- May 2021
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mxb.dev mxb.dev
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This looks cool! I can think of some interesting applications, but the example here is pretty slick.
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commonplace.knowledgefutures.org commonplace.knowledgefutures.org
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howtomeasureghosts.substack.com howtomeasureghosts.substack.com
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Kevin Marks</span> in "@alexstamos You gave a pithy quote about 'strangers' which downplayed the sustained attempts by the social silos to gather and document our lives in their dossiers and cash in on it. @matlock explains more here https://t.co/lo4dG4CuqV" / Twitter (<time class='dt-published'>05/18/2021 19:32:39</time>)</cite></small>
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commonplace.knowledgefutures.org commonplace.knowledgefutures.org
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These sound like some interesting structures around which a community could easily and interestingly create content.
Worth delving into seeing how they work.
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brainbaking.com brainbaking.com
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go-jamming is a cool looking Webmention sender and receiver, particularly for SSGs. It can be used to service multiple websites as well.
Requires a bit of configuration and build into one's templates, but it looks pretty well documented.
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www.thedriftmag.com www.thedriftmag.com
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>KevinMarks</span> in #indieweb 2021-05-12 (<time class='dt-published'>05/18/2021 19:50:04</time>)</cite></small>
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augmentingcognition.com augmentingcognition.com
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www.supermemo.com www.supermemo.com
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www.kevinmarks.com www.kevinmarks.com
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This is rather slick. It would be interesting to parse the root URL and show more context of the original author's name, avatar, etc. as well.
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crookedtimber.org crookedtimber.org
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I am now definitely Team Maria!
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I particularly enjoyed the California water commons, with its quiet nod to Elinor Ostrom’s original post-graduate research on emergent cooperation between county water-boards.
A quiet nod here in it's own right. Now I want to dig into Elinor Ostrom's research and work.
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I’ve also written about China’s no less corrosive version of the Internet and how it’s marketed to developing and middle income countries as “Autocracy-as-a-Service”.
Autocracy-as-a-Service---it's so sad that this apt phrase exists and worse that it has such a benign feeling to it.
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www.washingtonpost.com www.washingtonpost.com
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laurenhanks.com laurenhanks.com
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This is a rather cool find and I can think of a few ways of using it.
Being able to add widgets easily to the dashboard can be a highly useful thing!
Also having the ability to easily add an admin page in the menu could be incredibly helpful in this setting.
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goodereader.com goodereader.com
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These all look interesting, but my primary worry is the ability to do cross-platform note taking with them. Perhaps worth delving into some more custom reviews, but the price points of these compared to my laptop versus the functionality and flexibility needs to improve greatly.
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brainbaking.com brainbaking.com
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One of the toughest parts of note taking systems can be moving from one to another, particularly digital ones, as the technical overhead is almost never easy and typically requires a huge amount of work. Wouter's description here may seem facile, but I'm sure it wasn't simple, not to mention the fact that he's got more facility with coding than the average person ever will.
I do like the idea of basic text or markdown files that can be used in a variety of settings with relatively easy wiki mark up.
Of the systems I've seen, this seems to be the most portable format, but it also requires software that supports it at the base level, but which still provides search and other useful functionalities.
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www.markwk.com www.markwk.com
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Wouter Groeneveld</span> in Digitizing journals using DEVONthink | Brain Baking (<time class='dt-published'>05/17/2021 08:00:06</time>)</cite></small>
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brainbaking.com brainbaking.com
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A relatively comprehensive view of Wouter Groeneveld's commonplacing workflow. There are a few bits missing here and there, but he's got most of the bigger basics down that a majority of people seem to have found and discovered.
He's got a strong concept of indexing, search, and even some review, which many miss. There's some organic work toward combinatorial thought, but only via the search piece.
I should make a list of the important pieces for more advanced versions to have. I've yet to see any articles or work on this.
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www.dougengelbart.org www.dougengelbart.org
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editor-browser tool sets
This hasn't happened yet, and is unlikely to happen anytime soon. We seem to be moving away from a read/write web, with authors only being able to edit content they've created on domains that they control. The closest I've seen to this is the Beaker Browser.
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en.wiktionary.org en.wiktionary.org
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english.stackexchange.com english.stackexchange.com
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Definition of lexia (or French lexie).
