1. Read the book first
BookMind does not pretend that a few cards can replace a full book. Read the original work first, stay with the author’s full argument, then come back for the learning that follows.
Guide
BookMind does not compress a book into a few cards for quick consumption. It assumes you have read the book seriously, then come back to turn its ideas into your own understanding through questions, self-testing, and reflection.
Reading it does not mean you own it.
Living through it is what slowly makes it yours.
Read first, then study the cards, then write down your thinking. What matters is not how much you remember in one week, but whether you come back after a market cycle and find that your understanding has changed with you.
BookMind does not pretend that a few cards can replace a full book. Read the original work first, stay with the author’s full argument, then come back for the learning that follows.
Finishing a book does not mean you truly understand it. The cards bring you back to the key questions, asking you to answer before you look. They do not summarize for you, they reveal how much you have really absorbed.
The same sentence lands differently in a bull market and in a bear market. What you write down today, your judgment, hesitation, and understanding, becomes a mirror for your future self. Years later, the book may be the same, but you will not be.
That limit is intentional. P0 needs to prove the learning loop before opening the full library and future commercial layers.
Accounts are delayed on purpose so the team can first polish the learning flow, the first-open ceremony, and local progress. Real auth and sync belong to P1.