What if I wrote it now without reading The advantages of Scrapbox written on 2017-09-15 2019-01-25

  • I wrote it and talked about it in a one-hour study session and only got about 40% of the way through.
  • I got confused about whether the object of bracketing is a noun or a verb, which is not the main issue.
    • The main point I wanted to convey was that ā€œthe sense of #tags tends to generate an implicit assumption that only nouns are allowed, but this is not the case, and you are free to use verbs and short sentences as well.
  • I opened all the links and started explaining.

  • What is Scrapbox?

    • It is a collaborative editing wiki that does not require an explicit save action.

      • I could explain that, but they probably wouldnā€™t get it.
    • Information storage services focused on minimizing the cost of expressing links between information

    • Links are very beneficial, but if creating links is a hassle, people donā€™t link as much.

    • What is [Wiki

      • There is a ā€œtitleā€ on the page where the content is written, and
      • For example, a link can be made by [[title]] ā€œWiki Notationā€.
      • hypertext
      • What was <a href="http://example.com/title">title</a> in ā€œHypertext Markup Languageā€ (HTML) is now [[title]] in Wiki notation
    • In Scrapbox

      • I pushed it further and [Title.] now makes it a link.
      • You can write so directly, or just select a part of the existing text and press [ to make it a link there.
      • This ā€œact of creating a linkā€ is called [bracketing
      • Pressing [ while typing a sentence automatically inserts closing parentheses.
        • A fuzzy search is then run in real-time according to the string entered, and existing links are suggested.
        • Demonstration: Iā€™m going to do ā€œsuggestionsā€ here.
    • Link Concepts

    • Because the concept is new, there is no word that can refer to the concept of Scrapbox links, tags, and page titles in one word

    • #tag [link]

    • #tag and [tag] are functionally identical

    • Tags look like what we call labels or hashtags.

      • Because of this, people who have experience with existing tools that ā€œallow more flexible liquidation than hierarchical classification by tagging the targetā€ tend to misunderstand that ā€œthatā€™s what it is, isnā€™t it?
      • You can use it that way, but that way throws away an important part of Scrapboxā€™s functionality and is quite wasteful.
      • It is important to be able to tag = link words in a sentence (= bracketing)
      • for some reason
  • This is how itā€™s used on this page so far.

    • This ā€œact of creating a linkā€ is called [bracketing

    • If it simply says #Bracketing, even if they are functionally the same, they are different for human cognition.
    • This is a common practice in wikis.
    • I wonder if anyone who is caught up in the idea of a hashtag-style information organizer would tag ā€œbracketingā€ for this sentence
      • Tends to include ā€œcategory namesā€ like `#booksdiaryminutes
        • The idea of hierarchical classification by folders has been dragged out.
      • Instead of organizing by fitting into a known structure top-down, itā€™s better to connect unexpected things bottom-up.
  • As a feature inherited from the Wiki, the title of the page becomes the link target

    • At the end of the link [bracketing], there is a page titled ā€œBracketingā€.
    • Used differently from #book style tags because it brackets important words in a sentence and is also a page title - The fool learns from experience, the wise learn from history or other short sentences that can be used as links in their entirety. - The page with that title has a commentary about that short article.
      • Bracketing verbs: rot.
        • If you follow this rot, it leads to [Liquefaction of knowledge
        • Key phrases in noun form often tend to be [abstract concept
        • On the other hand, verbs are often close to [metaphor
        • It is easy to generate the assumption that ā€œit must end in one or a few noun words.ā€
        • Active bracketing of verbs
  • We donā€™t categorize them hierarchically, we link them together.

    • There are two sides to this feeling. Some say they want to ā€œsort it out.ā€
    • One of the authors had this to say about the idea of ā€œorganizing in a hierarchical manner
    • Humans are incapable of understanding and following complex rules.
    • The requirement to write in the proper place in the hierarchical structure becomes progressively more difficult.
    • When difficult demands are imposed, people stop writing.
  • On the other hand, there are tools out there with the idea that we should stop organizing and find them through searchā€¦

    • To be found in search (unless vague search evolves more), you need to search with exact keywords
    • Thatā€™s impossible for humans.
    • It is impossible to keep them in the right place according to the hierarchical structure, and it is also impossible to properly attach the right keywords and properly search for them when you search for them.
  • So, the concept of [sweet potato search

    • If the information is connected to each other, all you need is a keyword in one of them.

    • Notation distortions can be linked to each other: Example of Notation Distortion Discovery in Scrapbox.

    • Narrow down your search, select the results that look close, and follow the links to get to what you are looking for.