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phirephoenix.com phirephoenix.com
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www.jstor.org www.jstor.org
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The seminal 1890 Harvard Law Review article The Right to Privacy—which every essay about data privacy is contractually obligated to cite—argued that the right of an individual to object to the publication of photographs ought to be considered part of a general ‘right to be let alone’.
<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Jenny</span> in left alone, together | The Roof is on Phire (<time class='dt-published'>05/08/2021 18:32:41</time>)</cite></small>
See also: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Right_to_Privacy_(article)
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www.sfchronicle.com www.sfchronicle.com
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San Franciscans are mask shaming others for not wearing them outside despite recent changes in guidance by the CDC.
The problem here is the "if" you're fully vaccinated part, which 50% or more likely still haven't done, but are going maskless anyway.
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voices.washingtonpost.com voices.washingtonpost.com
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An interesting take from a significant modern researcher/writer about commonplaces in the digital era. He's particularly enamoured of the fact that Evernote dovetails with Google searches to show details from his own notebooks which he's saved in the past.
Search in commonplace books is definitely a must have feature.
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newrepublic.com newrepublic.com
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interconnected.org interconnected.org
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Some revisionist history here glorifying Bush and the Memex without any mention of the long historical precedent of the commonplace book.
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Article about the renaming of Welsh place names into English which erases culture and history.
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a very facile, introductory article. nothing new here for me.
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www.wired.com www.wired.com
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indieweb.org indieweb.org
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www.zylstra.org www.zylstra.org
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This is a solidly comprehensive overview of much of what I'd want in my own personal reader. I'll have to revisit it as I'm reading and using other readers to see if there are any other pieces missing.
Being able to sort by social distance, by community/tags, and by posting frequency and/or post type (ie separating articles from notes from bookmarks, etc) would be some of the bigger must haves.
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www.zylstra.org www.zylstra.org
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pythonspeed.com pythonspeed.com
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pythonspeed.com pythonspeed.com
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pythonspeed.com pythonspeed.com
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medium.com medium.com
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drsovndal.com drsovndal.com
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Cycling Anatomy, Second Edition
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p.haavard.me p.haavard.me
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This doesn't look good at all... Freenode is apparently being taken over with some corporate chicanery?
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jeetheer.substack.com jeetheer.substack.com
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www.diveintomark.link www.diveintomark.link
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threadreaderapp.com threadreaderapp.com
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press.uchicago.edu press.uchicago.edu
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>JHI Blog </span> in Collective Memory - JHI Blog (<time class='dt-published'>05/12/2021 21:55:54</time>)</cite></small>
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mitpress.mit.edu mitpress.mit.edu
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Markus Krajewski reminds us that Luhmann’s choice of interlocutor has a precedent in an 1805 piece by the novelist Heinrich von Kleist (see the chapter “Paper as Passion” in this collection).
<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Daniela K. Helbig </span> in Ruminant machines: a twentieth-century episode in the material history of ideas - JHI Blog (<time class='dt-published'>05/12/2021 21:27:02</time>)</cite></small>
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www.worldcat.org www.worldcat.org
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Daniela K. Helbig </span> in Ruminant machines: a twentieth-century episode in the material history of ideas - JHI Blog (<time class='dt-published'>05/12/2021 21:12:46</time>)</cite></small>
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www.verzetteln.de www.verzetteln.de
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Daniela K. Helbig </span> in Ruminant machines: a twentieth-century episode in the material history of ideas - JHI Blog (<time class='dt-published'>05/12/2021 21:12:46</time>)</cite></small>
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jhiblog.org jhiblog.org
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Media theorist Markus Krajewski has devoted a book specifically to the paper machinery of cards and catalogs. He traces the origins of this machinery back to sixteenth-century attempts at indexing books, and through the twists and turns of library technology in Europe and the U.S. over the following centuries.
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Ideas have a history, but so do the tools that lend disembodied ideas their material shape −− most commonly, text on a page. The text is produced with the help of writing tools such as pencil, typewriter, or computer keyboard, and of note-taking tools such as ledger, notebook, or mobile phone app. These tools themselves embody the merging of often very different histories. Lichtenberg’s notebooks are a good example, drawing as they do on mercantile bookkeeping, the humanist tradition of the commonplace book, and Pietist autobiographical writing (see Petra McGillen’s detailed analysis).
