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James Fallows on The Personal Brain

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Posted by Stephen Zeoli
Aug 24, 2009 at 04:51 PM

 

Speaking of Mr. Fallows, he has posted an article about The Personal Brain on his Atlantic Monthly blog:

http://jamesfallows.theatlantic.com/archives/2009/08/my_new_favorite_software_perso.php#more

Steve Z.

 


Posted by shatteredmindofbob
Aug 24, 2009 at 11:55 PM

 

Thanks for pointing to this. It’s certainly more interesting than the penis measuring contest going on over UltraRecall.

I may have to give The Brain another shot. Downloaded about a year ago and didn’t really see the point…

 


Posted by Tom S.
Aug 25, 2009 at 01:24 PM

 

I think I downloaded version 3 of this program and actually bought a license.  It really is quite flexible and the interface is unique.  Probably the only mind-mapping-like program I’d ever use.  I eventually abandoned it because it was actually too flexible.  Because it picked up almost no metadata, everything had to be defined and characterized by hand (i.e. “contact”, “task”,” Word file”, etc…).  It was a lot of work and I was spending too much time organizing and not enough time doing.

Still, I really liked it and it is now cross-platform.  Is it any better in these aspects now?  Does it still store all of the data, including linked files, in a single directory?

Tom S.

 


Posted by Jan Rifkinson
Aug 25, 2009 at 02:24 PM

 

shatteredmindofbob wrote:
>Thanks for pointing to this. It’s certainly more interesting than the penis
>measuring contest going on over UltraRecall.

I agree w your assessment altho it does assume that everyone has a penis. ;-)


Jan Rifkinson
Ridgefield CT USA

 


Posted by Stephen Zeoli
Aug 27, 2009 at 10:01 PM

 

It is hard for me to come up with a piece of software for which I have more ambivalence than I do for The Personal Brain. After reading James Fallows story about the Brain, I have begun to take another look at it. I watched some of the tutorials on the Brain web site and have gotten a better appreciation of the Plex area and how that is set up—where parent items appear, where sibling items appear, where child items appear, etc. The Plex truly is a unique and highly useful organization tool and because if it, The Personal Brain seems like one of the very few applications that could adequately handle ALL of my data in ONE database.

However, the Plex is also a facade. Because underneath it—the place where you write your notes, create tags, add attachments, etc…—is very pedestrian, to say the least. This is undoubtedly due, at least in part, to the fact that the Brain is a Java application. The worst aspect is the actual note editor, which is clunky at best. I’ve said this too many times before and those of you (if anyone is still reading) who recall what I’m about to write can just skip ahead, but first and foremost a note manager HAS to be a good writing environment. That means it should behave to the standards used by Microsoft Word and most other major word processors when it comes to editing text and using extended selection of text. For instance, in Word when you double click on a single word, the word is selected. If triple click inside a paragraph, the whole paragraph is selected. If after double- or triple-clicking you keep the mouse button depressed upon the final click, you can scoop up whole words are paragraphs either side of the word or paragraph you clicked on. This saves the very tedious operation of clicking carefully at the start of a group of words you want to move and dragging the cursor to the exact end of the group. Any note-taker that does not have this functionality is just not going to work for me, because the act of carefully selecting the words with non-extended selection techniques requires me to shift my focus and attention to the task and away from my thoughts.

Anyway, try writing in the Brain’s editor and see what happens when you try to use extended selection. It just doesn’t behave as I hope and expect.

Additionally, the layout of the non-Plex areas of the Brain feel too constrained. You can’t open a note in a separate window and expend it to the size that best works… or, if you can, I missed it.

So, I’m afraid that I personally can’t get behind the Brain, which is too bad because that Plex tool is pretty cool.

Steve Z.

 


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