Storing Deep Knowledge
All evening I have been pondering the best ways to go about storing deep knowledge. During the time I spent researching and building a knowledge reduction framework, I really tried to figure out how to relate and store deeper knowledge. Knowledge graphs alone or other advanced storage fabrics can capture the details, but the relational elements that move things from fact storage to deeper knowledge remain more elusive. Watching the NBA Finals game 5 on ABC is probably not going to advance that consideration. The ESPN on ABC for the Finals is interesting enough. We are watching the over-the-air broadcast, and the signal is crisp enough. It is a lot crisper than my current analysis of storing deep knowledge. My previous efforts really focused on reducing knowledge to a base storable format, but it lacked the backward linkages to create depth. That is where the assumption of thinking based on the stored facts is probably not the right expectation to set for the process. You really want to store some of that deep thought so that you are not trying to complete all the analysis on the fly.
Posts have been built and published each day for more than a week now. Overall the process of writing and sharing on Substack has been easy enough to sustain. I do have to pick a thumbnail each as part of the publishing process. Outside of that the only other daily constant is remembering to edit the post before publishing it out in the wild. It is always a lot easier to cut and paste and publish without editing, but that is not the right strategy over the long haul. It is far better to say what needs to be said, but make sure that is understandable, consumable, and will still be readable going forward. That pretty much means that all the grammatical concerns have been dealt with so the words can stand alone. Right now the daily format seems to be centered around 3 paragraphs and about 500 words of prose. All of those words are always freshly minted and 100% organic.
The first period is now coming to an end, and OKC has sustained an advantage tonight. We will see if I’m able to watch the entire game. Last time around, I almost flipped over to watch some Andromeda instead of staying with the game. I’m actually on the home streak and started season 5 this week. That means before you know it, the entire series will have been rewatched. It is entirely possible that I might watch SG1 from start to finish next. A lot of the older science fiction series are available for streaming. It is much easier to just chew through one of those series an episode a day than branching out to something new. Really the only two shows I watch in real time as they are released would be the Curse of Oak Island and Top Chef. No relationship exists between those two shows. They just happen to be shows that I have watched for years.