I like the thought of not only the history of thoughts and ideas, but also the history of the tools that may have helped to make them.
I'm curious to delve into Pietist autobiographical writing as a concept.
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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de.wikipedia.org de.wikipedia.org
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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I've heard references of people using these in combination with or also for commonplace books.
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history4today.com history4today.com
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arxiv.org arxiv.org
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www.gwern.net www.gwern.net
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Origin of Lindy's Law or the Lindy effect.
A discussion of the life expectancy of a comic.
What they miss here is that it's easier to produce if you're also consuming a lot of material, particularly in a group. The output is proportion to the input, and at the time there was only so much input that one could take in in a much sparser media market in comparison to 2021.
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www.sciencedirect.com www.sciencedirect.com
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www.baldurbjarnason.com www.baldurbjarnason.com
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arxiv.org arxiv.org
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Standard economic theory uses mathematics as its main means of understanding, and this brings clarity of reasoning and logical power. But there is a drawback: algebraic mathematics restricts economic modeling to what can be expressed only in quantitative nouns, and this forces theory to leave out matters to do with process, formation, adjustment, creation and nonequilibrium. For these we need a different means of understanding, one that allows verbs as well as nouns. Algorithmic expression is such a means. It allows verbs (processes) as well as nouns (objects and quantities). It allows fuller description in economics, and can include heterogeneity of agents, actions as well as objects, and realistic models of behavior in ill-defined situations. The world that algorithms reveal is action-based as well as object-based, organic, possibly ever-changing, and not fully knowable. But it is strangely and wonderfully alive.
Read abstract.
The analogy of adding a "verb" to mathematics is intriguing here.
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www.nature.com www.nature.com
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www.nature.com www.nature.com
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link.springer.com link.springer.com
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Turing was an exceptional mathematician with a peculiar and fascinating personality and yet he remains largely unknown. In fact, he might be considered the father of the von Neumann architecture computer and the pioneer of Artificial Intelligence. And all thanks to his machines; both those that Church called “Turing machines” and the a-, c-, o-, unorganized- and p-machines, which gave rise to evolutionary computations and genetic programming as well as connectionism and learning. This paper looks at all of these and at why he is such an often overlooked and misunderstood figure.
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www.tandfonline.com www.tandfonline.com
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Read the abstract. Sounds generally fascinating not to mention the Stuart Kauffman source.
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royalsocietypublishing.org royalsocietypublishing.org
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epjdatascience.springeropen.com epjdatascience.springeropen.com
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We analyze features contributing to the success of a book by feature importance analysis, finding that a strong driving factor of book sales across all genres is the publishing house. We also uncover differences between genres: for thrillers and mystery, the publishing history of an author (as measured by previous book sales) is highly important, while in literary fiction and religion, the author’s visibility plays a more central role.
The abstract generally tracks with my personal experience in the space.
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librarianshipwreck.wordpress.com librarianshipwreck.wordpress.com
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A strong and cogent argument for why we should not be listening to the overly loud cries from Tristan Harris and the Center for Human Technology. The boundary of criticism they're setting is not extreme enough to make the situation significantly better.
It's also a strong argument for who to allow at the table or not when making decisions and evaluating criticism.
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alistapart.com alistapart.com
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Maria Farrell</span> in What is Ours is Only Ours to Give — Crooked Timber (<time class='dt-published'>05/06/2021 13:32:31</time>)</cite></small>
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www.ianbrown.tech www.ianbrown.tech
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Maria Farrell</span> in What is Ours is Only Ours to Give — Crooked Timber (<time class='dt-published'>05/06/2021 13:32:31</time>)</cite></small>
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www.kickscondor.com www.kickscondor.com
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Perhaps I’m trying to use Obsidian for something it wasn’t intended – a note pad full of simple scratch notes that eventually become to-do lists, emails, blog posts, etc. It should be used to build a knowledge base – a collection of information that rounds out a subject. I just simply don’t do that type of note taking.
I'm using it to do both of these things and definitely find it more useful for the knowledge base work. I've never used Simplenote heavily, but it's definitely more focused on your use case Colin.
