Andrew Judson

I’m a software engineer and father interested in how we can improve learning to maximize human potential.

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Anki as Positive Friction

Something that I have found useful when evaluating signals[1] is how often I create Anki cards from them. Because Anki makes memory a choice, and I like to remember valuable things, if I make very few or no notes from a given signal it is probably not a valuable thing to be subscribed to (unless I am consciously reading something fun for pure entertainment). It is interesting that the mindfulness to think “should I make any notes” every time I read something helps prevents me from just mindlessly subscribing - no one sets out to waste time, but this added friction is a guardrail that helps me stay on task.


  1. E.g. newsletter subscriptions, RSS feeds, Slack channels, etc