Like what is this thing that you're even doing here?
01:07:43
◼
►
Or the reverse of it is, what is this ridiculous outline?
01:07:46
◼
►
Like, you know, you put a timeline,
01:07:48
◼
►
like have a list of dates on a piece of paper
01:07:50
◼
►
with just the basic information about what happened when.
01:07:53
◼
►
All of this extra stuff is superfluous
01:07:55
◼
►
because you can just like quickly reread the book
01:07:58
◼
►
on Nintendo and like revisit the primary source
01:08:01
◼
►
and like make sure that you have everything correct.
01:08:04
◼
►
- It's very time intensive.
01:08:05
◼
►
- I think it's less so when you realize like, again,
01:08:10
◼
►
why were some of the features of Evernote
01:08:13
◼
►
really key important to me.
01:08:15
◼
►
And like one of them is when you're highlighting PDF documents,
01:08:18
◼
►
Evernote has an amazing feature,
01:08:20
◼
►
which even in a PDF will like pull all of those highlights right to the front.
01:08:24
◼
►
- Well, and also as well I assume the OCR is very helpful.
01:08:27
◼
►
- Yeah, the OCR is incredibly helpful, yeah, for sure.
01:08:29
◼
►
- Because if you are thinking to yourself,
01:08:32
◼
►
"Oh, I need every piece of information about this part,
01:08:35
◼
►
I know I've read it in some articles", you could just search for it.
01:08:38
◼
►
- Yeah, yeah.
01:08:39
◼
►
It's just very interesting.
01:08:41
◼
►
And having made these videos and have experts look them over, like I have a really great
01:08:46
◼
►
track record of the experts being like, "Yeah, this script is totally fine."
01:08:50
◼
►
It's like, "Oh great, system works."
01:08:52
◼
►
You know, like there's no indication of like, you need any change with this.
01:08:57
◼
►
But anyway, so like just thinking about all of this, like, so one of the key things about
01:09:01
◼
►
the Zettelkasten which really resonates with me is I totally just, I hate the concept of
01:09:08
◼
►
like notes on a single piece of paper.
01:09:11
◼
►
It's also why, like, the app that I use for writing my scripts is Ulysses.
01:09:16
◼
►
Because one of the key features of Ulysses is they're like "no no no, we don't have a
01:09:19
◼
►
piece of paper that you're writing a script on".
01:09:23
◼
►
They call them sheets, I think, but it's the same thing where it's like, pages can be arbitrarily
01:09:28
◼
►
long, they can break at any point.
01:09:31
◼
►
You know, they can have page breaks, I mean.
01:09:33
◼
►
And you can have little sections, right?
01:09:35
◼
►
And so you can move the little sections around all the time.
01:09:38
◼
►
And I'm fairly sure that like no one uses Ulysses the way I do, where borderline, you
01:09:45
◼
►
know, every paragraph or two is broken up as a completely different little section,
01:09:50
◼
►
because I'm very often like rearranging these things.
01:09:53
◼
►
So this is why the concept of like, you want to be able to move the notes around is really
01:09:59
◼
►
helpful to me, because very quickly in a project, it becomes super clear, like, oh, I don't
01:10:05
◼
►
care about this part.
01:10:06
◼
►
But if I've like written it on a piece of paper or it's like a heading on an outline,
01:10:09
◼
►
it's sort of like stuck in place and you have to deal with it, right?
01:10:13
◼
►
Whereas you know if I'm working on Who Owns the Statue of Liberty and what I have is like
01:10:18
◼
►
a stack of "Oh here's 40 index cards of like your notes on this topic."
01:10:25
◼
►
There's a way in which like you can sort them or arrange them in such a way that it makes
01:10:30
◼
►
Like okay these relate to each other, this I don't care about at all and I can like move
01:10:34
◼
►
this around.
01:10:35
◼
►
you're saying note, right? Like this is this is the nomenclature I really want to make
01:10:39
◼
►
sure I'm getting correct. You mean like a singular piece of information?
01:10:44
◼
►
Yes. Right. Because I think a lot of people, including me, think of a note as this page.
01:10:52
◼
►
Yeah. So this is kind of why like when I was looking around and reading stuff like I immediately
01:10:57
◼
►
sort of gravitated towards Zettelkasten because this is one of the key concepts. Like they
01:11:02
◼
►
They talk about notes as being atomic.
01:11:05
◼
►
So it's like, each note is an atomic piece of information.
01:11:10
◼
►
You shouldn't be able to reduce it.
01:11:11
◼
►
- Can I read from Wikipedia now?
01:11:13
◼
►
Please let me read from Wikipedia.
01:11:14
◼
►
I think it will help, I genuinely do.
01:11:16
◼
►
- Okay, go ahead.
01:11:17
◼
►
- Azatul Kastan consists of many individual notes
01:11:21
◼
►
with ideas and other short pieces of information
01:11:24
◼
►
that are taken down as they occur or are acquired.
01:11:27
◼
►
The notes are numbered hierarchically
01:11:29
◼
►
so that new notes may be inserted at the appropriate place
01:11:32
◼
►
and contain metadata to allow the note taker to associate
01:11:36
◼
►
the notes of each other.
01:11:37
◼
►
For example, notes may contain tags
01:11:39
◼
►
that describe key aspects of the note,
01:11:42
◼
►
and they may reference other notes.
01:11:43
◼
►
The numbering, metadata, format, and structure of the notes
01:11:46
◼
►
is subject to variation depending
01:11:48
◼
►
on the specific method employed.
01:11:50
◼
►
I think that helps, because it's the idea, at least,
01:11:53
◼
►
that I think I'm following, is that the reason
01:11:54
◼
►
this system seemed to meet with you is that you've got
01:11:57
◼
►
like this little piece of information and they're put into a system but they are free
01:12:03
◼
►
to be moved around.
01:12:06
◼
►
But they are in like a hierarchy or they are associated with each other but not in such
01:12:13
◼
►
a way of like here is an outline.
