- ### New highlights added [[2020-12-22]] at 5:33 AM
- @_jonesian @tomcritchlow 2. Buster Benson's "Piles" and "Codex" @buster https://t.co/r0CYS15eXQ
- @_jonesian @tomcritchlow @buster 3. @nateliason 's Notes and Book Summaries https://t.co/aUlvQa0f4k
- @_jonesian @tomcritchlow @buster @nateliason 4. @chrisbiscardi 's Digital Garden (rainbow style!) https://t.co/QqokRwCGJg
- @_jonesian @tomcritchlow @buster @nateliason @chrisbiscardi 5. @andy_matuschak 's layered, bi-directionally linked system of "Evergreen notes" https://t.co/tie1obDf4v
- @_jonesian @tomcritchlow @buster @nateliason @chrisbiscardi @andy_matuschak 6. The Open Transclude UX pattern from @tobyshorin - https://t.co/6RhL26ssgJ https://t.co/1NzlO5owH5
- 7. @aengusmcmillin 's @RoamResearch -like experiment with bidirectional links implemented in @gatsbyjs
https://t.co/6mDraOaosf
- @aengusmcmillin @RoamResearch @gatsbyjs 8. @wynlim 's thoughts on Designing a Self-directed Learning Network: https://t.co/DCSLpW5GIO
- 9. @jhooks manifesto on Digital gardens > blogs: https://t.co/OeQA0ILFVc
- @jhooks 10. @gwern's sprawling, info-packed wiki with hover previews, TOCs, and a public change log https://t.co/joJ5zJU9Cd
- @jhooks @gwern 11. Speaking of hover previews, @JoshWComeau's experiment with Tippy.js this week is a fanstastic example of adding contextual layers to links - https://t.co/JBm8ITaV72
- @jhooks @gwern @JoshWComeau 12. Also related, @swyx's writing on Webmentions and Twitter as a "meta-commentary layer to the internet" follows this same vibe of bi-directional densely-linked knowledge across platforms - https://t.co/FxS4FnCh9p
- 13. To come back to @tomcritchlow for a moment, as far as I can tell from internet-history-digging they OG coined the term "digital garden" 🌱 and have a wonderful series of reflections on the concept here: https://t.co/TERmK4mzYE
- 14. Update on the historical origin!
Thanks to @tomcritchlow and @BillSeitz for the backstory insights
The linkbacks flow through Mike Caufield's "The Garden and the Stream: A Technopastoral"
https://t.co/8NTOduqsZx
Which leads back to...
- 15. Mark Bernstein's 1998 essay / explorative experience "Hypertext Gardens" - https://t.co/GjQxfOM0Yf
"Unplanned hypertext sprawl is wilderness: complex and interesting, but uninviting. Interesting things await us in the thickets."
❤️ This design aesthetic https://t.co/IzMtE1VHbK
- 16. Overdue addition to the list, but @swyx has an entire 'Digital Garden Terms of Service' agreement!
https://t.co/ESVoqdsom8
A beautifully reflection on what we should expect as readers and gardeners - Epistemic disclosure, proper attribution, and the right to be wrong