The concept of “making a house into a garbage dump” that makes programmatic mechanical contributions to Scrapbox uncomfortable.
On the other hand, cold start issue where it is difficult to perceive the value of linkage bonding without a certain amount of information.
This is an example of an unexplored name book that started after mechanically plugging in auto-generated content with a fairly high degree of garbage.
A mental model in which humans “tidying up” a pile of garbage created by a machine.
When originally separated projects were exported and merged into one, the original creation date and time could be retained, so if merging was done after some time had elapsed since generation, it was possible to flow into the past data without contaminating new arrivals.
If past blog posts are merged with the actual date and time they were written, they will not appear in the updated list. But they will appear in the search and random view. And so on?
Mechanically generated is created separately from the main project
The concept of “rot” humusization in a positive sense
Past output to compost.
- Concept of [Tsuji Bracketing
Composting even other people’s work
Related article recommendation by word frequency etc. is not good because the words to be selected are not good, and manual bracketing is human annotation of “good keywords” and “I would be happy if articles in which those words appear are recommended in the future”.
The dilemma is that if you want to stream other people’s work due to copyright laws, it has to be private, but for the sake of social triggers, you want the main output to be a public project.
A COMPOSER PRIVATE PROJECT that has everything and everything in it.”
We need a system where the composter is the hub for proper merging and updating.
What you should avoid is “overwriting a page with the same title if it happens to exist”, so you can check it in advance and merge the contents or make it a separate page.
Most of the garbage (about 80% w.b.) is water. Most of the text is also unnecessary filler
Walking is a mess, you don’t always get a solution to the problem you want to solve.
This page is auto-translated from /nishio/2018-11-29 using DeepL. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. I’m very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.