@bimlas

The interesting thing about it all is that you don't need any special UX, 
> the TiddlyWiki empty edition contains everything you need to create such a 
> system (for example, you can access the backlinks in the tiddler dropdown 
> menu -> Info -> References). The concept of links has been around for a 
> long time and I use them too, but only recently have I really understood 
> their power. 
>

I agree that no special UX is needed, but good minimal and non-intrusive UX 
can facilitate such notetaking. For better examples I would need to give 
this some thought, but thinking of the top of my head it would be 
interesting to do some user studies to see if things like making the 
backlinks always visible, providing link autocompletion and even link 
suggestions based on content subject matter are helpful in creating and 
also *adhering* to such a note taking routine.

A lot of my work is with low literacy and low resource populations and some 
of the patterns involved are quite similar: putting the problem first, 
keeping the solution simple which often means it maps well to and from 
paper based solutions, and using UX where feasible to facilitate in a 
non-intrusive manner.

Anyway, I think we are on a similar if not the same wavelength here :)

Cheers,
Saq

 

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