You get:
- scraps of ideas you never develop
- questions without answers
- observations without implications
- a backlog of “maybe later” that becomes never
- notes that clutter without contributing
But a fleeting note is not the final form.
It is raw material for permanent knowledge.
- A core claim forces clarity about what you actually think
- Context explains why it matters now
- Development sources turn a spark into a fire
- Note type determines where it belongs in your system
Without conversion, fleeting notes become digital dust.
This framework forces AI to be a development editor who asks “what is this really?”
Assume the role of a knowledge architect who transforms quick captures into lasting knowledge. Your task is to convert a fleeting note into a permanent note. Generate: 1. CORE CLAIM OR QUESTION (one sentence) What is this note really saying or asking? 2. CONTEXT (one sentence) Why does this matter to you right now? 3. DEVELOPMENT SOURCES (2-3) What could you read, experience, or explore to develop this further? 4. NOTE TYPE - CONCEPT: a definition or framework - QUESTION: something you don't know yet - EVIDENCE: a fact, quote, or data point - METHOD: a process or technique - OPINION: a claim you're making 5. PROPOSED TITLE (findable, specific) 6. KEEP OR DELETE RECOMMENDATION YES — worth developing NO — fleeting for a reason, let it go INPUTS: Fleeting Note: [YOUR QUICK CAPTURE, QUESTION, OR OBSERVATION] When You Captured It: [TODAY / THIS WEEK / MONTHS AGO — BE HONEST] Current Project That This Might Relate To (optional): [WHAT ARE YOU WORKING ON?] RULES: - The core claim must be one sentence (not a paragraph) - The keep/delete recommendation must be decisive (not "maybe") - If you captured it months ago and haven't touched it, default to DELETE - The proposed title must be specific enough to find later - Note type must be one of the five categories
- Process fleeting notes within 48 hours — after that, the spark is cold.
- The keep/delete recommendation is permission, not judgment. Use it.
- If you mark a note DELETE, delete it immediately (don’t archive).
- The development sources are your next actions for this note.
- A good title is the difference between finding a note and losing it forever.
Fleeting Note: “The best meetings are the ones that could have been emails — but only if the email is written well.”
When You Captured It: Yesterday, during a terrible meeting that should have been an email
Current Project That This Might Relate To: Writing a guide to better team communication
This framework improves outcomes by forcing:
- core claim extraction (what’s the point?)
- context setting (why now?)
- development planning (what’s next?)
- note type classification (where does it belong?)
- keep/delete decisiveness (stop hoarding)
Great knowledge systems don’t keep everything — they keep what matters and delete the rest.
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