Maps of Content — Topic Summaries
AI-powered summaries of 13 videos about Maps of Content.
13 summaries
How I Use Maps Of Content (MOCs) // EP 5 Mastering Obsidian
Maps of Content (MOCs) are a practical way to organize an Obsidian vault around topics using bidirectional links—so notes stay easy to connect as...
A Notes System for Your Ideas (Obsidian Template)
A Notes system for Obsidian called “Idea Verse” is built to make ideas reliably available—so thinking feels calmer, clearer, and more actionable. The...
Idea Emergence Q&A Part 1: How to Create MOCs, How to use Tags & Folders
Content maps (MOCs) are presented as the fastest way to turn scattered notes into usable thinking—especially once a person hits a “mental squeeze...
How to turn your notes into published articles and books using the Obsidian app with Eleanor Konik
Turning raw reading notes into publishable articles isn’t about collecting more information—it’s about filtering for a purpose, converting highlights...
How I structure my Obsidian vault (Obsidian tour 2023)
The core finding is that a high-volume Obsidian vault (8,000+ notes) stays usable long-term when organization avoids rigid “either/or” placement and...
Building Visual Maps of Content with Excalidraw in Obsidian
The core takeaway is a practical workflow for turning Obsidian into a “visual index” system by building Maps of Content (MoCs) with Excalidraw—so...
Designing Ideas: How Jonathan Splitlog uses the LYT frameworks (Obsidian)
Jonathan Splitlog’s Obsidian system is built to turn scattered reading, listening, and conversations into “mature,” evergreen knowledge—organized...
The LYT Framework - Q&A Part 2: Note Size, Maps of Content, and Evergreen Notes
Evergreen notes work best when they’re treated as “stars” in a personal knowledge system—clear, opinionated anchors that connect to broader...
How Lionel Davoust writes fiction books using the LYT Frameworks (Obsidian)
Lionel Davoust’s core claim is that long-form fiction becomes manageable when the writing process is treated like a system for handling...
Idea Emergence Q&A Part 3 - How you can use MOCs in different ways
A central theme emerges around how to organize “maps of content” (MOCs) so ideas flow into publishable writing without turning note-taking into a...
The LYT Framework - Q&A Part 4: Roam, How MOCs are Fluid Frameworks
The discussion centers on how personal knowledge management tools shape thinking—and why “fluid” frameworks like Maps of Content (MOCs) can prevent...
High level linking with Maps of Content
High-level “maps of content” turn a sprawling set of permanent notes into something navigable—an outline-like structure that helps connect ideas...
Obsidian Dataview, building a second brain, and more about me // Q&A Livestream
A steady note-taking routine and a “second brain” built for active learning—not just storage—anchors Nicole van der Hoeven’s Obsidian workflow, with...