first 30 minutes by goal - yasufumi-nakata/mind-upload GitHub Wiki
A short guide for fixing what to look at first for each goal
This learning page is generated for GitHub Wiki. The public portal is managed on mind-upload.com.
- Updated: 2026-03-14 / Role: Reading route
This page is a companion guide that explains how to read Mind-Upload in the first 30 minutes depending on your goal. The best first page differs for readers who want the big picture, theory, practical work, literature, or contribution routes.
This page gives short entry routes only. For detailed conditions and exceptions, return to the relevant main pages.
- Wiki: Guide to reading public pages - This is for people who want to see the role differences of the entire public page first.
- Wiki: Guide to reading theory pages - This is for people who want to read only theory-oriented pages.
- Wiki: Guide to reading practical pages - This is for people who want to focus on reading only the pages that involve moving their hands.
- If you just fix your purpose first, you will be much less confused about the order of reading.
- The first entrance is different for those who want to enter from theory and those who want to enter from practical.
- In the first 30 minutes, it is important to grasp the ``next direction'' rather than reading everything.
- Which route is ultimately the most efficient depends somewhat on the reader's background knowledge.
- If the page structure increases in the future, the shortest route may be fine-tuned.
You don't need to understand everything in the first 30 minutes. All you need to do is fixwhat you want to know and look first at only 3-4 pages that fit that purpose.
| Purpose | Order of viewing in first 30 minutes | What you want to take home after 30 minutes |
|---|---|---|
| I want to get the big picture | Start page → Verification → Roadmap | You can see that the focus of this site is not ``affirming conclusions'' but ``defining progress and creating a foundation for verification.'' |
| I want to start with theory | WBE 101 → Reading guide for theory pages → Perspective or Idea | Understand the differences in the roles of assertion level, long research notes, and design principles. |
| I want to move my hands | EEG 101 → Reading guide for practical pages → Datasets → Hands-on | Knowing which public data to start with and where to create a minimal loop of L0. |
| I want to organize my pile of literature | Research Harvest → How to read the literature and evidence page → Papers | You can see the difference between a map of each unsolved problem and a widely collected paper archive. |
| I want to know how to participate or update | Issue → Content Hub → Separating internal and external dependencies | Being able to understand the boundaries between work that can be done right now and work that needs to be put on hold due to external dependencies. |
| Place to stop | Page that should be replaced |
|---|---|
| Stop at theory name or philosophical term | Glossary / consciousness theory map |
| Stop at EEG or measurement word | EEG basics / Terminology guide from measurement to modeling |
| Stops due to role difference on practical page | Reading guide for practical pages |
| Stops due to role difference between public pages | Public page reading guide |
| Stops at any story from L0 to L5 | How to read each L0 to L5 |
- Try to read all long passages from the beginning: At first, it is better to decide on one axis for more stable understanding.
- Chasing theory and practice too much at the same time: It's better to decide which one you want to focus on first, so you don't get confused.
- Conclude using the FAQ alone: The FAQ is the entry point, so if you have a strong argument, you need to go back to the main text.
- I feel like I know the victory conditions just by looking at Hands-on: The design of the conditions must be confirmed in Verification.
If you want to go back to the differences in the roles of public pages as a whole, please use Public page reading guide. If you want to narrow it down to only theory-related pages, please use Reading guide for theoretical-related pages. If you want to narrow it down only to practical-related pages, please use Reading guide for practical pages.