![]() ![]() But let's jump over to the master table, which is actually the view that I use most of the time because it presents all the information sorted and organized in the most effective manner. And it's kind of nice to sort of look across the bookshelf, and see all the covers. So when I'm perusing what to read, I'll dive into this view. This is a filtered view for books that I want to read next are queued up for immediate or eventual readings. I like the gallery view is sort of a nice bookshelf presentation. So here under knowledge sources, the library is where the book fault lives. But I'm going to jump to a demo version so I can share more freely with you guys. Starting in the command center, the mind expansion is the dashboard that all these knowledge management faults live in. And with that, let's dive into the book vault. If you want to contribute to the broader conversation that's been evolving on Twitter, be sure to join us over there. So if you have any thoughts or questions, be sure to leave them in the comments below. ![]() So it's easy to go back and skim and revisit that information, it just becomes more valuable over time as you contribute to it, it grows and it becomes a more powerful resource for you to draw from and to learn from and to grow from. So it becomes a total goldmine of insight and information that you can draw on endlessly in because we're going to when reading the books, take notes and summarize and highlight properly in a way that has a hierarchy to it. And then you have the complete archive of all the books you've ever read, and all the information and knowledge extracted from them. And then after we've read it, it changes into a finished section. So as you think about what books to read next, it'll line up all the options of all the books that struck you as potentially interesting and worth your time. So any time you come across a book that sounds interesting, you'll throw it in the queue, and it'll be lined up and you'll never forget about it. Currently, it'll be our whole list of the books we'd like to read with a priority setting to organize, which are next and which are further down the road. Those are the books that are actively being read. So in addition to the organizational structure of the book, the book vault will be where we line up the books we want to read, it'll identify the books we're actively reading, and there'll be the place where taking our notes, and adding our thoughts and highlighting and extracting information from the books. And that's what we'll get into deeper in this episode. But it really shines when we're talking about books we want to learn from and grow from. And this book vault is still good for capturing fun books as well. If it's a book for learning, you know, novels, fun books, you don't need to extract the information, you just enjoy them and you go on the ride. ![]() And out of that effort, we get a lot more in return.īut I want to make sure, as we read books and absorb this information, whether they're doing it as an audio book, or a Kindle book, or a print book, we get as much out of it as possible. The First up is the book, vault books are a special thing to me, like they, they take a lot of effort to read, I mean, they're not just a quick skim, they're not short for media. Now we're going to go deeper into each section. In the last video, I did an overview of the knowledge management system across the board, just a surface level introduction of each of the components and a little bit about how they work together. ![]() And we turn it into knowledge that we can use and apply to our projects and into our growth into our life in general. And we store all the ideas and information. So the book vault is, of course, one of the vaults, where we've now moved past the pillars in the pipeline sections of our Pillars, Pipelines & Vaults organizational structure, and we're now diving deep into the vault section. Hi, everyone, welcome back to our ongoing series on how to create a life operating system in Notion. subscribe to the channel, leave a comment)
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