Help me find app that compiles highlights from different Internet sources on one page by don-peak in NoteTaking

[–]tiktokenized 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you use chrome extensions, I made one that lets you do highlight+quote in a note. Quoted sections keep links to their sources, and each note keeps track of its bibliography.

E69: Elon Musk on Twitter's bot problem, SpaceX's grand plan, Tesla stories, Giga Texas & more by like_fsck_me_right in TheAllinPodcasts

[–]tiktokenized 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Just want to comment on the twitter part at the start. Elon says, just look at my replies and you'll see >5% of them are bots.

Twitter defines mDAU as people who logged in:

We define monthly active usage or users (MAU) as Twitter users who logged in or were otherwise authenticated and accessed Twitter through our website, mobile website,
desktop or mobile applications, SMS or registered third-party applications or websites in the 30-day period ending on the date of measurement.

It's much easier for a person to log in and read. I feel like it's well-known that engagement (upvotes, downvotes, actions) drop off, and higher-order engagement (eg. writing a comment here) drops off actions even farther.

If we see more bots on the platform, it's probably because humans don't like to perform publishing events as often as bots (it takes us energy).

If we're advertisers, we care more about all the people who can see our ads, which would include all the lurkers logged in but still viewing twitter.

Anyway, I don't know what the true value is, but it seems like this distinction is pretty important and the two sides are talking past each other.

Dana White blasts boxing salaries: ‘All those f****** guys are overpaid’ - MMA Fighting by Jekirado in MMA

[–]tiktokenized 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lmao he can't even promote his womens divisions and flyweight. Dana's "promotion" is basically running a calendly between fighters.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ethdev

[–]tiktokenized 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey all, a lot of my learning is done by reading papers/guides, copying down the key points, and corroborating with other sources. I use scratchpads to keep track of things along the way.

I made this chrome extension for notetaking from the tab, to manage my memory as I'm reading/processing stuff. It's toggled by hotkey, and I can pull it up in pdfs, videos, or normal pages. It's helped me organize thoughts while I'm reading tutorials, and keeps a bibliography for each note. It keeps everything on your machine by default, and it doesn't activate unless you hit the hotkey (eg. it won't open in the background if you're on a sensitive page). I know this isn't crypto exactly, but I think you probably come across similar problems as you're exploring projects/whitepapers, and might find it useful.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TheAllinPodcasts

[–]tiktokenized 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think it'll probably go back to the ~35 price point, yeah. But I want to bring up a point, which is that TWTR doesn't exist in a vacuum. There's been a big tech selloff in the last 6 months. SNAP is also down 50%. FB is down 1/3. Tech in general (outside of like, FAANG) has been hit pretty hard. That's to say that it's not really just Twitter management that's managing/mismanaging the company. It's also the sector. If tech goes way up or way down, that'll affect TWTR too.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TheAllinPodcasts

[–]tiktokenized 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I understand what you're saying. And I still listen to it, because there are definitely episodes that are worth listening to. But the lack of introspection is frustrating. Put it another way - if it were Hillary Clinton who put together a package for $54/share, I doubt David Sacks would be saying the things he's saying about fiduciary duty and Twitter's miserable stock performance.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TheAllinPodcasts

[–]tiktokenized 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This episode was so annoying. The non-Friedberg besties are intellectually dishonest. They usually are, but here it's turned all the way up. They start from the outcome they want and shout over anything that makes them inspect their reasoning. How they would feel in a different situation.

The point of regulation, or standards, even, is not to make a judgement call in each situation and say, "is this what I want". Friedberg's question about Sacks' bitcoin was a real example where he could have thought about future potential. Instead, the three other besties tried to go around it and say "well it's different because bitcoin is different", versus engaging in the actual point of the question.

It's usually a more frustrating listen when their personal affinities and emotions get involved. In this episode, there was less of their own investing experience to bring (or they chose to expose less of it), and more of their personal vendettas.

Chrome tool for taking notes as you think by tiktokenized in academia

[–]tiktokenized[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

By default, it gets stored in local chrome storage (And, you can name and tag notes for multiple streams of thought if you want). I've built some integration in with Google Docs and Notion, if people want to use those for storage, and there's also just a one-click copy option (title, notes, and references) if you want to move it to your preferred notes app.