01:12:18
◼
►
Yeah like one of the key things you know and this again is where like my feelings about
01:12:23
◼
►
notes and outlines. So it's like, this seems like nonsense. Before you write a paper,
01:12:27
◼
►
create an outline of the paper. Like, what are you going to write in each of these sections?
01:12:30
◼
►
There's like, that is a bunch of nonsense. That's saying, before you write the paper,
01:12:34
◼
►
you need to know what the paper is about. It's like, well, how am I supposed to do that before
01:12:38
◼
►
I write it? You know, it's like, the outlines the hard part, like it's, this is not the easy
01:12:44
◼
►
part to get you started. Like it's, you know, I always found that stuff just really frustrating.
01:12:48
◼
►
And again, is why with so many of like the way this stuff is taught in school,
01:12:53
◼
►
it just seemed to me like, "What is this charade everyone is playing? Like, I don't understand. Oh,
01:12:58
◼
►
I can write an outline before I know all the things about the topic? Exactly how am I supposed
01:13:03
◼
►
to do that?" This is also why like this system of like little notes that are just individual
01:13:08
◼
►
pieces of information means it doesn't matter what order you come across these pieces of information,
01:13:14
◼
►
You know, like, writing and research are nonlinear processes.
01:13:19
◼
►
And by having individual atomic notes,
01:13:23
◼
►
they can be created and found in any order.
01:13:26
◼
►
It doesn't matter.
01:13:28
◼
►
One of the other things that
01:13:30
◼
►
I don't know if this is going to be helpful,
01:13:32
◼
►
but since I'm still in this intermediate stage,
01:13:34
◼
►
but I suspect it's going to be helpful,
01:13:37
◼
►
is I have a strong feeling that
01:13:41
◼
►
this will help also more clearly define
01:13:45
◼
►
When am I writing versus when am I researching?
01:13:50
◼
►
Right now in the video creation process and for always like those two phases have been very difficult
01:14:00
◼
►
Distinguish from each other quite often and so I suspect like I'll be able to draw a greater distinction between those two and that might be
01:14:08
◼
►
useful. Like even in my own time tracking system, in theory I've always had two timers,
01:14:14
◼
►
one which is called like, writing, and one which is called research. But I'm very aware
01:14:18
◼
►
that I treat those two as totally indistinguishable from each other. Like very often I'm starting
01:14:23
◼
►
the research timer and then it's like, "Oh, I've basically spent all this time writing,
01:14:28
◼
►
or vice versa." And it's like, who cares? This is all the same sort of nonlinear, deeply
01:14:33
◼
►
interconnected process.
01:14:34
◼
►
It's not like when you write you no longer refer to the material.
01:14:38
◼
►
Yeah, so yeah, and again like on my computer screen like this is also why like whenever
01:14:43
◼
►
I'm writing I would almost always have Evernote open on the side and it's like oh yeah here's
01:14:49
◼
►
that report that dude wrote about tumbleweeds a hundred years ago like I want to have that
01:14:52
◼
►
on screen while I'm writing this section about tumbleweeds you know that kind of thing but
01:14:56
◼
►
it also does make it like a bit more burdensome that I'm always like 100% looking at the primary
01:15:02
◼
►
really what you need is this group of atomic notes and then you can pick out the ones that
01:15:10
◼
►
are most necessary for the current part of the script that you're writing.
01:15:14
◼
►
B: Yeah, it's like a layer of information that exists between the script and the primary
01:15:20
◼
►
sources whereas I'm totally aware that I keep describing—I mean I'm sorry listeners,
01:15:27
◼
►
I'm sure this must be infuriating as I explain to you like what you learned in grade school
01:15:31
◼
►
a useful skill, right? It's like a house. [laughs]
01:15:33
◼
►
CB; Yeah, it is. This is very surreal to be talking about, like, because it's... But
01:15:41
◼
►
I guess it's kind of fascinating because it's like, how would you rediscover this type of
01:15:49
◼
►
note-taking today? So, okay. So this new grey system, does it only include text?
01:15:57
◼
►
What do you mean?
01:15:59
◼
►
Well, like if you had an image.
01:16:03
◼
►
So again, since I'm just playing around and it's still very fluid, I've been largely working
01:16:08
◼
►
on actual paper because I think that's always the best way to think about something.
01:16:12
◼
►
But I have found one of these apps to do this kind of thing and it's an app called Obsidian.
01:16:18
◼
►
It's funny, it's actually someone's...
01:16:20
◼
►
It's a very small team and it's their quarantine project.
01:16:23
◼
►
Like it's the thing that they've been working on.
01:16:25
◼
►
So it's it's still pretty early.
01:16:27
◼
►
What was that sound?
01:16:31
◼
►
This looks complicated.
01:16:32
◼
►
Okay, so the reason this caught my attention and is also
01:16:36
◼
►
It supports LaTeX!
01:16:39
◼
►
Okay, right.
01:16:41
◼
►
Let me let me get there, Myke.
01:16:43
◼
►
You've been found out.
01:16:45
◼
►
So this is like a note app.
01:16:47
◼
►
And I would say this is very much in the like Notion Rome family.
01:16:52
◼
►
You know, this is another version of like different people are trying to approach this
01:16:56
◼
►
sort of concept of these interconnected webs of information.
01:17:01
◼
►
"This looks so complicated."
01:17:03
◼
►
Yeah, but here's the thing.
01:17:04
◼
►
A thing finally clicked for me, which was, you know, last time we were talking about
01:17:09
◼
►
how like, oh, I was working in Notion and I was just trying to type and/or and then
01:17:13
◼
►
like when I hit slash a whole world of opportunities opened up to me.