For the quick notes scratchpad idea, I've been relying on Markor and syncing the results from my phone to my Obsidian data store to get those notes into my notebook more easily. Often when I'm at my desktop I may move those notes to other more appropriate places to keep track of them. Hopefully Obsidian's mobile version (in beta) will make this portion easier.
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daringfireball.net daringfireball.net
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social.coop social.coop
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An interesting thread with some links to the [[agora]] and various pieces others are building.
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anhsyxia.wordpress.com anhsyxia.wordpress.com
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journals.sagepub.com journals.sagepub.com
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Vox</span> in (16) How I memorized an entire chapter from “Moby Dick” - YouTube (<time class='dt-published'>05/04/2021 22:24:24</time>)</cite></small>
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journals.sagepub.com journals.sagepub.com
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Vox</span> in (16) How I memorized an entire chapter from “Moby Dick” - YouTube (<time class='dt-published'>05/04/2021 22:24:24</time>)</cite></small>
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known.kevinmarks.com known.kevinmarks.com
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epeus.blogspot.com epeus.blogspot.com
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Sidewiki does another interesting thing - it matches comments to the same words elsewhere on the web. For example, my comment on Douglas Adams excellent 1999 piece also shows up in SideWiki on JP Rangiswami's blog where he quotes Douglas Adams too.This hints at a greater possibility for SideWiki - to weave the web together by better by showing commentary across the web from all places that quote and cite each other, correlating by textual quotation and adding annotated links to the commentary from people we trust most.
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web.archive.org web.archive.org
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If instead of commenting, you write a response on your blog, you are standing behind your words, and associating them with the rest of your writing. The social dynamics are very different; you think more before responding instead of posting a quick flame. You can't really spam, as you are only soiling your own garden.
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scroll.blog scroll.blog
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Their care for the communities and the journalists and creators that serve them is not isolated to the people who are explicitly paid to care about such things. That sense of service permeates the whole company. Seeing that has been a unique experience.
Care for the communities? Really?! I'm not so sure here...
However, we’re not moving fast enough.
I'm also a bit reticent about the We're not moving fast enough part. Sure we need to help out journalists, but usually moving fast in the social space has been a disservice to the user.
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developer.okta.com developer.okta.com
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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www.zylstra.org www.zylstra.org
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I really need to delve back into some of the plugins and test out using them more frequently. The workspace one I tried briefly when it first came out, but it had a few problems for me which are now likely fixed.
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www.zylstra.org www.zylstra.org
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Ton delineates his ideas between notions, notes, ideas, and work notes. It's not too dissimilar to the ideas others like Maggie Appleton have written about various smaller pieces being built up from small "seedlings" into larger evergreen pieces within a digital gardens framing.
I do like the idea of emergent outlines he notes over Ahrens' speculative outlines.
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www.zylstra.org www.zylstra.org
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I love the phrase "elephant paths" (the correct translation?) for maps of content.
I also like the idea of having a set up for doing digital captures of physical notebook pages. I'll have to consider how to do this most easily. I should also look back and evaluate how to continue improving my digital process as well.
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lucybellwood.com lucybellwood.com
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piperhaywood.com piperhaywood.com
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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world.hey.com world.hey.com
- Apr 2021
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threadreaderapp.com threadreaderapp.com
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www.collindonnell.com www.collindonnell.com
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After the recent brouhaha at Basecamp (context: https://www.platformer.news/p/-what-really-happened-at-basecamp), a great example of someone using their own domain because they didn't want the bad press of a silo/platform to stick to them
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lornamcampbell.org lornamcampbell.org
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isabelle.reclaim.hosting isabelle.reclaim.hosting
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Great recap of an awesome time Isabelle! Thanks for all your hard work to make it so seamless!
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isabelle.reclaim.hosting isabelle.reclaim.hosting
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meredithfierro.com meredithfierro.com
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Thanks for all your hard work Meredith! The conference went so well and in large part it's down to your work which hasn't gone unnoticed.
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threadreaderapp.com threadreaderapp.com
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micro.welltempered.net micro.welltempered.net
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This looks like some good fun coming up!
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threadreaderapp.com threadreaderapp.com
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www.eff.org www.eff.org
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nathangathright.com nathangathright.com
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Just the sort of draconian silo activity you'd imagine that Apple would be doing.
