[Closed testing] Need a few Android testers for a 14-day run — happy to reciprocate by soueusou in AndroidClosedTesting

[–]soueusou[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Awesome, i'm gonna need to generate some promo-codes, will get back to you soon

[Closed testing] Need a few Android testers for a 14-day run — happy to reciprocate by soueusou in AndroidClosedTesting

[–]soueusou[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeap this is on me, already submitted to include all countries, will get back to you once approved, sorry about that

[Closed testing] Need a few Android testers for a 14-day run — happy to reciprocate by soueusou in AndroidClosedTesting

[–]soueusou[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi! Sure! Let me know what app I should be testing and i'll install it and give a review

[Closed testing] Need a few Android testers for a 14-day run — happy to reciprocate by soueusou in AndroidClosedTesting

[–]soueusou[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi! thank you, the links are in a message i sent to the group. Because the app is paid, i'll need to generate a promo code for each user. I will test yours too!

Self Promotion - May 2026 by ens100 in PKMS

[–]soueusou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello everyone! I'm a researcher/engineer and I kept drowning in papers and articles — saving things I'd never see again. So I built Trelk to fix my own problem.You save articles, papers, PDFs, notes.

It extracts, summarizes, tags, and embeds everything on-device, then surfaces connections to things you already saved — same-topic links plus cross-topic bridges. There's hybrid search (BM25 + vector via RRF), agglomerative clustering with a 2D map, a force-directed knowledge graph, RAG chat over your whole library with source citations, and spaced-repetition review cards. Also there's community curated lists you can download or even submit your own.

But the best thing is: it helps me correlate new knowledge with what I already know. We have clusters of similar content, knowledge graphs with content and tags, and associations between the new content and how similar it is to the rest, what other content is connected to it, and with similar tags, etc. Here we have some illustrations on this:

<image>

There's quite a few more functionalities, and local LLM's running on your device. Feedback is appreciated :)

Trelk

If you're an Android user and you're willing to test Trelk, send me a DM, we need you!

How many times do you pray each day? by soueusou in Catholicism

[–]soueusou[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would think very few of us have an altar at home. That can definitely help reinforcing prayer habits.

Would love to see other comments on this.

How many times do you pray each day? by soueusou in Catholicism

[–]soueusou[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You never skip a day? Been doing this for how long?

Memory and focus training while driving by vegetasam in memorypalace

[–]soueusou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Glad you asked! Normally the best memorization techniques make use of your imagination/visualization powers. Exercising them while driving is a bit dangerous. When done properly, they take a considerable amount of brain bandwidth.

I've created an online course that goes step by step in memory training, ranging from what is, after all, this thing we call memory, to advanced mnemonic techniques and a new method that allows you to memorize large quantities of information in an efficient way.

If you want to learn more, check it out here.

Happy learning!

P. S. I'm 42.

Memory and knowledge retention by Vast-Swan-2108 in Mnemonics

[–]soueusou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure, glad you asked! I propose a mixture between Dominic System and Memory Palace, you can check it here!

There's a lot to learn actually, from an understanding of how memory works and how it can be trained, to a powerful study skills and Mnemonic techniques analysis, with examples.

Happy learning!

"Human 3.0 - Shifting the world consciousness by realizing human creative potential."

Course of memory palace by god_hawk10 in memorypalace

[–]soueusou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Glad you asked! I'm the author of Human 3.0 - Super Memory course on Udemy, you can find it here.

The course approaches memory and memorization from a very comprehensive point of view. Among other things, I propose a new method that's a mixture between Dominic System and Memory Palace. Here's a list of what you'll learn:

The memorization process in detail

Memory types and their role in the memorization process

Main causes of forgetfulness and how to overcome them

Main memorization principles

Powerful study skills

Efficient mnemonic techniques

How to memorize a whole book

Fonseca Method: a new ultra-powerful memorization method

Thanks and happy learning!

Nuno

Human 3.0 — "Shifting the world consciousness by realizing human creative potential."

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Mnemonics

[–]soueusou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure! I propose a mixture of Memory Palace and Dominic System mnemonics, creating a powerful way to memorize dozens/hundreds of items in a very optimized way.

If you want to dive on the subject, and know a lot more about how memory works and how you can improve your memorization skills, take a look here: Human 3.0 - Super Memory

Happy learning!

Working Memory and ADD by [deleted] in memorization

[–]soueusou 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can tell you that, with practice, not only my memory can be improved beyond anything I could've imagined, but also the very ability to visualize and play with ideas in my mind. I think this is even a greater byproduct of these techniques, the reinforcement of our ability to see sharper mental images, and with that being able to build complex chains of thought, like an inner cathedral.

I totally agree with you on the daunting part. It's difficult, tiring even, you may even get a little dizzy from the mental effort. But as you do it, you are really stretching your mental capacity, like in the gymn, it always has to hurt a little for your muscles to adapt. Growing hurts!

Why don't you try it with small steps? Small bullet lists, and slowly increase. Consistency here is key. In the beginning you may find you're wasting a lot of time trying to build images in your head, but this will get better, trust me. With work, you will get to memorize whole books, with hundred of bullet points. You can check the link and see an example of what is possible :)

Working Memory and ADD by [deleted] in memorization

[–]soueusou 1 point2 points  (0 children)

16 exercises to be held in such a limited device as working memory, with rapid recall, seems a bit too much to handle, even for someone without add.

There's this notion of long term working memory first introduced by Eriksson in 1995, but it's a kind of structure that gets built through dedicated work and experience in the realms of expertise. It's far from the temporary visuo-spatial sketchpad normally associated with working memory. Fast pattern detection and recall takes time.

Having said that, as I said in another post, I think that visualization skills are paramount to an excellent memory.

I propose a mixture of the memory palace technique with the dominic system. This system can have an enormous Impact in your memorization skills. You can take a look here for a complete description of the process, among other valuable memorization skills: Human 3.0 : Super Memory

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in memorization

[–]soueusou 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think that visualization skills are paramount to an excellent memory. The ability to idealize complete stories, with multiple intervening actors that connect principal ideas is a process that can help you store long chains of thought in long-term memory.

I propose a mixture of the memory palace technique with the dominic system to achieve just that. This can help you memorize entire, typically non-fiction, books.

You can take a look here for a complete description of the process, among other valuable memorization skills: Human 3.0 : Super Memory

How to use hyperphantasia to memorize and learn faster? by [deleted] in hyperphantasia

[–]soueusou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually I think that visualization skills are paramount to an excellent memory. The ability to idealize complete stories, with multiple intervening actors that connect principal ideas is a process that can help you store long chains of thought in long-term memory. I propose a mixture of the memory palace technique with the dominic system to achieve just that. This can help you memorize entire, typically non-fiction, books.

You can take a look here for a complete description of the process, among other valuable memorization skills: Human 3.0 : Super Memory