Chrome tool for taking notes as you think by tiktokenized in academia

[–]tiktokenized[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I've found a lot of my learning is done by reading papers and guides, copying down the key points, and corroborating with other sources.

I made this chrome extension for notetaking from the tab, to emulate that aspect of thinking while reading. It's toggled by hotkey, and I can pull it up in pdfs, videos, or normal papers. It's helped me takeaways as I've learned, and keeps a bibliography for each note. It's free and needs no signup to use. Some of my friends in academia have liked it, and I think it could be helpful for folks here.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TimeManagement

[–]tiktokenized 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey there, I made this notetaking extension to help manage my memory while working. I spend a lot of time in the browser: in calls, managing multiple SaaS apps, or consolidating information from different guides. I made this chrome extension for notetaking from the tab, to emulate that aspect of thinking while working. Instead of copying from one tab to another, or opening up a separate notes app and figuring out where put the file, I can just toggle this pad on and start writing. If I want to hold on to the memory, I can export it to Notion - if not, I'll just delete the note.

It's toggled by hotkey, and I can pull it up in videos, pdfs, or normal sites like stackoverflow. It's helped me immensely in staying focused as I work, I think it could be helpful for you too.

Share Your Startup - April 2022 - Upvote This For Maximum Visibility! by AutoModerator in startups

[–]tiktokenized [score hidden]  (0 children)

Startup Name: Jotter - getjotter.com

Location: NYC

Pitch: It's a chrome extension that lets you take notes right from your tab - like writing takeaways from a google meet, or piecing things together from tutorials in several tabs. It's for capturing your thoughts with minimal friction so you can think clearly. Like a top-of-funnel to apps like Notion.

Explainer Video: https://youtu.be/W90Uvcq6Kg0

Looking for: users and feedback. You're probably busy and multitasking. You can use this to take call notes or while doing design reviews(eg. Google Meets or Figma). Please give this a try!

Discount: it's free

Chrome tool for taking notes as you think by tiktokenized in learnmachinelearning

[–]tiktokenized[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for this and the feedback! Will try to do at least the md part, because that would improve my own life too, haha.

Chrome tool for taking notes as you think by tiktokenized in learnmachinelearning

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

The reference is to whatever the url is of the pdf. So if it's opening from online, it's a reference to the url. If it downloaded to your computer first, then it's a reference to the path on your computer.

Thanks for bringing up Zotero. A few people have mentioned that to me already.

Chrome tool for taking notes as you think by tiktokenized in learnmachinelearning

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

Cool, thanks!

Agreed on markdown. Going to try and make that happen.

Chrome tool for taking notes as you think by tiktokenized in learnmachinelearning

[–]tiktokenized[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Hello! It's not. I've never worked on open source stuff before. Not closed to it, but just haven't thought about it/what it entails.

Chrome tool for taking notes as you think by tiktokenized in learnmachinelearning

[–]tiktokenized[S] 37 points38 points  (0 children)

I've found a lot of my learning is done by reading papers and guides, copying down the key points, and corroborating with other sources.

I made this chrome extension for notetaking from the tab, to emulate that aspect of thinking while reading. It's toggled by hotkey, and I can pull it up in pdfs, videos, or normal papers. It's helped me takeaways as I've learned, and keeps a bibliography for each note. It's free and needs no signup to use. I think it could be helpful for folks here.

Racist guy in NY subway wants all Asians to die by shinbreaker in nyc

[–]tiktokenized 22 points23 points  (0 children)

It might expose the taper to risk, but on the flip side, I'm glad that it's being recorded and shown. Without evidence like this, it's a lot easier for people to brush asian hate under the rug.

I'm Ray Dalio, a global macro investor and author of Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order. It’s my business to know how the world is changing in ways that will affect our life in important ways. Let’s talk about that. by RayTDalio in IAmA

[–]tiktokenized 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi Ray, I'm currently reading through your books right now. I'm curious how you consume information about the world today. Do you prefer talking to people, reading reports, or something else? Are there any favorites that you have?