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In today's video, I'm going to be
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sharing scientifically proven ways to
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study better and remember things better.
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Okay, let me be honest with you for a
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second. Even if I give you the absolute
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best memory and study hacks out there,
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most of you will probably be way too
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lazy to actually use any of them. Yeah,
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I see you looking shocked. This is
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probably your 10th video on how to study
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better. You're probably watching this
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while eating or you're watching a Tik
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Tok because you're bored. So, let me cut
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you a deal. I'm going to teach you some
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study techniques and I'm also going to
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show you a tool that basically does all
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the work for you. All you have to do is
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get off Tik Tok for one second, listen
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to me, and actually check out the tool.
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Sound fair? Cool. So, let me introduce
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you to Recall. Now, Recall isn't just
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another note-taking app. I mean, yeah,
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you can take notes and all, but it has
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other features that's meant to help you
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remember information when you need it
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the most, which is why it's called
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Recall, and I've been using it a lot
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recently. It's definitely boosted my
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productivity. It helps me learn certain
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topics faster, speeds up research, and I
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really like that the more you use it,
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the better it gets. And the best part, a
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lot of the methods I'm going to show you
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in this video are built into this tool.
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So, even if you're too lazy to apply any
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of these techniques yourself, Recall
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will do it for you. And you should also
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check out this tool because they're also
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the sponsor of today's
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video. Fun fact, your brain can store
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around 2.5 pabytes of information.
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That's roughly 2.5 million GB, which is
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basically
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46,834 copies of Fortnite. Yeah, your
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brain can crank a lot of 90s. Pretty
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cool, right? Well, if my brain has all
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this storage, why can't I remember
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anything? Well, that's actually a good
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question. There's a lot of reasons why
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we forget things. You know, there's
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health reasons like bad diets and not
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sleeping, which honestly explains a lot
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for students. Uh, and your brain also
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uses some storage to um, how do I put
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this? Keep you alive. But what about
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specifically for studying and recalling
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information? Well, the simple answer is
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your brain doesn't care enough to
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remember it. What? Welcome to Sloth's
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Memory Crash Course. If you want to
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study and remember everything like a
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genius, you should know a little bit
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about how memories work. Don't worry,
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the explanation will be quick, easy to
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understand, and painless. I think our
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brain manages memories with a
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three-stage process. Encoding, storage,
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and retrieval. Your small brain encodes
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the information. It stores it, and when
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you need it, it retrieves it. Pretty
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simple. Now, your brain has three types
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of memories. Sensory memory, short-term
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memory, and long-term memory. Now, of
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course, it's more complicated than that.
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You don't care about memory that much,
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but if you do, go do your own research,
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nerd. I'm kidding. I'm also just not
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qualified to teach you this. I don't
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know what I'm talking about. I just did
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a simple search on perplexity. Here's
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the search results. Right now, for the
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purpose of studying and remembering
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stuff, we can throw sensory memory and
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short-term memory out the window. We
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only care about long-term memory.
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Long-term memory can store a lot of
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information for extended periods from
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days to years. And we can strengthen
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these memories with repetition,
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emotional significance, and having a
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deeper understanding of the topic. Our
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goal is going to be to move information
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to our long-term memory. And once
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they're in long-term memory, we're going
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to strengthen them. And that's
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everything you need to know about
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memories, at least for this video. Now,
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it's just going to ask you a few
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questions. And I'd
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appreciate chunking. Now that you know a
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little bit about how memory works, this
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technique will make more sense. Chunking
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is a technique that involves breaking
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down large amounts of information into
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smaller units or chunks. Now, the idea
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of chunking was first popularized in
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this paper in 1956 by this beautiful
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psychologist, George Miller. Number It's
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a very famous paper in psychology and
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it's now been referred to as Miller's
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law. The average person can hold about
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seven plus or minus two chunks of
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information in their short-term memory.
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The reason why this technique is so
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effective is because it lets your
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short-term memory process this
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information more efficiently, which
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means you can take in and remember more
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information. And since the information
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is organized in meaningful chunks, it'll
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be easier to transfer this information
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from short-term memory to long-term
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memory. Now, if you're a technical nerd
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just like me, you can think of this as
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compression. A lot of you have probably
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done chunking subconsciously. Phone
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numbers, the numbers are grouped
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together, chunks. Your debit and credit
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cards, the numbers are grouped together,
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chunks. This video, chapters, chunks.
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There's chunks every now. Chunking is
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pretty easy to do. Whenever you're
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studying, you're going to group the
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information into chunks. Let me give you
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an example with programming because this
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is a programming channel sometimes.
