2026 2

Memorable explanations

Our brains remember some things better. Explaining that way makes it stick. Here are the eight things, most important first, that help you: Structure explanations memorably: Face. You remember faces before facts. So cast characters: “Imagine you’re a courier carrying a packet.” Prefer archetypes to real names — less baggage, more imagination. Place. You’re reading down a list now — and the top feels more important. That’s spatial wiring. Turn any concept into a map. Use higher, deeper, nearer, inside, … Tale. You read #1 and #2 first because they came first. Your brain built a cause from that sequence. Time creates cause for free. “Because” makes anything believable. Scale. “Two feet tall” lands instantly. “60 cm” forces you to convert. Your brain doesn’t measure — it compares. Give it reference objects, not just numbers. Deliver explanations memorably: ...

Using browser history as memory

I have a bad memory. (I need to write about that. I k eep forgetting to.) It’s worsening. Yesterday, I misplaced my debit card for the first time. Or maybe the second…? Which reminds me, I just forgot a call I have now! (Panic.) (15 min later.) So, anyway, therefore, I log stuff meticulously. Like what I did each day, what I ate, what I weigh, what pained me, etc. But the best logging is automated. My phone logs where I am. My bank logs what I spend. My calendar logs who I meet. ...

2025 1

AI As Your Psychologist: Personality Flaws Exposed

ChatGPT can now search through your chats with the new memory feature. As an LLM Psychologist, I research how LLMs think. Could LLMs research how I think? I asked three models: Based on everything you know about me, simulate a group chat between some people who are debating whether or not to add me to the group, by talking about my personality flaws The models nailed it! Here are 12 flaws they found. ...

2006 1

Cut-and-paste is not understanding

Cut and paste has become easier. So we make less effort to understand. We don’t need to. Like when we pay less attention if we’re recording a lecture. Solution? I suggest the Tunnel in the Sky strategy. Rod Walker is going for survival training on an alien planet, and asks his sister, Captain Walker… “Uh, Sis, what sort of gun should I carry?” “Huh? Why the deuce do you want a gun?” ...

2003 1

Information Age helps the forgetful

Information Age Intelligence talks about how “… the information age … opens up the opportunity for those with weaker memories to compete on a more even playing field than those with good ones.” And it’s the one of the best things that ever happened to me. via andersja

2002 1

PC Pit Stop

PC Pit Stop. A good tune-up for your PC. I managed to improve my hard disk performance by enabling DMA, and my memory by reducing the video card shared memory.