So much for their free and open directory as their position in the space.
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libraryfutures.net libraryfutures.net
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Internet Archive</span> in (6) Why Trust A Corporation to Do a Library’s Job? - YouTube (<time class='dt-published'>04/28/2021 11:46:41</time>)</cite></small>
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stackoverflow.com stackoverflow.com
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A bit of a tour through the Ruby source code seems necessary as the documentation is a bit thin.
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history4today.com history4today.com
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kitchen.opened.ca kitchen.opened.ca
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madland.ca madland.ca
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This is a pretty solid overview of a literature review workflow. He doesn't use the words, but this is not a half bad way to build a digital commonplace book or digital garden/personal wiki for research use.
I hadn't thought about using Grav as the method for storing and displaying all of it, but perhaps it's worth looking into?
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madland.ca madland.ca
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An interesting outline of how Colin Madland uses Notion for his Ph.D. research work.
He's got a good list of some pros and cons at the bottom. The export sounds a bit hairy on one front, but at least gives you some sort of back up in case the worst were to happen.
Not sure it's the thing for me and I'm happier with my workflow using Obsidian at the moment, though some of the ideas about process here could be helpful.
It looks like he's got some of the same issues in using Grav for his knowledge work as I do in WordPress, though the taxonomy and Webmention portions do tend to help me a bit.
Colin brought this to my attention at the OERxDomains21 conference.
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stephaniewalter.design stephaniewalter.design
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maggieappleton.com maggieappleton.com
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I like the metaphors of Dark Forrest and Cozy Web, but I'm not sure that this visualization of it really works for me.
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www.buzzfeednews.com www.buzzfeednews.com
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datatogether.org datatogether.org
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Internet Archive</span> in (6) Why Trust A Corporation to Do a Library’s Job? - YouTube (<time class='dt-published'>04/28/2021 11:46:41</time>)</cite></small>
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bitcoin.stackexchange.com bitcoin.stackexchange.com
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www.platformer.news www.platformer.news
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More context on the Basecamp story
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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github.com github.com
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:structured - Lumberjack::Formatter::StructuredFormatter - crawls the object and applies the formatter recursively to Enumerable objects found in it (arrays, hashes, etc.).
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niklasblog.com niklasblog.com
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I found this article through Hypothes.is when I saw someone marking up the same article I had read.
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islandinthenet.com islandinthenet.com
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This is a pretty cool workflow to micro.blog's micropub endpoint.
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marendeepwell.com marendeepwell.com
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What a fantastic set of accomplishments! Thank you for hosting such a spectacular space for all of us to hang out in.
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www.patrickrhone.net www.patrickrhone.net
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You're right. I had to do a double take to go back. What a fascinating life Abel Meeropol must have had.
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bavatuesdays.com bavatuesdays.com
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I totally want to play around with both of these and host personal versions to play around with. Sadly some of the technical requirements for them always seem just beyond my reach. Perhaps I'll give it another go shortly.
I do wonder what a Reclaim Cloud instance would end up running over time. I doubt I'd drive much traffic.
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defaultfriend.substack.com defaultfriend.substack.com
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There's a certain sort of irony that this essay is on Substack.
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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"The Analytical Language of John Wilkins" (Spanish: "El idioma analítico de John Wilkins") is a short essay by Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges originally published in Otras Inquisiciones (1937–1952).[1][2] It is a critique of the English natural philosopher and writer John Wilkins's proposal for a universal language and of the representational capacity of language generally. In it, Borges imagines a bizarre and whimsical (and fictional) Chinese taxonomy later quoted by Michel Foucault, David Byrne, and others.
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en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
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He is particularly known for An Essay towards a Real Character and a Philosophical Language (1668) in which, amongst other things, he proposed a universal language and an integrated system of measurement, similar to the metric system.
This may be well worth reading with respect to my research on memory, stenography, shorthand, etc.
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www.michaelbransonsmith.net www.michaelbransonsmith.net
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www.michaelbransonsmith.net www.michaelbransonsmith.net
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via Jim Groom
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world.hey.com world.hey.com
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Seems fairly innocuous corporate speak until you think about it for a minute...