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Let's imagine you're trying to learn the
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basics of programming. If you weren't
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chunking, you might just write your
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notes like this, just a list of items
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and their definitions. In this example,
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we have eight items. Since we're not
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chunking, your brain is going to treat
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these items as the chunks. And if you
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add more and more to this list, it might
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become too much to hold based on
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Miller's law. So what we can do to
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remember more information is we can
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group them into meaningful categories.
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Now your brain is going to treat these
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categories as the chunks. So instead of
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eight chunks, it's going to be four
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chunks. And each chunk is easier to
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remember because the concepts are
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related. Now the problem is the notes
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themselves. I'm too lazy to take notes
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as is. Now you're telling me I have to
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pay attention and categorize them.
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You're asking a lot for me. This is
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where Recall comes in. Recall uses AI to
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automatically take notes for you. It'll
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summarize whatever video you're
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watching, even if it's over an hour,
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since people like to make such long
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videos nowadays. And it'll also
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summarize any articles you're reading,
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even research papers. You can either
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have a detailed summary or a concise
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summary. Now, what's nice about the
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summary itself is that it automatically
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chunks them into different sections. And
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it also tags the summary, and you can
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change the tags to whatever fits. Now,
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you might be skeptical on the AI notes,
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and I don't blame you. AI isn't perfect
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yet, but don't worry. Recall lets you
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modify the notes, and it also saves the
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original text, so you can double check
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and make sure everything's correct. And
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another cool feature of recall is that
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chunking is kind of built into this
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because if you notice on some of these
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notes, some of the words are highlighted
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in yellow and if you hover over them,
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it's going to show up with a card and it
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also shows you all the notes you have
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that's related to the topic. And when
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you click the card, it takes you to the
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notes for that concept or word. These
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are called connections inside of recall.
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So, if we go to the connections tab
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here, you're going to see all the
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connections inside this card. And it
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also shows you how to create your own
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connections in the notebook by clicking
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the lightning bolt icon or typing slash.
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Doesn't this look familiar? Categories,
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chunks. See what I mean? Recall has it
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built in. So, go chunk up your note.
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Active recall. I'm a little sick right
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now, so my voice sounds a little weird.
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A wreck. Okay, so a day passed and it's
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not getting better. And we're back.
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Active recall. It's a classic technique
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that basically everybody has mentioned
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for studying because it's just that
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good. And there's a lot of research that
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supports it. Boom. Research paper. Boom.
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Another one. Boom. Another one. Boom.
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Which makes me question, why aren't you
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using it? Now, active recall is pretty
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simple. All you're doing is testing and
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challenging yourself to retrieve
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information from your memory. Instead of
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just passively rereading notes or
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textbooks over and over, you're actively
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recalling information out of your small
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brain. You understand the name? Think of
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it like working out. If you just watch
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workout videos without ever doing the
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actual exercises, you're not getting
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stronger. The same applies to your
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brain. If you're just rereading notes
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without testing yourself, your brain
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muscles are not going to get stronger.
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Your memory doesn't improve. So, how do
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you implement active recall into your
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studying with flashcards? Flash cards
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are one of the best ways to do active
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recall and they're pretty easy to make.
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Flash cards are a two-sided card where
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one side has the question and the other
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side has the answer. So, whenever you're
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studying, you're going to read the
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question and try to answer it. And once
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you have your answer, you're going to
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flip the card over and see if you got it
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right. Now, flash cards are great until
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you have to create like a hundred of
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them. That's where it gets annoying,
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tedious, and exhausting. Unless you're
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using recall, of course, they have a
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built-in flashcard feature. All you have
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to do is go on the quiz tab and click
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the generate question button. And recall
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is going to generate flash cards based
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on the notes you have, which saves you
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so much time. And of course, if the
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flash cards aren't correct, you can
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modify them. Now, flash cards are a
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great strategy for active recall, but we
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can do even better by combining active
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recall with some other techniques. Now,
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one technique you can combine active
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recall with is space repetition. Not so
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fun fact, studies suggest that within an
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hour, people forget roughly 50% of new
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information, and within 24 hours, it
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rises to 70%. And after a week, 90%.
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This is called the forgetting curve. and
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it's pretty depressing. But don't freak
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out. We can actually do something about
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this. Now, this forgetting curve happens
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to information that's not being
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reviewed. That's why you forget it so
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easily. So, all you have to do is review
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your notes. Small brain review notes.
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Small brain, no forget. Pretty simple.
