The answer is not mine, it's from Quora. But I think the info, which is presented in it, will be useful to you.
In a nut shell, information-wise, Physics entails primarily:
- principles and laws;
- definitions, terminologies and nomenclatures;
- process flows;
- causes and consequences;
- problem:solution;
notwithstanding a slew of lab experiments in problem solving;
So, it's good to know a good number of diagramming techniques, e.g. idea maps, concept maps, Venn or matrix diagrams, flow charts, fish-bone diagrams, etc. to help you to flesh out important information, as part of your note-taking/note-making;
First thing first:
Learn to segregate the "core material" from "elaborative material", with the help of your subject/exam syllabi."
That's to say, your focus is on "core material", and using Pareto's Law, generally about 80% of exam questions are more likely to come from "core material".
This is not to say "elaborative material" is not important.
Tactically speaking, once you have the full grasp of "core material", "elaborative material" is more likely to fall in automatically.
You may even want to explore the use of the following study tools:
i) SQ5R reading/studying strategy:
It's a structured system [SQ5R is an acronym for SURVEY, QUESTIONS, READ, RECORD, RECITE, REVIEW, REFLECT], but it equips you with efficient and effective ways to navigate academic materials, especially the intellectually-intense ones, with ease and expediency.
I append herewith a nice document for you to read:
It's a far more superior system that the conventional outline method, known to most students in schools, college and universities.
It's latent power comes from its simple and yet elegant three-column spatial configuration for taking notes and making notes.
The "cue" column is the most powerful system I have ever known, as it facilitates - and expedites - your memory retention/recall via self-testing.
You may want to read this nice write-up on Cornell Notes method of note-taking and note-making, in conjunction with SQ5R reading strategy:
Guide to Effective Note Taking - SQ3R and Cornell - The Student Power
If you think you have an artistic streak in you, you may even want to explore the multitudinous graphical methods of note-taking and note-making, like idea mapping, cluster diagramming, and other graphic organisers and visual tools.
As a supplementary routine to SQ5R and Cornell Notes, you may even want to explore the use of the proven Index Card Strategy to deal with your "core material", particularly the definitions, terminologies and nomenclatures, for quick and convenient "learning-on-the-go": commuting and waiting in queue.
For your final test/exam preparation, you can even expand the foregoing "Divide and Conquer Strategy" as follows:
Grab a large sheet of blank paper, butcher roll or news print roll, say 8 ft by 4 ft or so, and paste it on the wall, and a box of colour markers, both fat-tip and fine-tip.
Some assorted colour sticky notes, too!
Now, pick up your subject textbook.
With the fat-tip marker, write the subject title on the centre of the paper on the wall.
You may want to draw a simple image of your choice to represent this title.
Using your knowledge of "core" ideas and "elaborative" details you have developed earlier, write them all down, using your fine-tip markers, on the wall paper, all along the periphery.
You can transcribe "elaborative" details on to your sticky notes, and place them alongside the "core" ideas.
Upon completion, stand back, do a gallery walk and quickly review just to make sure that you have not missed out any important data from your notes and/or subject textbook.
This single sheet of completed wall paper for the chosen subject will be your consolidated and summarised study sheet for your subject test/exam.
The beauty of this elaborate process is that you have at your complete disposal all the "core" ideas and "elaborative" details all nicely laid out on one single sheet of paper, at a visual glance.
You can then use each large consolidated/summarised sheet for self-testing or reciprocal questioning with a study buddy.
For the fun of it, you may even want to paste the completed wall paper on to the bedroom ceiling hovering over your bed, so that you can do what I often like to call the 3 R's (recap/review/reinforce) prior to hitting the sack.
I'm curious to see how this tee shirt is received among Bitcoin maximalists. On one hand, it's Bitcoin positive, on the other hand, it uses Ethereum technology.
Writing an academic essay means fashioning a coherent set of ideas into an argument. Because essays are essentially linear—they offer one idea at a time—they must present their ideas in the order that makes most sense to a reader. Successfully structuring an essay means attending to a reader's logic.
Whether one agrees or disagrees, this is at least a coherent, well-written
argument. Those are rare enough in crypto that it deserves credit on that basis
alone.
It seems, though, like the author is prematurely dismissing a large and
evolving sector of the crypto space. No rational investor thinks that every
project is going to succeed in exactly its current form. Improvements will
continue, and the projects that ultimately become mainstream household names
will have developed a long way past today's versions. In that regard, the
author's criticisms have merit regarding projects as they exist right now, but
the question is really how polished can we reasonably expect such new ideas to
be at this point? Being a work in progress is not the same thing as being
fundamentally 'ill-suited' or a failure.
If final judgement is rendered solely based on where we are today then,
frankly, all of crypto is a failure. That's a bit short-sighted, no?
Most fake news is generated by humans and then spread on social media. But the rise of robust systems such as OpenAI’s controversial GPT-2 point toward a future where AI-generated articles are close enough to the real thing to obfuscate nearly any issue.
Research by the Norwegian Consumer Council (Forbrukerrådet) shows that many smartphone apps send highly personal data to thousands of advertising partners. The report uncovers how a large number of shadowy entities are receiving personal data about our interests, habits, and behavior, every time we use certain apps on our phones. This information is used to create comprehensive profiles about us, which can be used for targeted advertising and other purposes.
“These practices are out of control and are rife with privacy violations and breaches of European law. The extent of tracking makes it impossible for us to make informed choices about how our personal data is collected, shared and used. Consequently, this massive commercial surveillance is systematically at odds with our fundamental rights”, says Finn Myrstad, director of digital policy in the Norwegian Consumer Council.
“Every time you open an app like Grindr advertisement networks get your GPS location, device identifiers and even the fact that you use a gay dating app. This is an insane violation of users’ EU privacy rights”, says Max Schrems, founder of the European privacy non-profit noyb.