01:17:17
◼
►
It's like, oh my God, I don't need to insert a kanban board in the middle of this sentence,
01:17:22
◼
►
thanks guys, right? I think for all also reasons which may be much more clear now, I'd also
01:17:27
◼
►
largely just totally dismissed the very notion of apps like Notion and Roam. I was like this is just
01:17:32
◼
►
nonsense, this is just academic busy work for people who don't really need it. So it just so
01:17:38
◼
►
happens like working with Obsidian and just playing around with it and seeing like okay what's the deal
01:17:42
◼
►
you know of all of these various notes like the Zettel heads seem to really like this one in
01:17:48
◼
►
in particular, so I was like "Oh, let me just play around with it."
01:17:50
◼
►
And a thing finally clicked in my head, which is I realized "Oh, okay."
01:17:57
◼
►
What all of these notes systems are doing is very similar to the thing that I used to
01:18:05
◼
►
use in college, which was Org Mode on Emacs.
01:18:09
◼
►
It's the same concept of like, when you're typing, at any point you can link to something
01:18:16
◼
►
else or insert different kinds of information. And something about like the graphical user
01:18:23
◼
►
interface of a thing like Notion makes it to me feel like really cumbersome and absurd.
01:18:29
◼
►
But when I think about it as "Yeah, but you can do this whole thing just with an extremely
01:18:34
◼
►
large number of text files on your computer," there's a way in which like, "Oh, it feels
01:18:40
◼
►
much more simple to me." And I realize like, "Yes, when I used to use org mode on Emacs,
01:18:45
◼
►
what this thing was. You can like link to any other text file or you can quickly include
01:18:50
◼
►
some to-dos. You can include your LaTeX formatting if you want to. You can insert a calendar,
01:18:55
◼
►
but it's all done via text files. And that's the thing that Obsidian is doing. It's similar
01:19:02
◼
►
to Rome, it's similar to Notion. The key difference is that they're just doing it entirely through
01:19:08
◼
►
Markdown files on your local drive.
01:19:13
◼
►
And it's like "Oh, okay, cool, I get it.
01:19:14
◼
►
I've been using Markdown to write my scripts for forever, so this is like no burden whatsoever
01:19:21
◼
►
to then also do a bunch of notes in Markdown."
01:19:24
◼
►
And it means that like the transition between those two is ridiculously simple if I want
01:19:29
◼
►
information to go one way or the other.
01:19:31
◼
►
But so this is like a digital version of doing the index cards, and this is where like, oh
01:19:39
◼
►
yeah, if you have an image that you want to use, like, you can include it in just the
01:19:43
◼
►
way Markdown formats including images, but ultimately it's all just, here's 300, you
01:19:48
◼
►
know, .md files on your hard drive that are just text files.
01:19:53
◼
►
And if you type double brackets, you can link from one to another, which is like the exact
01:19:56
◼
►
same thing that Rome does.
01:19:58
◼
►
Like if you're typing in Rome, you can open up two double brackets and you can link to
01:20:02
◼
►
any other one of the notes anywhere in your in your system.
01:20:05
◼
►
So does that answer your question of what happens if you have a picture?
01:20:11
◼
►
I'm really lost looking at this Obsidian app.
01:20:13
◼
►
C- I would not recommend Obsidian for you, Myke.
01:20:18
◼
►
M- Because I don't really understand, like, so you're creating...
01:20:24
◼
►
Where are you making notes?
01:20:25
◼
►
Well again, for me, I'm still doing this almost entirely with paper as I'm figuring out what's
01:20:30
◼
►
I have played around with Obsidian, but again, just like we talk about when people are figuring
01:20:37
◼
►
out their to-do systems, you don't want to prematurely optimise for the digital version,
01:20:44
◼
►
because you're going to get too distracted by the features or lack of features of whatever
01:20:47
◼
►
digital tool.
01:20:48
◼
►
It's the same thing here, I just wanted to play around with Obsidian to see, let me understand
01:20:54
◼
►
the concept of what this is in a digital form, which is you can have virtual index cards
01:21:01
◼
►
with virtual strings connecting related ones together.
01:21:04
◼
►
It's like, okay, cool, I understand that.
01:21:07
◼
►
And that also helped me understand this is very much like, you know, I mean, the reason
01:21:13
◼
►
I think you're feeling overwhelmed looking at it is it's very Linux-y, which is what
01:21:17
◼
►
made me think like, oh yeah, this is just like org mode from a thousand years ago, you
01:21:22
◼
►
so you can have this digital version.
01:21:24
◼
►
But it's just like the basic ideas for any project.
01:21:28
◼
►
You can have notes that are just individual pieces of information.
01:21:32
◼
►
Those pieces of information, because they're on index cards,
01:21:37
◼
►
are not constrained by your preconception of either, like,
01:21:42
◼
►
what is the hierarchy or what is the order of these notes.
01:21:47
◼
►
That can come out of it later when you realise,
01:21:50
◼
►
"Oh, these three pieces of information are related" or like "These two pieces of information,
01:21:55
◼
►
I thought they were interesting and important at the start but it turns out that they're
01:21:58
◼
►
actually irrelevant so I can put them at the back of the list."
01:22:01
◼
►
It's really just about the reordering layer.
01:22:07
◼
►
And again, I think why this feels like it's a useful step for me is because it's- it feels
01:22:14
◼
►
like this pre-script layer where it's much easier to think about some of the information
01:22:23
◼
►
related to a topic without one, reviewing the primary sources even in their much compressed
01:22:31
◼
►
form or two, writing the script where there's also this additional layer of what is the
01:22:40
◼
►
style in which I'm saying this information, right? Because the script is not just a recitation
01:22:46
◼
►
of facts, right? No one would watch the videos if I was just like, "Here, let me tell you
01:22:50
◼
►
all the facts about the situation." That has a whole other, like, what is the style? How
01:22:56
◼
►
is this being told? Like, what are the visuals going to be? Like, that's an additional thing
01:23:00
◼
►
that I have to think about when doing that. So the notes layer feels like information
01:23:07
◼
►
organization without the burden of style, and without the weight of the primary source.
01:23:18
◼
►
That's the way I think this will work going forward.
01:23:21
◼
►
I feel like Rome is a good option for you, from what I know about it.
