Yawning, and smearing my eyes with my fingers, I walked bleary eyed into the kitchen and filled the kettle with fresh water from the tap, checking with my hands to make sure it was cold enough (The best tea comes from the coldest water). I glanced outside for a minute at the city mist. I could almost taste the grey. I plugged the kettle in and switched it on. As the kettle began to hiss, I looked for biscuits. Anything above loose crumbs would do. Thankfully I found some fusty digestives. For some reason, biscuits are always nicer when they've gone a bit dry and stale. I took the milk out of the fridge and poured some into a cup that I'd left out from having used earlier. The kettle began grumbling fiercely so I took it from the cord, threw a teabag into my cup and poured boiling water onto it. I watched brown swirls rise up through the muted white of milky water. A few minutes passed. I removed and squeezed the teabag, then flicked it into the bin. I picked up my mug and left the kitchen with a nice, hot cup of strong tea.
The only way to make it expand forever would be to support recursion. Would be interesting what texts you could come up with that. Kind of a textual Mandelbrot set.
It was a dark and stormy night. The captain and his men were huddled around a campfire. The captain turned to Jake and said "Jake, tell us a story.", so Jake began his story: "It was a dark and stormy night. The captain and his men were huddled around the campfire..."
Perhaps using some kind of Markov chain process? It could be amusing, but would be more interesting with some kind of understanding of parts of speech.
This would be a great way to supplement dense text for comprehension purposes and for learning new vocabulary. Learning moments are different for different people, this makes it one-size-fits-all.
It has the feel of interactive embedded footnotes with positive reinforcement for opening them -- each time I clicked it revealed a few more features about you. Positive reinforcement is an important factor as you feel like you're discovering information hidden at a deeper level. Even if dozens, or even hundreds, have discovered that "secret" before it still feels like you've achieved something. The alt-text on XKCD is a perfect example of this.
Footnotes tend to convey additional information omitted due to necessity or lack of interest by the mainstream readers. I don't see them online a great deal, primarily as the web isn't composed of traditional pages so they don't translate well...
Has anyone else seen an interesting or novel way of doing footnotes on the internet?
(unrelated, but if anyone wants a fascinating example of footnotes in meta-fiction, the novel Oracle Night by Paul Auster has entire subplots and even another "book" hidden in the footnotes)
My colleague (with some help from me) created an interactive version of the 1932 French poem "Nouvelles impressions d’Afrique" by Roussel, one of the early experiments in this vein: http://withhiddennoise.net/roussel/
Slate magazine uses a nice way of presenting footnotes, especially in the series of long-form articles it published in the last few months. They use a small grey circle with a + sign in it; when you hover over the circle, a popup appears with the footnote. Some of the long-form articles have entire paragraphs in each footnote, which seem like they've been removed to make the article flow better but preserved for the interested reader who would like more detail. Others are simply corrections or clarifications added after the fact. I'd love it if more sites picked up this convention.
Another site which has a particularly unique way of writing footnotes is E2 ( http://everything2.com ). Like Wikipedia, editors ('noders') are encouraged to link articles ('nodes') together by hyperlinking words throughout the text. Unlike Wikipedia, noders can post anything: essays, fiction, poetry.
Some use the hyperlinks as commentary on the main text - if you hover over them, the title of the linked node can be very different from the text of the actual link, possibly changing the meaning of a sentence (for example, "I tell her that I'm [okay]", with [okay] linking to the node 'I am not okay'.)
Occasionally, noders link entire phrases or sentences which seem interesting, even if there's no actual node with that name. There is the concept of "filling nodeshells": writing new and interesting content to fill a node which was created by someone linking a phrase from another node.
Each node also holds a grid of 'softlinks': nodes which people visited from that node. Mostly this is composed of links from the text in that node, but it can also be used for readers' commentary via the readers deliberately visiting appropriately-titled nodes.
It might be nice to read news articles this way. Start with the headline and expand the parts that interest you the most. I can imagine it being difficult to write that way, though.
I discovered Joe Davis and TT a couple years (even going so far as to make my own editing tool which, I like to think, influenced Joe's own implementation).
I was thinking about the news article ideas the other day, actually. (E.g., a 24in60.com snippet that expends to a full article.) I think it would be really cool, but it takes a lot of work to make something seamlessly go from being a snippet of information to a full-fledged investigatory article. You'd basically have to write a series of increasingly more detailed articles using the same story flow. This might be something text analytics and computer-generated content could be able to do; if not today, then someday.
Or maybe just write the article, and present the most-important bits first, starting with the headline. Then, the first paragraph or so would cover the important points, and as you kept reading, it'd get less and less important.
That's genius. I wish there was an organization in which they wrote most of their articles this way. Perhaps they could even send these articles to other organizations for some kind of reprinting fee.
I did a better go at it, but then realized I'd yet to sign up... I didn't quite have the mettle to do as good a job on the second attempt. But I certainly think it'd be interesting to have this on a site.
I hope some one writes a javascript library that takes a suitable formatted text and has an expandTo(length) function so that the same info can fit into various screen sizes without having a scrollbar.
