
MindManager offers a number of different templates and styles for you to choose from, and also a library of icons and graphics with which to spruce up your maps. At its most basic, MindManager simply makes it easier to create a an attractive map, automatically drawing lines and nodes, allowing quick, keystroke-based addition of lists and spacing everything out for you as you add more branches and sub-branches. Mindjet’s MindManager 9 takes that concept and transfers it to your PC, adding more power and flexibility in the process. The idea is that creating a mind map is more compatible with how your brain actually works than simply making lists, and consequently gives users more time and space to think creatively. It’s a simple enough concept: from a central bubble, you draw lines out subtopics and further subtopics if necessary, illustrating them as you go for a visual, all-in-one view of your information, plan or project.



Mind Mapping has been used for years for brainstorming, visualising complex ideas and projects, or as an aid for studying and writing.