01:23:29
◼
►
Okay, why do you say that?
01:23:31
◼
►
- Well, 'cause it is all about like,
01:23:33
◼
►
singular pieces of information
01:23:36
◼
►
that can very easily link together.
01:23:39
◼
►
And from what I know of Roam,
01:23:43
◼
►
it is available on the web on all devices.
01:23:48
◼
►
My understanding is they are making apps for all platforms.
01:23:52
◼
►
My concern would be with an app like Obsidian,
01:23:54
◼
►
it's like Mac only,
01:23:56
◼
►
which I don't know if that's the right method.
01:24:00
◼
►
Oh yeah, 100% no iOS app for Obsidian is the hugest downside.
01:24:07
◼
►
But again, this is why I'm not really invested in what is the digital tool at this stage.
01:24:13
◼
►
Yeah, I want to come back to that though, like I really do.
01:24:16
◼
►
But the thing is, I wanted to just play around with it, because there is a way in which it
01:24:21
◼
►
can be briefly clarifying about like, what do people mean when they're talking about
01:24:25
◼
►
linking notes?
01:24:26
◼
►
Oh okay, this is what they mean.
01:24:27
◼
►
that you had to start looking at some of these things
01:24:30
◼
►
like Notion, Roam, Obsidian for you to be able to clarify
01:24:34
◼
►
the basic system, right?
01:24:37
◼
►
Like I can see that of like, all right,
01:24:39
◼
►
you're like, all right, okay, so I'm not wild here.
01:24:41
◼
►
It is a valid like way that people collect information,
01:24:46
◼
►
right, and now you can go back to doing what you're doing
01:24:49
◼
►
now of like making sure that this basic structure
01:24:54
◼
►
makes sense to you.
01:24:56
◼
►
This has been a trip.
01:25:01
◼
►
Well, you know.
01:25:03
◼
►
You think you know someone.
01:25:06
◼
►
Well, I mean, again, this is where I really mean
01:25:10
◼
►
this thing of like my other drumbeat
01:25:12
◼
►
from being just a person who makes things on the internet
01:25:15
◼
►
is the deep, deep realization that human communication
01:25:19
◼
►
is much harder than people think it is.
01:25:23
◼
►
And one of the reasons is that human brains
01:25:26
◼
►
much more different than people think they are, but they're also different in extremely
01:25:34
◼
►
subtle and hard to notice ways.
01:25:37
◼
►
And this can be one of these sorts of things where it's just like something that seems
01:25:41
◼
►
obvious to everyone can be non obvious for someone else or just because the way like
01:25:47
◼
►
one person's brain works like a thing that works for everyone doesn't work for them.
01:25:51
◼
►
- Well, we have been talking about notes apps
01:25:54
◼
►
for so many years, but never had we realized
01:25:58
◼
►
that we were doing this process
01:26:01
◼
►
in such vastly different ways.
01:26:03
◼
►
- Yeah, yeah, it casts back on the,
01:26:05
◼
►
every time you're talking about Evernote
01:26:07
◼
►
or note-taking apps, you realize,
01:26:08
◼
►
oh, there's something else here, right,
01:26:11
◼
►
that makes this conversation make a lot more sense,
01:26:14
◼
►
which is Gray thinks notes are a Potemkin village
01:26:19
◼
►
of knowledge that schools require students create for inspectors and have no intrinsic
01:26:25
◼
►
value whatsoever. And grown-ups who make notes are just repeating the behaviors from their
01:26:30
◼
►
childhood without understanding why they're doing it. Right?
01:26:37
◼
►
Just because you couldn't see the board. I still like I do still wonder like how on
01:26:41
◼
►
earth I made it so long without being able to see the board.
01:26:44
◼
►
Or realize it like that's the funny part to me right like it never came up it just never
01:26:48
◼
►
I do wonder sometimes because I think perhaps if I'm trying to recreate like how did this situation even begin in the first place,
01:26:56
◼
►
I do know like one of the most important gifts that my parents ever gave to me was when I was in middle school.
01:27:02
◼
►
They gave me this like course on how to memorize stuff and I know we've talked about this sometimes.
01:27:08
◼
►
And like I remember in middle school just really devouring this set of tricks of how to remember things.
01:27:16
◼
►
And I've always just been aware of how that one thing got me through high school and college
01:27:24
◼
►
is like, "Here's how to memorize things."
01:27:27
◼
►
And so I also just wonder is like, is that a contributing factor to how I was able to
01:27:33
◼
►
get by with no one noticing I couldn't read the board?
01:27:36
◼
►
Is because I was like, "Oh yeah, no, I've got this hack for the school system that just
01:27:40
◼
►
lets me pass these standardized tests."
01:27:45
◼
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So do you remember last time we were talking about real-time collaboration applications?
01:29:40
◼
►
You were looking for alternatives to Google Docs, that's what you were doing.
01:29:43
◼
►
Yeah, because we were upset about no-dark mode and then I said to you, "Alright, let's
01:29:48
◼
►
try out Word, look out for an invitation from me."
01:29:50
◼
►
Oh yeah, well I haven't opened my email since then, but I assume that that invitation never
01:29:55
◼
►
It never got sent because Word didn't pass the initial testing for me.
01:30:00
◼
►
Basically I spent a couple of days trying out lots of different applications, you know,
01:30:05
◼
►
I tried Word, I tried Pages, I tried Notion for something like this, I tried Apple Notes.
01:30:13
◼
►
Effectively, the problem is none of them are as instant as Google Docs.
01:30:18
◼
►
I was just doing some simple testing with, I would have Word open on my iPad and Word
01:30:23
◼
►
open on my Mac in the Mac app or in the web browser.
01:30:29
◼
►
And the issue would be that it would update the information, but not immediately.
01:30:34
◼
►
It would kind of like, you could basically watch the system do it.
01:30:38
◼
►
Like you would start typing a bunch of stuff, you would stop, you would see like saving
01:30:43
◼
►
and then a couple of seconds later it would appear in the other place.
