@michael_nielsen - I have a q about your excellent LTM post.
How long is the longest ordered list that you keep as a single Anki card? I sometimes find the ordering to be important, but it will often take longer than 10 seconds to enumerate the items.
http://augmentingcognition.com/ltm.html
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Replying to @nottombrown
I don't use it much for ordered lists. I've got a few of three items. What kinds of things are you remembering?
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
Here’s an example. I’d like to remember to try the earlier strategies before the later ones.pic.twitter.com/nsJQHLXfaK
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Replying to @nottombrown
That I'd break down. I'd also consider putting in some things about why. Why add training data before normalization? Etc. With the why's internalized you don't need to worry about the order, it'll seem inevitable.
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
Ah, makes sense to focus on the “why” for breaking this down. This list is basically a set of heuristics based on how costly vs promising various interventions are. A more explicit model would hopefully generate both these heuristics and other useful things.
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Replying to @nottombrown
In general "is there a more meaningful version of this question?" is nearly always a useful heuristic for refactoring.
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I suspect that's particularly true in this case, because of course you don't really want to apply those 6 things in order all the time - there's all kinds of exceptions, and it's worth having a rich understanding of why you're doing what.
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