I can predict someone’s views on Twitter with about 85% accuracy based on whether they have a blue checkmark next to their name. It goes up if it’s not a legacy one.

An increasingly useful rule of thumb I’ve found:

The side with nuance is probably the right side.

Every time I find someone lay down an absolute rule (no ifs or buts) it usually means they haven’t thought it through.

Ironically, this is an absolutely statement so my rules says it’s wrong :P

This is me.

If you’d like to make sketchnotes but have never given it a go, I’d love to know what holds you back. (Or what held you back before you started).

For me:

  • I hated my drawings
  • I had no idea how to make things fit in the limited space.
  • Freeform doc on Mac “What on earth is this mess of half images”.
  • Same freeform doc on iPad “Oh hello useful collaboration document with pictures, drawings, links and more.”

Clint Eastwood by Gorillaz was made with a drum synth preset

I remember hearing that the drums on Umbrella by Rhianna are a default garageband set. Great examples of take advantage of creative help.

I used to have my streamdeck mini setup so I could pull up my obsidian daily note with a button and save a web page with a click. Somewhere along the way I lost those shortcuts so I guess I need to recreate them again.

A major strength and weakness of obsidian is that you make the structure.

  • The strength is that makes you think about the ideas you save.
  • The weakness is that slows down quick capture and can lead to more time organizing than using. I’m starting to think that maybe I need a separate app for capture, bookmarking and then use obsidian as an idea / essay factory.

Unexpectedly using my iPad a whole lot again. Not sure why exactly but probably more reading, more sketchnoting and maybe a small element of obsidian too (in contrast to word docs, logos and video editing which I was doing more on the Mac.)

If you’re a Christian, you might enjoy this little lent devotional series i’m doing. Each day has a verse, a reflection, a prayer and a sketch.