01:30:46
◼
►
And like that is not what I want.
01:30:48
◼
►
And then, so I was doing these tests in between the time of like us recording and releasing
01:30:53
◼
►
the episode.
01:30:54
◼
►
And honestly by the time we'd released the episode I realized that both word pages and
01:30:59
◼
►
everything else, none of them were as good as Google Docs.
01:31:01
◼
►
Then I started hearing from all the core Texans who were like, "Please, please don't use
01:31:06
◼
►
I have lost so much work through that collaboration system."
01:31:10
◼
►
Because it's conflict, right?
01:31:11
◼
►
Like this is the thing we were talking about.
01:31:13
◼
►
It's like, it's conflict.
01:31:15
◼
►
Also like, you know, there were people that were saying to me like, "Oh, Word has a dark
01:31:19
◼
►
mode as well, but it doesn't have a dark mode.
01:31:23
◼
►
Like the UI goes dark, but the page is still white."
01:31:27
◼
►
And then there were people that would tell me, "Oh, all you have to do is change the
01:31:29
◼
►
page to a black background and the text to white. No, that's not a dark mode. That's
01:31:33
◼
►
not a dark mode, right? Like that's you making changes that you'll eventually like when you're
01:31:38
◼
►
on an app system that has light mode and then it won't make any sense because the page is
01:31:44
◼
►
Yeah, I hate those pseudo dark modes so much. I was really pumped because Apple recently
01:31:49
◼
►
released a dark mode for numbers, their spreadsheet program that I use so much. I was like, oh,
01:31:55
◼
►
finally, like dark mode for spreadsheets. No, the spreadsheets are just as white as
01:31:58
◼
►
they ever were.
01:31:59
◼
►
So the UI Chrome is dark, which is, that's not,
01:32:02
◼
►
you know, it's not helpful, like email apps are fine,
01:32:05
◼
►
you know, like it just inverts the text color,
01:32:07
◼
►
but it's not like everybody's getting emails
01:32:10
◼
►
that are just white text, right?
01:32:11
◼
►
'Cause that's no good.
01:32:12
◼
►
So basically, there's a long version of this,
01:32:17
◼
►
but I don't think it's worth necessarily going into
01:32:19
◼
►
at this point.
01:32:20
◼
►
The short version is, I've come to conclude
01:32:23
◼
►
that real-time collaboration for me is more important
01:32:26
◼
►
than the native OS features that I want.
01:32:29
◼
►
- Because the most important thing that goes
01:32:32
◼
►
into these documents is the text,
01:32:33
◼
►
and the text has to be correct for everyone.
01:32:36
◼
►
And if it isn't, then what was the point
01:32:39
◼
►
in even starting the document in the first place?
01:32:41
◼
►
Like if real-time collaboration was not as important,
01:32:44
◼
►
like if all I wanted was just to have
01:32:46
◼
►
like the most native features,
01:32:48
◼
►
I'd probably just use Apple Notes for everything.
01:32:51
◼
►
Right, like that's the decision I kind of come to,
01:32:52
◼
►
is like that's an application that's always gonna be
01:32:55
◼
►
up to date with the system,
01:32:56
◼
►
it has good hooks in with the system,
01:32:57
◼
►
I love it. I use it for so much stuff. But the problem is like you have to wait
01:33:02
◼
►
for people's stuff to get synced in. And then the other issue I was finding is
01:33:06
◼
►
that all of the new pieces of software that people are creating like in the
01:33:11
◼
►
vein of a Google Docs like a kind of a web-based solution, they want to be
01:33:14
◼
►
everything. They want to be Docs and Sheets and Chat and Tasks and everything
01:33:20
◼
►
and everything and everything and everything. And that's also not what I
01:33:24
◼
►
I want. Like, I want a focused product. So I think I'm basically back in the place that
01:33:30
◼
►
I end up being once every year or two. Google Docs is the best at what Google Docs does.
01:33:37
◼
►
And I just have to hope that Google will update it to be what I want it to be.
01:33:41
◼
►
I'm sorry that your journey into real-time collaboration apps was less of a march and
01:33:49
◼
►
more of just a circle right back to where you started.
01:33:52
◼
►
- It's been like two days.
01:33:54
◼
►
It really, it really didn't take very long.
01:33:55
◼
►
- At least it was a short circle then,
01:33:57
◼
►
it wasn't a long circle. - That's true, that's true.
01:33:59
◼
►
I didn't have to do a lot of work to come to this decision,
01:34:02
◼
►
but I just, I've come to really rely
01:34:05
◼
►
and value what Google Docs does,
01:34:08
◼
►
and it's the best at what it does fundamentally.
01:34:14
◼
►
So I mentioned that now was a busy time for me, right?
01:34:17
◼
►
Like I've got a lot going on right now.
01:34:20
◼
►
And the big project that I have on my horizon
01:34:24
◼
►
is the Podcastathon, Podcastathon 2.
01:34:27
◼
►
- Oh, Podcastathon 2.
01:34:29
◼
►
- Electric Boogaloo.
01:34:31
◼
►
Listeners may remember that last year
01:34:33
◼
►
we raised a ton of money.
01:34:36
◼
►
It was an incredible thing
01:34:37
◼
►
for St. Jude Children's Cancer Research Hospital.
01:34:40
◼
►
And I'm gonna be talking a little bit more
01:34:42
◼
►
about this on our next episode,
01:34:44
◼
►
but we are fundraising again,
01:34:46
◼
►
starting now and throughout September.
01:34:48
◼
►
If you go to stju.org/relay, you can give money there.
01:34:52
◼
►
It would be incredible for you to support the cause.
01:34:55
◼
►
We had such an incredible showing last year.
01:34:57
◼
►
We raised over $300,000, which was just
01:35:01
◼
►
absolutely unbelievable, blew us all away.
01:35:04
◼
►
And we want to do it again.
01:35:05
◼
►
We want to raise that money again,
01:35:07
◼
►
because it's difficult, right?
