Beautifully designed, executed and presented. With just enough tension to pull the reader in...
I had to look up the author (who I was not familiar with, tbh) and her other work. Good job!
Beautifully done. 12/10, would read again!
Intriguing example with the shoemaker story, but initially confusing. After playing with it, okay, but still perhaps more confusing than the concept which is clear.
The trick with the cursor suggests: what if the context was ambient, like a graph of concept bubbles around whatever paragraph has focus? Or, a step further, as if the paragraph was a card in an array of cards swiped across a desk in "is this your card?" style, with fisheye focus on paragraph text, past and future paragraphs as cards to left and right of this one, with summarized concepts bracketing those from above and below?
In any case, this is onto something, and worth experimenting with various UIs.
I really like the layout of the reimagined wikipedia it has the feeling that there is an entire group of people and subjects the care about and rely on the central topic. It's the exact same feeling as studying at a good school. The narrative that this circle creates can be a powerful motivator for learning. With wikipedia and other wikis, most articles feel like your reading an expense report and 99% of links are equivalent to the "general topics" and seem to serve more as distractions from your topic rather than a circle around it.
And yet, it somehow feels different. It's really as you say, "it has the feeling that there is an entire group of people and subjects the care about and rely on the central topic"; those thumbnails beckon, invite you to explore in a way that regular hyperlinks don't.
(That, or maybe after years of getting stuck on Wikipedia, recursively reading linked pages for hours on end, I eventually grew desensitized to regular links.)
Workflowy: https://workflowy.com/ Ravel: https://ravel.acenturyandabit.xyz/
[1] And article hints at it with the lines "A fish eye lens doesn’t ask us to choose between focus and context" and "This concept isn’t new—it’s foundational to fields like data visualization."
You want the right information, summarized correctly, from the right source, to the right person, and just in time. We can barely, sometimes, do that if we're lucky with deterministic systems... We loose most of the control of any of these pieces in probabilistic systems. Maybe that works for you, but it feels like hubris to use it anywhere I might actually think I could use it.
I do find significant use for this in something like review and considering the legibility of my own note taking, that is one handsome solution.
I've built something similar and have yet to find a compelling use case for it. In my mind it seemed like such an obvious idea that I thought I'd start using it instead of Wikipedia. However, in practice I seldom care about the broader or more specific topics for the thing I'm looking into. It's strange though because I'm a compulsive rabbit holer but it just doesn't trigger the same urge to explore related nodes as Wikipedia does.
With that said, this UI is much slicker so maybe that is the missing piece.
The idea was to use the Git commit log to show how a software evolved into what it is today. I needed to think of zooming in and out of context, where there are thousands of commits involved. I am not a good UI person so I will definitely take inspiration from this.
I don't think this is a particularly good showcase.
It's great that someone has a new saying, but it's still the same concept. It's not like we've just been shown a new wheel. It's just been cleaned up and given fresh coat of armor all, and maybe chrome rims instead of the ones from the factory
That wikipedia view sounds terrifying.