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via https://stackoverflow.blog/2021/04/23/podcast-332-non-fungible-talking/?cb=1
check if devlop on Ethereum still sucks
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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Fork Uniswap & Create Your Own Sushiswap
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aaronparecki.com aaronparecki.com
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Read more FOSS
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jeetheer.substack.com jeetheer.substack.com
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queue.acm.org queue.acm.org
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threadreaderapp.com threadreaderapp.com
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An interesting take on Substack bringing back some of what blogging used to be.
<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Jay Rosen</span> in "A writer explains in this thread why he's going Substack. "The shortest answer I can give is: I miss blogging and Substack seems the best path for a return to a viable blogging culture." It's true that he says about that culture. I was there. 😎" / Twitter (<time class='dt-published'>04/22/2021 16:08:34</time>)</cite></small>
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cuelang.org cuelang.org
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www.history.com www.history.com
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Tulips as Cryptocoins?
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Suggested reading by the OERxDomains session: Taking Care by Lee Skallerup Bessette and Susannah McGowan
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bavatuesdays.com bavatuesdays.com
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support.streamyard.com support.streamyard.com
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support.streamyard.com support.streamyard.com
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blog.steren.fr blog.steren.fr
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www.manton.org www.manton.org
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history4today.com history4today.com
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Sorry to hear this Dan, but I might be able to help in terms of providing some perspective for moving forward.
These days the idea of bestseller means selling in the range of 10,000 books. The average book released these days sells only 250 copies, so if you're over that, you're doing well.
It's also incredibly uncommon for any publishers to put any serious money behind promoting their titles unless PR opportunities are falling off the trees for them. (This means that unless you've been selling a million copies of everything you write, they probably don't care.) Many publishers will assign you a pro-forma publicist to help when they can, but don't expect much from them. Most publishers will tell you to hire your own book publicist (usually for about $1,500-3,000 a month).
My guess is that the first run of your book was probably 1,000 to 2,000 books, which will bring the cost of raw printing down to $2 a copy. If you need copies of your book and they're remaindering them, you might offer the publisher $1-2 a copy plus shipping to get 50 or 100 copies for yourself for hand sales over the next decade (for speaking engagements, etc.) or selling a few copies from your own stash on platforms like Amazon, Abebooks, Alibris, etc. The cost of keeping a book in print these days is usually around $12 a year and then they print them on demand.
Some of the methods you mentioned, talks, online readings, etc. can be useful marketing for both you and your book(s). Look around your local community/state for book events, fairs, bookstores that invite authors, etc to supplement this.
Depending on your next title, it might be worth hiring a publicist if you're going the route of a text accessible to a broader public.Often this can be a reasonable risk but getting copies into reviewers' hands can be helpful, as can radio or print appearances. Another option is to pay for adds in appropriate print magazine outlets related to your material.
It's an uphill slog, but getting a publisher to take most of the risk and offering you all the free amenities of editing, proofreading, typesetting and distribution can be worth it in the end to get your material out.
When choosing your next publisher/editor, have a bit of this conversation with them at the outset to see what expectations they have for themselves. Don't tip your hand though by letting them know prior sales numbers.
Since you've got your own website/newsletter/social media presence, you should also look into affiliate accounts with the bigger online platforms. Chances are you're actually selling most of your own copies, you may as well get a 4% or larger cut of the referrals you're giving. Your link on this page alone could give you a reasonable little return on top of the boilerplate 7% you're probably getting from the publisher.
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community.reclaimhosting.com community.reclaimhosting.com
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Great synopsis of the difference in offerings of Pressbooks here.
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www.theverge.com www.theverge.com
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mignano.medium.com mignano.medium.com
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In the coming months and years, we’ll be working to further enable choice for creators, including giving them the power to choose not only how someone wants to create or monetize audio, but also where specific content is able to be consumed, ensuring creators have an opportunity to decide if they are aligned with the platforms distributing their content.
So this means you're going to use simple, open standards and tooling so that not only Anchor and Spotify will benefit? Or are you going to build closed systems that require the use of proprietary software and thus force subscriptions? Are you going to Balkanize the audio space to force consumers into your product and only your product? Or will producers be able to have a broad selection of platforms to which they could distribute their content?
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