01:35:09
◼
►
Everything's difficult for everyone right now.
01:35:12
◼
►
But that doesn't mean that this is a thing
01:35:14
◼
►
that we also can't continue to think about, and we should.
01:35:18
◼
►
St. Jude is such an incredible place.
01:35:20
◼
►
They do such incredible work.
01:35:22
◼
►
The treatments that have been invented at St. Jude,
01:35:25
◼
►
they've helped push the child cancer survival rate
01:35:28
◼
►
from 20% to more than 80% in its 50 years of being around.
01:35:33
◼
►
And so supporting this charity,
01:35:36
◼
►
their mission is to make sure
01:35:38
◼
►
that no child dies from cancer.
01:35:41
◼
►
And I think they can do that, right?
01:35:43
◼
►
They've done such incredible things over 50 years.
01:35:47
◼
►
We want to continue to support their work.
01:35:50
◼
►
So if you go to stjude.org/relay, you can donate.
01:35:54
◼
►
Whatever you can will go a long way
01:35:57
◼
►
to helping this wonderful institution
01:36:00
◼
►
and the children that they take care of.
01:36:03
◼
►
And this isn't a charity that is just an American charity.
01:36:07
◼
►
They help people from all over the world.
01:36:09
◼
►
And the research from St. Jude
01:36:12
◼
►
has helped with medicine worldwide.
01:36:15
◼
►
So it is a really, really incredible place.
01:36:17
◼
►
It does incredible things.
01:36:19
◼
►
So say I wanna talk more in detail about St. Jude
01:36:21
◼
►
on our next episode, 'cause that is,
01:36:23
◼
►
will be in September, and that is when
01:36:26
◼
►
Childhood Cancer Awareness Month is.
01:36:28
◼
►
But also in September is Podcastathon 2.
01:36:31
◼
►
It's gonna be on September 18th,
01:36:34
◼
►
from two to eight p.m. Eastern, twitch.tv/relayfm.
01:36:37
◼
►
Again, I will talk about that more.
01:36:39
◼
►
I will remind everybody in our next episode about that.
01:36:42
◼
►
But the big thing, the big thing that's taking up
01:36:44
◼
►
my time right now is that this is an all remote podcast.
01:36:48
◼
►
I thought you're not all getting together in uh, in Memphis again.
01:36:52
◼
►
No, not happening.
01:36:53
◼
►
It's like last year we did everything in Memphis, Tennessee that, uh, uh, the St.
01:36:57
◼
►
Jude campus.
01:36:58
◼
►
They have these incredible production facilities there and I mean, I can't be
01:37:03
◼
►
So currently at the moment, a big project is getting mega studio set for this
01:37:12
◼
►
you're gonna need filming as well, right?
01:37:15
◼
►
- It's all video.
01:37:16
◼
►
- You wanna look good on camera.
01:37:17
◼
►
- So I have my one person production crew
01:37:21
◼
►
of Adina right now and we are making it happen.
01:37:24
◼
►
We're setting up sets, we're getting some lights,
01:37:27
◼
►
we're getting tripods.
01:37:28
◼
►
Yeah, there's a lot going on and it's a big project
01:37:34
◼
►
for everyone right now because as well as coming up
01:37:37
◼
►
with the content that we wanna put into the event,
01:37:39
◼
►
it's like just the basics.
01:37:42
◼
►
When we started the planning for Podcastathon 2,
01:37:45
◼
►
it was like, all right, how can we make this bigger
01:37:47
◼
►
and better and focus on the content?
01:37:49
◼
►
So we started doing that, and now we have the sub-project
01:37:52
◼
►
of, okay, now we need to rework all the logistics as well.
01:37:55
◼
►
So. - Right.
01:37:56
◼
►
- So it's a bigger project.
01:37:58
◼
►
I mean, I'm really pleased this is the second one we've done
01:38:01
◼
►
because if it was the first one,
01:38:02
◼
►
it would have been infinitely harder
01:38:04
◼
►
because now we've been able to learn from last year.
01:38:07
◼
►
And I genuinely think that the remoteness of it
01:38:11
◼
►
is not going to affect it.
01:38:14
◼
►
The only difference is me and Steven
01:38:15
◼
►
are not in the same place.
01:38:16
◼
►
Because every guest we had last year--
01:38:19
◼
►
well, not every, but many of the guests we had last year
01:38:22
◼
►
were remote guests.
01:38:23
◼
►
Yeah, it's really lucky that you were able to do with Steven
01:38:26
◼
►
in person the first time.
01:38:28
◼
►
That makes a huge difference for trying
01:38:29
◼
►
to do it all remote the second time, for sure.
01:38:32
◼
►
Yeah, so we've learned from it.
01:38:33
◼
►
And we have an incredible team at St. Jude and Allsac
01:38:38
◼
►
to help us put it on.
01:38:39
◼
►
They've given us access to lots of incredible resources.
01:38:43
◼
►
So I'm really excited about it,
01:38:45
◼
►
but I'm also super nervous about it
01:38:47
◼
►
'cause it's a big job for us
01:38:51
◼
►
to get this studio ready for that.
01:38:55
◼
►
It was never made for that.
01:38:57
◼
►
So we're currently setting up sets, effectively,
01:39:01
◼
►
like locations, like fixed locations in the studio.
01:39:04
◼
►
- Wait, what do you mean, like sets and locations?
01:39:07
◼
►
Are you gonna transition to,
01:39:08
◼
►
oh, this is Myke by the fireside kind of set?
01:39:11
◼
►
Like, is that what you mean? - Pretty much, yes.
01:39:13
◼
►
So we're gonna have three locations in the studio.
01:39:16
◼
►
Like one is like a relaxed location.
01:39:20
◼
►
One is a behind the desk location.
01:39:22
◼
►
And one is a secret location that I won't reveal just yet.
01:39:27
◼
►
'Cause we're setting up something which is in scope,
01:39:31
◼
►
maybe a little more than we should do.
