Home / Ramblings / Freemind: Untangle your Brain

Freemind: Untangle your Brain

24568932I don’t usually write about stuff other than sensors and robots, but I’m going to have to make an exception this time.

I’ve been using a great tool for the past few months now called Freemind.  It’s a Mind-mapping tool that allows you to quickly put down your ideas and visualise them and make connections between various sub-ideas.  As Wikipedia puts it:

A mind map is a diagram used to visually outline information. A mind map is often created around a single word or text, placed in the center, to which associated ideas, words and concepts are added. Major categories radiate from a central node, and lesser categories are sub-branches of larger branches. Categories can represent words, ideas, tasks, or other items related to a central key word or idea.

To show you how I’ve used this, let me show you a screenshot of one of my mind-maps, namely the one for my Driver Suite:

[Click to enlarge]

There’s a central idea, in this case the Driver Suite, and attached to it I have a TODO, a list of new sensors and possible future ideas.  I have Freemind open all the time, so I can quickly add new things, rearrange them when something occurs to me or anything else.  There are lots of easy, straightforward keyboard shortcuts, so you’re not slowed down entering new ideas and thoughts.  It’s possible to add hyperlinks, even entire files.  You can change the look of nodes, put fluffy clouds around them if you feel like it, make them bold, yellow, underlined and italic, whatever you feel like.  There is a myriad of icons you can add to a node as well.

I have numerous mind-maps, one for each work project, this one for the Driver Suite and another for possible blog article ideas.  Freemind has allowed me to forget less and remove some of the chaos in my head.    So if you’re like me and bursting with ideas but cursed with the memory of a gold fish, this might be just the thing you’re looking for.  There are other tools out there that can do the same thing, some are commercial, some are free (like this one).  Freemind runs pretty much any platform that will run Java.  You can download it here: [LINK].

I owe my current project manager a debt of gratitude for showing me this great tool, thanks Frank!

About Xander

Xander Soldaat is a Software Engineer and former Infrastructure Architect. He loves building and programming robots. He recently had the opportunity to turn his robotics hobby into his profession and has started working for Robomatter, the makers of ROBOTC and Robot Virtual Words.