![]() ![]() I think one of the problems of OneNote is that it only has very shallow tooling to support categorization:Ī) it allows you to make 1 hierarchical taxonomy which is the notebook > section group > section > page thing.ī) it also allows a taxonomy tags and you have a panel to then list these tags. ![]() provide metadata on this at least that is what you would do i think in the scope of one note around this. A Folksonomy is also interesting because that is that you check what you search on in OneNote or what you often use and focus on these things to e.g. "hierarchical categories" or "tags" and so on. So when doing this this will give you e.g. This requires much more mental load but it comes closer to "modelling" your system to something that you recognize from reality. came up with: So now we look into that sequential list of events and define this in e.g. So historically logging photos or events or information is what we already do, we do not really need a software tool for this other than using no paper. this is what you do with journal however that does not categorize anything, it does not provide you with usefulness for gaining the information out of it or leverage on it. This is what we do when we blog or put information in a sequential format by date and time, however this was 6000 years ago. History is the first greatest invention: it organizes events / data in a one-directional way. I think we follow Aristotle on this, this may be something to keep in the back of the mind: When you have 100.000 pages on different things you start thinking about taxonomies and types. So when a UI designer wants to show a proof of concept or a sales slide of the product it probably will never be explainable to anyone why you would want more categorization support: it is simply explainable to business because it means complexity. On small hello world kind of demo's all kinds of ways of categorizing will work and may even be seen as overkill / not understood why you would want to do this at all. I think the way to categorize depends on the amount of unstructured data. ![]()
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