![]() ![]() Now, he’s using all sorts of tools to “cook ideas”. ![]() The way this article came to life, came a lot through his point of view of cooking ideas. For that matter he is using quite the number of tools, and I’ve acquired them all.įirst of all, being the big fan of Evernote that I am, if I come to an idea, I capture it in Evernote. I make a snippet of it, and just save it to my inbox. I process my inbox daily, and it contains tons of my thoughts. If I feel connected to an idea, when I review it again, I usually put it somewhere in my MindMaps, or simply createa a new mind map and throw out a couple of concpets that I want to follow. He uses his iPad instead, which is also great for this! Unlike David, I am using iThoughts on my iPhone primarily. It syncs via Dropbox with my iPad, where I come to later on to nurture and grow more ideas. I revisit mindmaps that are created specifically for my ebook. So if it feels fun, I revisit the file and play with it some more. Now Dropbox is critical here for people who love linear thinking. iThoughts is great piece of software, simply because it supports OPML. This format works for your mindmap, as well as for your Outliner. Now if you are mindmapping on your Mac, iThoughts will read most of the mind mapping formats. That’s what makes it so amazing and worth buying on iPhone and iPad (17$ investment). ![]()
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