    • Structuring information in a way that is neither hierarchical classification nor keyword search alone

    • Need to have lots of links so that discovery can be made by following links

      • So Scrapbox lowered the cost of creating the link.
      • The approach of automatically creating links doesnā€™t seem to be doing it at the moment.
      • I donā€™t know if they donā€™t do it ideologically or if they just havenā€™t gotten around to it.
      • But at least theyā€™re not afraid to put content in automatically.
    • In Scrapbox Information Organization, Tadanori Kurashita divided the history of information organization into three categories

    • Information Organization 1.0: Location-based Organization

      • Things can only exist in one place at a time.
      • The same idea applies to placing files in a hierarchy of folders.
      • If something canā€™t be clearly defined where itā€™s located, itā€™s out of order.
    • Information Organization 2.0: Donā€™t Organize, Arrange

      • Arrange them in order of update or access, rather than trying to organize them.
      • Find by search
        • Search = Refine
      • Google has been successful in aligning by PageRank
      • Services without a good ranking method tend to be ā€œsorted by update timeā€, etc.
      • Sorting by access order is a rule of thumb that ā€œthings that have been used recently are used more often againā€.
    • Information Organization 3.0:.

      • Networked organization, connected by links
      • Place it in a frequently used locationā€ is often used to organize physical objects
        • Dishes and knives are usually kept near the kitchen.
      • When certain information is used, the information that relevance to it is used more often.
        • ā†’ Linkage by relevance of information to realize ā€œplace nearā€.
      • Relevanceā€ is not only mechanically based, but also subjective to each individual.
        • So it must be easy for humans to output that Subjective association.
        • Scrapbox facilitated the related outputs by simplifying the notation of links to the extreme
  • Subjective and objective associations

    • I donā€™t know what the reason is for the ā€œsuggestions of related articlesā€ that are often attached to blogs, etc.
    • On the other hand, in the case of Scrapbox, ā€œthings with a common tagā€ are connected by the name of the tag.
    • That ā€œtag=linkā€ was given by me in the past.
    • Manually selected words used to calculate distances Recommendation Engine.
    • Manual selection = white list.
      • Recommendation engine implementations eliminate words that are not useful for recommendations by calling them [stopword
      • This is a blacklist.
      • When I used to build a recommendation engine with Cybozu-style article data, an unexpected word got in the way.
        • Due to the large number of interactive articles, the ā€œpersonā€™s nameā€ becomes an overwhelmingly high-frequency word.
        • As a result, recommending by cosine similarity based on the frequency of occurrence of the word, or recommending by ā€œthe same person is in the dialogue articleā€.
    • Scrapbox is a whitelist, not a blacklist, and the recommendations are not a blackbox, nor is the behavior understandable
      • Not ā€œI donā€™t know what it is, but it was recommended to meā€ but ā€œThis article contains the same tag.
  • Explains the function of what is called a link or tag

    • The word ā€œlinkā€ gives the misconception that it is a connection between things that already exist.
    • The term ā€œtagā€ is ambiguous, and different people have different images of it, but I think it can be easily thought of as a predetermined mark, like a Twitter hashtag, that has nothing to do with the text, but makes it easier to put it all together later.
    • Scrapbox is quite different, more like a ā€œpage titleā€ concept
    • Link to the Future
    • Links are identified by color
    • External links are underlined, connected links are blue, unconnected links are red.
      • The identification method of, well, itā€™s hard to tell at first glance, isnā€™t it?
        • The telomere-based obsolescence indicator is also hard to understand, but Iā€™ll explain that elsewhere.
    • Bracketingā€ as if highlighting important key phrases in a sentence
      • At this point, the target string becomes a ā€œlinkā€.
      • Internal links as they are not external links.
      • This link is blue if they are connected, red if they are not.
    • Of course there are ā€œunconnected links,ā€ and thatā€™s not an unusual state of affairs.
      • I havenā€™t quantitatively examined it, but there are probably a large number of ā€œunconnected linksā€ out there.
      • We donā€™t link because we think itā€™s connected, we bracket because we think itā€™s important.
      • This would unexpectedly result in several blue links.
      • Connections to other pages are discovered after the fact.
      • The phrase ā€œLink to the Futureā€ was a surprisingly blue link, even though I thought Iā€™d just thought of it.
        • Unfortunately, there was no beneficial information at the link.
        • However, this blue link has led me to the idea of a ā€œlink to the futureā€ in the past.
        • Of course, when I first wrote this ā€œLink to the Futureā€ it was ā€œ[A link that leads nowhere.
        • If youā€™ve thought about it in the past, why not search (e.g. for someone using a search engine) with ā€œfuture + linkā€ and [weā€™ll find something.
        • I tried.
          • 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 ā€œgood keywordsā€ and ā€œI would be happy if articles in which those words appear are recommended in the future.