01:39:33
◼
►
But if we are able to execute it,
01:39:35
◼
►
and I believe that we will,
01:39:37
◼
►
will be incredibly fun.
01:39:39
◼
►
So it's a big project and like I'm super happy
01:39:43
◼
►
that I have Adina's time for this.
01:39:45
◼
►
Like she's basically pushing everything
01:39:47
◼
►
to decide to do this.
01:39:48
◼
►
'Cause there's no way I could do this on my own.
01:39:51
◼
►
Like even just like getting the basic equipment
01:39:54
◼
►
that we need is a huge task because like you try
01:39:58
◼
►
and find a good light right now.
01:40:00
◼
►
- Yeah, I was gonna say, do you have those fancy like,
01:40:03
◼
►
I don't know what they're called, the things that you use
01:40:05
◼
►
to bounce the light off of so you can look, you know,
01:40:07
◼
►
really great on the camera?
01:40:08
◼
►
- Yeah, I don't think I've gone to that level.
01:40:10
◼
►
- The bounce shields?
01:40:11
◼
►
I don't know what they're called.
01:40:12
◼
►
- Yeah, bounce shields, that's what they call it in the biz.
01:40:15
◼
►
You know, like, just stuff like, and it's a great product,
01:40:18
◼
►
like the Elgato Key Light,
01:40:20
◼
►
all the streamers use these lights, they're fantastic.
01:40:23
◼
►
I've been able to get a couple of them.
01:40:24
◼
►
- Is this more of your RGB nonsense?
01:40:26
◼
►
Is that what you're talking about here?
01:40:27
◼
►
- No, it's just a pure light, there's no RGB on this one,
01:40:31
◼
►
but it is something that all the game streamers use.
01:40:34
◼
►
But yeah, it's like, this is an interesting task to tackle
01:40:38
◼
►
because this is not my world.
01:40:41
◼
►
But it's something that we are getting a handle of
01:40:47
◼
►
during the fundraising process
01:40:49
◼
►
between now and September 18th.
01:40:50
◼
►
Like we're raising money all through September,
01:40:52
◼
►
but obviously we want to have a lead up
01:40:55
◼
►
to the podcast-a-thon.
01:40:56
◼
►
Like we're going to be doing other Twitch streams
01:40:59
◼
►
and this is all like testing of the setups, right?
01:41:02
◼
►
so we can make sure that we have the basics ready
01:41:07
◼
►
before we have to commit eight hours, you know?
01:41:09
◼
►
- Right, yeah.
01:41:10
◼
►
Yeah, that's not when you wanna find out
01:41:12
◼
►
how difficult it is to switch between sets
01:41:14
◼
►
is when you're trying to do something live for eight hours.
01:41:18
◼
►
Like, and so it's even like one thing
01:41:19
◼
►
where I've already realized like,
01:41:20
◼
►
"Oh, okay, I found a great tripod.
01:41:22
◼
►
"I need two of these."
01:41:25
◼
►
And so I've got this cart we bought from Ikea
01:41:29
◼
►
that has a small tripod on it.
01:41:32
◼
►
the laptop that I'm going to be using, the light and gear, right, that I need in, if
01:41:37
◼
►
I'm going to, because then basically we're moving this cart around to the different parts
01:41:41
◼
►
of the studio, right? So it's all in a fixed location. But what I've learned is for two
01:41:47
◼
►
of the locations, it will be better if I can just pop the camera off and put it onto a
01:41:50
◼
►
tripod which is on the ground rather than on the cart. So like this is the benefit of
01:41:55
◼
►
of doing these smaller tests of trying to work out
01:42:00
◼
►
what this environment will be good for.
01:42:03
◼
►
And there's like two things which is like benefits.
01:42:06
◼
►
One, I'm pleased we didn't have this place entirely furnished
01:42:09
◼
►
because we would not have the space to do what we want to do.
01:42:12
◼
►
-Right, right. Yeah.
01:42:12
◼
►
You didn't know that, surprise,
01:42:14
◼
►
you need to build three filming sets in Mega Studio.
01:42:18
◼
►
-And two, it's helping us accelerate the furnishing process
01:42:23
◼
►
because there's stuff that we need for this.
01:42:25
◼
►
So yeah, this is a very interesting task to undertake,
01:42:30
◼
►
but I am very excited about it
01:42:33
◼
►
and I couldn't find a better cause to do it for.
01:42:36
◼
►
Core Tech Sense, do us proud.
01:42:39
◼
►
Go to stju.org/relay and donate now.
01:42:42
◼
►
Get ready for the Podcastathon
01:42:43
◼
►
and I'll be talking about it a little bit more next time.
01:42:47
◼
►
So as is usual for us,
01:42:49
◼
►
I had like a million more things
01:42:51
◼
►
that I wanted to talk about today,
01:42:53
◼
►
that we're gonna have to push to a later episode,
01:42:55
◼
►
'cause I was not expecting what was your quote,
01:42:58
◼
►
"mini-topic" in the episode of reassessing your note-taking
01:43:02
◼
►
to be an absolute fundamental rebuild
01:43:04
◼
►
of what it takes to make a note.
01:43:07
◼
►
- Yeah, I'm sorry, I didn't mean to totally blow your plans.
01:43:10
◼
►
I thought that was a nice,
01:43:11
◼
►
that might be a nice pre-show thing. (laughs)
01:43:15
◼
►
- Look, as I've said many times,
01:43:16
◼
►
there's two great things about us having more.
01:43:19
◼
►
I have work already done for next time.
01:43:21
◼
►
And two, it gives us stuff to talk about
01:43:24
◼
►
in more text as well.
01:43:25
◼
►
- Yes, that's true.
01:43:27
◼
►
- But before we go today, it's August.
01:43:30
◼
►
And around these parts, August means text adventures.
01:43:33
◼
►
- Text adventure time.
01:43:35
◼
►
- And we have another one.
