- Forgetting to look at the to-do list -> Make a different to-do list
- Have 10+ to-do lists
- Forgetting what the to-do even refers to
- Discover emacs org mode, it can link everything together -> constantly forget emacs key bindings
- Use logseq/obsidian instead -> forget which names/links refer to projects -> have 10+ aliases referring to different perspectives of the same project
I need static types, logic programming, graph search algorithms, and a bit of AI, to help save me.
Also, it'd be nice if modern software was easier to interface with. Needs more support for deep linking and syncing. The "walled garden" approach is anathema to solutions that can help ADHDers.
No, that isn't what the article said.
It said that calendars and to-do lists help cope with ADHD, not that everyone who uses them has ADHD.
Ironically, it's easy to forget to put things in a calendar or on a todo list.
More irony:
- Forgetting to look at the calendar
- Forgetting to look at the to-do list -> Make a different to-do list
- Have 10+ to-do lists
- Forgetting what the to-do even refers to
- Discover emacs org mode, it can link everything together -> constantly forget emacs key bindings
- Use logseq/obsidian instead -> forget which names/links refer to projects -> have 10+ aliases referring to different perspectives of the same project
I need static types, logic programming, graph search algorithms, and a bit of AI, to help save me.
Also, it'd be nice if modern software was easier to interface with. Needs more support for deep linking and syncing. The "walled garden" approach is anathema to solutions that can help ADHDers.
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