Ask HN: Paper pad "self-prompting" as rubber-duck-with-a-context-length?
However, while typing into a monologue channel is indeed fast and direct and augments my poor mental context-length of verbal communication, the ephemeral, delible nature of uncommitted text undermines the purpose of being forced to formulating a "good-enough" communication as a cognitive device to reifying a thought that would otherwise be in flux.
What I have found to be a good balance that achieves both committal pressure of speech and a longer context-length of text is writing on a tearable paper pad with ink and not pencil. You are still allowed to cross-out words in a pinch but the spatial cost of this means that there is still a slight pressure to force you to stop and formulate before committing, without being debilitatingly permanent.
Essentially, you manually hand write a chat log while mentally alternating between the role of a prompter and a silicon ducky, making a point to delineate between the two by drawing a horizontal line across the page.
I'm wondering if I'm alone in this or if anyone here are also similarly idiosyncratic to have this work for them as well?
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