Why Strange Images Make You Remember Better
Let's talk about improving one's memory... No, not the RAM kind. Sadly, no extra gigabytes for your brain today π€·ββοΈ The fun part? A lot of what looks like "wow, this person is a genius" is actual...

Source: DEV Community
Let's talk about improving one's memory... No, not the RAM kind. Sadly, no extra gigabytes for your brain today π€·ββοΈ The fun part? A lot of what looks like "wow, this person is a genius" is actually technique, practice, and a few surprisingly simple mental tricks. Here you'll learn about practical methods like chaining, memory palaces, and the person-action-object system. You can listen to the podcast episode that sparked this post: DevThink Episode 004 β Memory The big idea: memory is trainable One of the most encouraging takeaways from this conversation is that memory is not some fixed trait that only a lucky few are born with. Sure, some people seem naturally better at remembering names, lists, dates, or card sequences. But the techniques discussed in the episode make a strong case for something much more useful: memory can be improved on purpose. And that's good news, because it means you don't have to wait for talent to show up. You can work on it. πͺ Why weird works A theme that