          • The criteria for selecting strings to be tagged is ā€œFuture Self Perspective. It is what you want to extract your future self with.

            • 2018-05-27 Tagging in Scrapbox
            • This is an article that Kazuhiro Shiozawa wrote in his Scrapbox on May 16, and after posting it on Facebook, there were comments on Facebook, and I thought it would be useful to record the text that came out of that exchange.
            • My notes on this
              • Structuring information is done ā€œso that it will be useful when you use that information in the future.

          • A Google search found this
            • Mr. Sasaki said that Scrapbox is good for keeping track of ideas and things you want to do (in the future), not logs (in the past).

            • https://idea-gym.com/scrapbox-training/#Scrapbox
              • Not a place to store logs ā†’ spoken in terms of [Not a warehouse to put dead text in.
                • This link itself is also entered with link suggestions, and when you jump to the link, itā€™s empty but connected to about 4 pages ahead, and then you pick the one you think is original, and then thereā€™s an external link further down the page.
  • 2-hop link

    • Once you bracket the keywords in the page, it is virtually the same as having a page.
      • For example, if you click on it, the screen appears just like a normal page, not a 404 error.
      • Blue links are shown not only on the real page, but also when a connection is made to a virtual page.
      • Practically equivalent to ā€œsearch 2 hops ahead in the network described by the link, and if there is content, it is blue
      • Often presents unexpected connections because it explores one step beyond human associations
      • image
  • The Context of Increasing Individual Intellectual Productivity

    • I personally feel itā€™s of high value.
      • I didnā€™t include it because I didnā€™t understand its value at the time of planning and writing The Intellectual Production of Engineers, but I would definitely include it if I were planning it now.
    • The ā€œthree sacred treasures of intellectual productionā€ in my mind at the moment.
      • KJ method using 100 small sticky notes
      • Make it electronic and searchable
      • Scrapbox
  • It is difficult to perceive value unless a certain amount of bracketed text exists.

    • If you donā€™t feel itā€™s worth it, donā€™t spend time putting down sentences or writing and bracketing them.
    • Scrapbox is a notebook
    • Just as notebooks can be used in a variety of ways, Scrapbox can be used in other ways as well.
    • For example, taking advantage of the ability for collaborative editing, minutes of a meeting can be taken by multiple people in real time.
      • Discussion is more likely to be useful because the discussion becomes textual.
      • In the case of doing ā€œone person writes on a laptop and then transfers it to a monitor for everyone to read,ā€ the record is poor if the person taking those minutes participates in the discussion.
      • When multiple people are co-editing, what one person thinks ā€œshould be recordedā€ is recorded.
      • Low bullet cost (1 space) and unlimited hierarchy, so there is no constraint to ā€œone dimensionalizeā€ the discussion
    • For example, take your own study notes in Scrapbox. - Bracket Words you donā€™t understand and write what you researched about the word on the linked page.
      • If you write the definition of a normal distribution in a paper notebook, for example, on a certain day, if you want to refer to it a few days later, it is inconvenient because it is several pages away
      • If itā€™s digital, you can link to it.
      • The cost of that link is lowā€ (just change the string normal distribution to [normal distribution]).
      • As you take notes, you create a network of knowledge.
    • I think each is useful, but not quite what Iā€™m focusing on here, ā€œIncreased intellectual productivityā€.
  • Making flow into stock

    • How do we create structured knowledge from everyday interactions (flows)?
    • People who didnā€™t even keep the flows and disposed of them.
      • Verbal conversation
    • All emails are stored and searchable.
    • Cybozu bulletin boards, Slack, etc.
      • The ā€œletterā€ metaphor of e-mail has been stripped of its back-and-forth greetings.
      • Permalinks appear.
        • It will be possible to point to and share ā€œpast interactions.ā€
    • Togetter
      • Able to discard exchanges on Twitter, rather than simply sorting through them.
        • Slack permalinks are equivalent to ā€œlink to the public timeline at a point in timeā€
        • Unlike Slack, where you are supposed to create rooms (channels) in advance for each purpose, Twitter has no rooms.
          • So, after-the-fact, only pick up on specific topics.
    • Co-editing: a long tradition from Wiki
    • Modern tools are a combination of these elements
      • image
  • I guess I could export my project and create a new project for explanation.

  • An example of abstraction enhanced by the discovery of something unexpected by the linkā€™s ambiguous search suggestions. - A case study of abstraction in Scrapbox


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