Personal Memory Manager
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Posted by Alexander Deliyannis
May 29, 2011 at 03:39 PM
For reference: PMM is now called CRPA, ?Constructive Recollection Philosophy Application?. Users who have downloaded the application in the past will probably have received information on this change.
I find interesting the linking of the tool to a philosophy (or vice versa, the application of the philosophy to a software tool). I can think of at least two other examples of such an approach—though the way and depth in which the philosophy itself has been explicitly developed may vary- namely MaxThink and CMap Tools.
That said, I expect that there is some kind of philosophy implied by most or all of the tools that we discuss here.
Posted by Stephen Zeoli
May 29, 2011 at 06:01 PM
Another application (not developed for several years, I believe) which had a philosophy behind its development was The Literary Machine, an application that appealed to me in theory, but didn’t work real well in execution. Here’s the link:
Steve Z.
Posted by Cassius
May 30, 2011 at 02:16 AM
JJSlote wrote:
>Yep, I very quickly got the same Access Violation as did quant. Program seems
>overbuilt and fragile. Too bad, because it has features frequently requested and
>rarely implemented:
>
>1) A direct and immediate tie between map and outline pane
>2)
>Link types, searchable
>3) Multiple floating note windows
>Jerome
——————————————————————————
Inspiration has some of this, certainly #1.
Posted by Cassius
May 30, 2011 at 02:16 AM
JJSlote wrote:
>Yep, I very quickly got the same Access Violation as did quant. Program seems
>overbuilt and fragile. Too bad, because it has features frequently requested and
>rarely implemented:
>
>1) A direct and immediate tie between map and outline pane
>2)
>Link types, searchable
>3) Multiple floating note windows
>Jerome
——————————————————————————
Inspiration has some of this, certainly #1.
Posted by Cassius
May 30, 2011 at 02:16 AM
JJSlote wrote:
>Yep, I very quickly got the same Access Violation as did quant. Program seems
>overbuilt and fragile. Too bad, because it has features frequently requested and
>rarely implemented:
>
>1) A direct and immediate tie between map and outline pane
>2)
>Link types, searchable
>3) Multiple floating note windows
>Jerome
——————————————————————————
Inspiration has some of this, certainly #1.