
Maybe I’m missing something, or maybe it’s because it’s a beta. This lets you add links to other apps, like conversations in Messages.
TOUGH CHOICE QUOTES MAC
Note that the Mac app toolbar includes a button with a link icon called Add a Link. Position your cursor where you want to add the link, then hit Command+K or use Edit and Add Link from the menu bar to invoke a screen like the one on iPhone. On the Mac, adding a link to other notes is a little more straightforward (as long as you know where to look). You can optionally name it something different than the title. Tap the one you want to link to insert it. If you ask me, I say these popovers should really never require swiping.Īfter you tap Add Link, a new screen slides up that lets you search for titles of other notes in your collection. On the iPhone, tap where you want to insert the link in the note to invoke the format popover. You can already try note links in iOS 17 beta 1 and macOS Sonoma beta 1, but it took me a lot of poking around to locate the feature. Other note-taking apps have popularized this feature, and now it’s coming to the built-in Notes app this fall. Linking to notes from other notes can be really useful. One is the ability to add links to other notes, but it can be a bit tricky to track down. Be it in choosing a major, or a potential career, or deciding which activities to pursue, multiple factors will always be at work, and it is crucial that we make decisions and pursue them with the upmost of our efforts and capabilities.įorks in the road are inevitable, the effort we put into them is what determines the outcomes we get from them.Apple Notes gains a few new useful features in iOS 17, iPadOS 17, and macOS Sonoma.

However, the reality is that, in the face of situations that don’t always makes sense, decisions must still be made. Quite similarly, our lives as college students don’t usually make the most sense either. Yogi Berra never quite made an awful lot of sense. His belief is that in the wake of important decisions, we must back our thoughts and be committed to our decisions.
TOUGH CHOICE QUOTES FULL
He suggests that, in the face of these difficult decisions, it is best practice to make a decision and go forward with full confidence and charisma. However, Berra’s way of thinking detracts from the specificity of the decision and rather emphasize that it occurs. One must choose at the fork, either left or right or so you’d think. And yet, Yogi Berra seemingly disagrees with this notion on all accounts.īerra’s notion of simply taking the fork in the road is quite far from the norm, and to the logical thinker does’t make much sense. One would think that, with the heightened severity of these decisions, people would weigh them with the utmost cruciality. These forks become the defining moments in our lives the times we look back on with pride or doubt. It is quite different the walking down a literal path, as we cannot simply go back and try again. Our decision at those particular forks in our lives have made all the difference in the past years of our lives, which in my opinion, constitutes quite the large decisions.Īt these forks in our lives, the decisions we make ultimately change our lives forever. I went right, ignoring another university in the process and ultimately ended up here, writing this blog in CAS138T. If you are like me, coming to college was a major fork in the road that came with what was likely the toughest decision I had made to that point in my life.

For example, right now we are all freshman in college and in the past year we have faced many forks. When you think about it a bit more deeply, the path you choose at the fork really does make a difference. However, some of the greatest minds in history have pondered this question, and I suppose that in its own right warrants further review. It’s not a complex process, plain and simple. If one doesn’t work out, you come back and go the the other way. I mean, quite literally, there are only two options, left or right. I always found it interesting the amount of attention that forks in the road received. But which one is the best decision? Can we thrive and grow at all in a safe harbor? Is an overly adverse and uncertain path too risky? To Yogi Berra, master of all things illogical and paradoxical, it couldn’t matter less. Others, yet, advocate the rugged terrain of new and exciting experience. Some say take the paved, tried and true path. The fork in the road has long been used as a metaphor for decision making.

“When you come to a fork in the road, take it.”
