torekp Posted March 4, 2010 Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 What mind maps are. I've played around with FreeMind a little, and have a hard time seeing how this will be worth the effort. Am I missing something? Wrong software? Forget software, do it by hand? Just a few more hours to get past the bump in the learning curve and see how wonderful this stuff is? Quote Link to comment
crelf Posted March 4, 2010 Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 What mind maps are. I've played around with FreeMind a little, and have a hard time seeing how this will be worth the effort. Am I missing something? Wrong software? Forget software, do it by hand? Just a few more hours to get past the bump in the learning curve and see how wonderful this stuff is? I think they're useful for high-level conceptual designs and also good for brain-storming sessions. That said, they're easily overused, so draw a line in the sand on when/where you want to use them, and where other tools are more appropriate. We use Mindjet MindManager. Quote Link to comment
Daklu Posted March 4, 2010 Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 I've played around with FreeMind a little, and have a hard time seeing how this will be worth the effort. I second what Chris said. A screwdriver is a very useful tool if you need to tighten a screw. It's next to worthless if you need to loosen a hex bolt. Quote Link to comment
PaulG. Posted March 4, 2010 Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 ... Am I missing something? Wrong software? Forget software, do it by hand? Just a few more hours to get past the bump in the learning curve and see how wonderful this stuff is? Glancing over the Wiki article I would have to say (IMO) yes, yes and yes. I thought this is what notepads and white boards were for. I spend too much time learning new software as it is. Quote Link to comment
torekp Posted March 4, 2010 Author Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 I think the software might be particularly useful for (detailed, complex) arguments. Or tricky diagnostic procedures. I'll probably come back to it at some point for those purposes. Quote Link to comment
Darren Posted March 4, 2010 Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 I've been to a few brainstorming meetings that used some kind of Mind Map software. It seemed like a solution looking for a problem to me. I prefer good ol' whiteboards and notetaking. -D 1 Quote Link to comment
jcarmody Posted March 4, 2010 Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 What mind maps are. I've played around with FreeMind a little, and have a hard time seeing how this will be worth the effort. Am I missing something? Wrong software? Forget software, do it by hand? Just a few more hours to get past the bump in the learning curve and see how wonderful this stuff is? I used to use Freemind a lot and was very happy with the way it helped me organize large bodies of information. It's not hard to learn enough to be effective. I don't use it any more because it's not Emacs. Quote Link to comment
Falevoz Y. Posted March 5, 2010 Report Share Posted March 5, 2010 I'm a big fan of freemind! I mainly use it for brainstorming animation and organizing information from different sources before writing a summary. When you are familiar with shortcuts, I think it's a very powerful tool. Yann Quote Link to comment
pallen Posted March 5, 2010 Report Share Posted March 5, 2010 I've used Minjet's Mind Manager a few times. My boss really likes it. (...don't know whether to keep calling him "new" boss or not) I really like Visio myself. Doesn't need to be a newer version either. Just give me "Technical 5" and it has everything I need. For notes, I tend to keep one text file for every project that acts as a kind of "twitter" to myself. I just hit the F5 key before I type, and I get a time stamp that helps me keep track of things. Since this are my notes only, I don't worry about what I put in them. Being very candid in those notes has actually helped me when revisiting a project at a much later date. Quote Link to comment
JasonXCX Posted March 6, 2010 Report Share Posted March 6, 2010 I've used Minjet's Mind Manager a few times. My boss really likes it. (...don't know whether to keep calling him "new" boss or not) I really like Visio myself. Doesn't need to be a newer version either. Just give me "Technical 5" and it has everything I need. For notes, I tend to keep one text file for every project that acts as a kind of "twitter" to myself. I just hit the F5 key before I type, and I get a time stamp that helps me keep track of things. Since this are my notes only, I don't worry about what I put in them. Being very candid in those notes has actually helped me when revisiting a project at a much later date. I use Mindmanager and Cmap. Mostly for presentations it is very usefull to organise documents , and to answer questions . Basicely Mindmanager organise tree ( you can make tree from a structured text written with Word and write text from tree ) Cmap use graphs and I do prefer that. Quote Link to comment
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