Yawning, and smearing my eyes with my fingers, I walked bleary eyed into the kitchen and filled the kettle with fresh water from the tap, checking with my hands to make sure it was cold enough (The best tea comes from the coldest water). I glanced outside for a minute at the city mist. I could almost taste the grey. I plugged the kettle in and switched it on. As the kettle began to hiss, I looked for biscuits. Anything above loose crumbs would do. Thankfully I found some fusty digestives. For some reason, biscuits are always nicer when they've gone a bit dry and stale. I took the milk out of the fridge and poured some into a cup that I'd left out from having used earlier. The kettle began grumbling fiercely so I took it from the cord, threw a teabag into my cup and poured boiling water onto it. I watched brown swirls rise up through the muted white of milky water. A few minutes passed. I removed and squeezed the teabag, then flicked it into the bin. I picked up my mug and left the kitchen with a nice, hot cup of strong tea.
I see some deeper meaning in this - in that it is an explicit way to show how communication can be parsed down so simply. Many writers/communicators want to extrapolate every thought into word tombs - when they can very often be summated in something as small as "I made tea." Beautiful execution, here, on getting me (and hopefully others) to think about writing/communicating more simplistically - and then actually doing it.
Otherwise stated, "This makes me want to communicate more simply."
As I was playing with it, I was thinking about how it illustrates the way magnifying different aspects can give a different feeling to one's writing. Like: can I get better emphasis by keeping a particular facet short and direct, or does it pay to expand on it?
So I think it's not just about keeping it simple, but seeing where simple might be better, or where depth might be better.
This is the difference between my speech and my typing, my presentations and my speaker notes, and so on. Anyone know how to learn to do this as you go along, not preparing?
I saw something like this described many years ago (possibly by Ted Nelson, who coined the term 'hypertext'). The concept was like a volume control for text where cranking the volume control varied the amount of detail from one line summary through to a multi page article.
I've always really liked the idea but writing coherent content could be fiendishly difficult (the simple approach is just to provide a number of versions and cycle through them).
66 comments
[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 128 ms ] threadYawning, and smearing my eyes with my fingers, I walked bleary eyed into the kitchen and filled the kettle with fresh water from the tap, checking with my hands to make sure it was cold enough (The best tea comes from the coldest water). I glanced outside for a minute at the city mist. I could almost taste the grey. I plugged the kettle in and switched it on. As the kettle began to hiss, I looked for biscuits. Anything above loose crumbs would do. Thankfully I found some fusty digestives. For some reason, biscuits are always nicer when they've gone a bit dry and stale. I took the milk out of the fridge and poured some into a cup that I'd left out from having used earlier. The kettle began grumbling fiercely so I took it from the cord, threw a teabag into my cup and poured boiling water onto it. I watched brown swirls rise up through the muted white of milky water. A few minutes passed. I removed and squeezed the teabag, then flicked it into the bin. I picked up my mug and left the kitchen with a nice, hot cup of strong tea.
;)
a choose-your-own-adventure kind of like this, released a week or two ago by Andrew Plotkin.
I created an example one here (made a few typos that I couldn't figure out how to fix):
http://www.telescopictext.org/text/AYeELHzYgVV8b
Footnotes tend to convey additional information omitted due to necessity or lack of interest by the mainstream readers. I don't see them online a great deal, primarily as the web isn't composed of traditional pages so they don't translate well...
Has anyone else seen an interesting or novel way of doing footnotes on the internet?
(unrelated, but if anyone wants a fascinating example of footnotes in meta-fiction, the novel Oracle Night by Paul Auster has entire subplots and even another "book" hidden in the footnotes)
Search for "A few Easter eggs"
Another site which has a particularly unique way of writing footnotes is E2 ( http://everything2.com ). Like Wikipedia, editors ('noders') are encouraged to link articles ('nodes') together by hyperlinking words throughout the text. Unlike Wikipedia, noders can post anything: essays, fiction, poetry.
Some use the hyperlinks as commentary on the main text - if you hover over them, the title of the linked node can be very different from the text of the actual link, possibly changing the meaning of a sentence (for example, "I tell her that I'm [okay]", with [okay] linking to the node 'I am not okay'.)
Occasionally, noders link entire phrases or sentences which seem interesting, even if there's no actual node with that name. There is the concept of "filling nodeshells": writing new and interesting content to fill a node which was created by someone linking a phrase from another node.
Each node also holds a grid of 'softlinks': nodes which people visited from that node. Mostly this is composed of links from the text in that node, but it can also be used for readers' commentary via the readers deliberately visiting appropriately-titled nodes.
More info: http://everything2.com/title/The+perfect+node
I was thinking about the news article ideas the other day, actually. (E.g., a 24in60.com snippet that expends to a full article.) I think it would be really cool, but it takes a lot of work to make something seamlessly go from being a snippet of information to a full-fledged investigatory article. You'd basically have to write a series of increasingly more detailed articles using the same story flow. This might be something text analytics and computer-generated content could be able to do; if not today, then someday.
Sadly, it's pretty trivial to disprove this by counterexample.
http://www.telescopictext.org/text/3r3OhSm1fuXVT
I did a better go at it, but then realized I'd yet to sign up... I didn't quite have the mettle to do as good a job on the second attempt. But I certainly think it'd be interesting to have this on a site.
Otherwise stated, "This makes me want to communicate more simply."
So I think it's not just about keeping it simple, but seeing where simple might be better, or where depth might be better.
I've always really liked the idea but writing coherent content could be fiendishly difficult (the simple approach is just to provide a number of versions and cycle through them).