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But the real question is, how often
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should you review your notes? And this
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is where space repetition comes in. All
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you're doing is reviewing your notes at
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increasing intervals. So, when you first
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start, you review your notes after 1 day
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and then 3 days and then a week and then
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a month, 2 months, 3 months. You get the
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point. And when you do this, you're
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going to dramatically slow down how
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quickly you forget stuff. Now, the
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reason why reviewing your notes is so
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important is because you're literally
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tricking your brain into thinking, "Hey,
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I keep seeing this information. It must
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be important. I should remember this."
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And when you combine this with active
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recall, oo, the quality of your studying
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is going to be so much better. And it's
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really easy to combine both active
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recall and space repetition. All you
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have to do to add space repetition is
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review your flash cards at increasing
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intervals. So, review them after a day
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and then 3 days and then a month, two
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months, blah blah blah blah. If you're
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using recall, then you have all those
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features built in. And it's pretty
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obvious that this is built into it
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because the URL says space repetition.
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The page itself recall review uses space
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repetition. It doesn't get more obvious
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than this. And you can see how recall
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handles these intervals. They have three
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different types. Immediate review,
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subsequent review, and then they have
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incorrect responses. But not only that,
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recall has this really cool feature that
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takes space repetition even further. It
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has a feature called augmented browsing.
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And you can think of it as a built-in
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space repetition tool whenever you're on
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the internet. Because if we simplify how
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memory works, in order to remember
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information, you just have to review it.
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Well, with this augmented browsing
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feature that recall has, whenever you're
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on the internet, the words that you have
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notes on will be highlighted, and when
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you click on them, your notes are just
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going to show up. And if you're
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reviewing your notes, what is that?
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Space repetition. It's really helpful.
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So nice. I actually use it a lot because
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whenever I'm reading some article about
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data science, machine learning, data
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structures, and algorithms, sometimes I
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see some terminology that I know I've
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studied, but I forgot a little bit of it
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and I don't want to waste time digging
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through my notes to find some
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information. So instead of wasting time,
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all I have to do now is hover over the
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word and my notes about that topic show
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up. It makes it way easier to review my
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notes and it makes whatever I was
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reading way easier to understand. I love
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this feature so much. Have you ever
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heard of the famous physicist Richard
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Feineman? Nobel Prize winner. Smart guy.
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Well, he developed one of the simplest
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but most effective methods for truly
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mastering a topic, the Fineman
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technique. You can combine this with all
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the techniques we've talked about, and
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it's a very simple technique. All you
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have to do is explain a concept in the
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simplest terms you can. Here's the
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technique in a nutshell. Step one,
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choose a concept you want to understand
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deeply. Step two, teach it to yourself
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or to someone else. Step three, identify
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where you get stuck. If you struggle to
[09:55] (595.28s)
explain something clearly, that means
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your understanding needs some work. Step
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four, simplify those notes and maybe
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create some analogies. And once you do
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that, you're going to repeat the process
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again. But trying to explain something
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to someone else every single time you
[10:06] (606.24s)
want to learn something can be pretty
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inconvenient or embarrassing. And if
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you're watching this video, you probably
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don't have any friends. Well, we can use
[10:12] (612.32s)
the next best thing, AI. Now, with
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recall, you have access to a chat
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feature. You can ask AI stuff about your
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notes. But if you want to use the
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Fineman technique, you can ask AI to
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rate and critique you based on your
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explanation of the concept and check if
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your explanation is correct. And now
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when you give AI your explanation, it's
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going to let you know if you did good or
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if you need to review your notes again
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because you're a little dumb. Now,
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another way you can use the Fineman
[10:33] (633.20s)
technique with recall is by telling AI
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that you'll be explaining this concept
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and to test you by asking clarifying
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questions like a real person who cares
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would. It's like having your own
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personal tutor that won't judge you. I
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need to touch some grass. Okay, I
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already know some of you are still not
[10:45] (645.68s)
going to use these techniques, which is
[10:47] (647.04s)
actually pretty insane, and you probably
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broke the contract. All I have left to
[10:50] (650.08s)
say is just try Recall. Seriously, no
[10:52] (652.08s)
jokes, no memes. It does everything for
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you. You don't have to do much. You
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press button, you get notes. You press
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another button, you get flashcards. You
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can chat with AI that probably knows
[11:00] (660.32s)
more than your teachers because they use
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AI, too. And with augmented browsing,
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you can always check out your notes
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whenever you're reading something or
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watching a video. It just makes studying
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so much easier. You can try out recall
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at getrecall.ai or click the link in the
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description. And if you use the code
[11:12] (672.96s)
sloth 25, you'll get 25% off until May
[11:15] (675.84s)
1st, 2025. So, use it before it expires.
[11:18] (678.40s)
And if you're watching this video and it
[11:19] (679.84s)
already expired, um, sorry. Moral of the
[11:22] (682.48s)
story, you probably forgot what this
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video was