01:43:36
◼
►
So on August 29th, the upgrade Cortex crossover
01:43:41
◼
►
text adventure for this year will be published
01:43:43
◼
►
for Relay FM members.
01:43:44
◼
►
All Relay FM members get access to this.
01:43:47
◼
►
So if you subscribe to more tax or you subscribe to another show, there is a
01:43:52
◼
►
feed called relay FM crossover, which is where all of the bonus content is posted.
01:43:56
◼
►
I'm going to put a link in the show notes.
01:43:57
◼
►
So if you're a member and you don't have the crossover feed, you can just click
01:44:00
◼
►
that and it will take you where you need to go to sign up for it.
01:44:03
◼
►
But this is a great time.
01:44:04
◼
►
If you're not a relay from member to try out more tax, because if you've got
01:44:09
◼
►
to get more text.com, you can sign up for $5 a month and you will get more
01:44:14
◼
►
and you will also get the crossover feed that includes the text adventure special
01:44:18
◼
►
so you can give it a go and see what you're missing out by not getting more
01:44:22
◼
►
text. It's gonna be a trailer at the end of this episode so you can hear the
01:44:26
◼
►
theme of this year's text adventure so I'll play that for you. If you're not a
01:44:31
◼
►
member you need to become one to get access to this. Go to get more text.com
01:44:35
◼
►
you can sign up you'll be able to get the more text feed and the crossover
01:44:38
◼
►
feed that will include the text adventure for you and don't forget more
01:44:42
◼
►
More Tex is longer, ad-free episodes of Cortex.
01:44:46
◼
►
So go check it out right now.
01:44:48
◼
►
GetMoreTex.com.
01:44:50
◼
►
GetMoreTex.com.
01:44:51
◼
►
Myke, Gray, welcome to Z-War!
01:44:57
◼
►
Oh no, it's a zombie!
01:45:02
◼
►
You're at the hospital entrance.
01:45:21
◼
►
my map. Okay, wait a second.
01:45:23
◼
►
- Didn't last very long.
01:45:24
◼
►
- You read the poorly spelled email you received
01:45:29
◼
►
this morning from your sister.
01:45:31
◼
►
Halp zombie apocalypse xoxo Francis.
01:45:36
◼
►
- Looks like you're right, Myke.
01:45:38
◼
►
It's zombie time.
01:45:40
◼
►
The only real piece of information that we need
01:45:42
◼
►
is what kind of zombies are we dealing with here?
01:45:45
◼
►
Are they like zombie zombies
01:45:47
◼
►
or are they 28 days later zombies?
01:45:50
◼
►
If they're zombie zombies, zombie zombies aren't that big of a problem.
01:45:54
◼
►
I'm hoping it's zombie zombies.
01:45:58
◼
►
You have a fire extinguisher.
01:45:59
◼
►
If we have to use this fire extinguisher to extinguish a fire, I'm going to be very disappointed.
01:46:05
◼
►
It turns out this is just a lesson in fire safety this whole adventure.
01:46:09
◼
►
I guess typical style, we check this floor, right?
01:46:12
◼
►
Like, let's not leave the floor.
01:46:14
◼
►
Myke, you and I, we're like a SWAT team here.
01:46:16
◼
►
We're gonna cover our corners, and we're gonna take it floor by floor.
01:46:20
◼
►
With a fire extinguisher, just like a good SWAT team.
01:46:24
◼
►
The theater is filled with the shuffling bodies of zombified patients and staff members.
01:46:29
◼
►
There are too many zombies here to fight.
01:46:31
◼
►
Upon seeing you, they become agitated and start to close in.
01:46:36
◼
►
Close the door.
01:46:37
◼
►
Close the door.
01:46:39
◼
►
Open inside.
01:46:40
◼
►
Reference acknowledged.
01:46:41
◼
►
Zombies begin to enter the kitchen.
01:46:44
◼
►
We're f***ing this round.
01:46:45
◼
►
We shouldn't have opened that door, huh?
01:46:46
◼
►
The zombies attack you and bite you and kill you and you die.
01:46:50
◼
►
Alright, okay.
01:46:51
◼
►
Fine, fine, fine.
01:46:52
◼
►
You open the heavy door and find a chef.
01:46:56
◼
►
She says, "You didn't eat anything, did you?
01:46:59
◼
►
The chief of staff told me to add vitamin Z to the meatloaf.
01:47:02
◼
►
After that, everything just went to hell."
01:47:06
◼
►
I'm gonna turn the dial, okay?
01:47:09
◼
►
But what I'm saying is that we need to do that right now.
01:47:11
◼
►
You have no sense of exploration, Myke.
01:47:14
◼
►
You guys may not remember the past text adventures,
01:47:16
◼
►
but we've had this conversation before.
01:47:20
◼
►
- Set dial to high.
01:47:22
◼
►
- The machine hums and the zombie thrashes around,
01:47:25
◼
►
but something goes wrong.
01:47:26
◼
►
The machine starts to smoke and the electrodes catch fire.
01:47:29
◼
►
The zombies eyes burst from their sockets
01:47:31
◼
►
and the power goes out.
01:47:32
◼
►
- Are we in darkness now?
01:47:33
◼
►
- I can't see anything.
01:47:36
◼
►
- Ah, I guess this is where we use the bullet on ourselves
01:47:40
◼
►
and start over.
01:47:42
◼
►
Or you could just, you know, load your save game.
01:47:46
◼
►
You managed to escape Z-ward with your life,
01:47:50
◼
►
but you'll never forgive yourself for the loss of your sister.
01:47:55
◼
►
Okay, alright.
01:47:56
◼
►
Reload save slot 2.
01:48:00
◼
►
I think that's the most judged we've been by Xeolotron.
01:48:07
◼
►
If you want this text adventure,
01:48:10
◼
►
It's available for all relay FM members in the crossover feed.
01:48:14
◼
►
You can become a member today at get more text.com.
01:48:17
◼
►
This is the world's most ambitious text adventure crossover event.
01:48:30
◼
►
It's not that ambitious, but still.