No. 15: NON VOLATILE STORAGE MEDIUMS: THE BEST WAY TO CONCEPT IS THE FASTEST
When you make things for a living, ideas are precious. They're also incredibly pesky. They come to you right before sleep, in the shower, walking down broadway, almost always at some point when the last thing you thought you were going to have is an idea.
Documentation of these specifically and keeping an archive generally, is critical to the creative process, especially when ideas are in their infancy. We wrote about this at length in APPLIED IMAGINATION.
But capturing fleeting thoughts in today's world can feel like something between a full tech stack and another day job.

We’ve found — through trial, error, repetition, and multiple cancelled Notion subscriptions — that the best way to take notes is the fastest. Not the prettiest. Not the most organized. Not the kind your future self will thank you for. But the kind that doesn’t ask for permission and has been there since the days of our cavepeople ancestors — a writing instrument and a surface.
Writing by hand or on paper, or on receipts, or in the margins of a printout you no longer need is, strangely, less rude in meetings than typing. You don’t have to stare down into a screen, or angle your body behind a rectangular shield. You just write.
It's like thinking out loud in total silence.
You're not limited by trackpad and keyboard — you can free form notes, write anywhere, link thoughts together with lines and quick diagrams.






