全世界に公開していいメモ帳
Andy Matuschak.icon One of my favorite ways that creative people communicate is by “working with their garage door up,” to riff on a passage from Robin Sloan (below). This is the opposite of the Twitter account which mostly posts announcements of finished work: it’s Screenshot Saturday; it’s giving a lecture about the problems you’re pondering in the shower; it’s thinking out loud about the ways in which your project doesn’t work at all. It’s so much of Twitch. I want to see the process. I want to see you trim the artichoke. I want to see you choose the color palette. Anti-marketing.About these notes | Work with the garage door up Andy Matuschak Andy Matuschak.icon My notes are publicly accessible, and I integrate them into public conversation. I don’t understand the impact of this practice yet, but it certainly changes my relationship to the notes in a significant way and creates valuable discussion. There are likely some interesting networked intelligence angles here. I know of no prominent “live” public Zettelkasten. Luhmann’s is archived, but that’s a different relationship—he’s not using it in conversation, then using that interaction to inform his writing.About these notes | Evergreen notes | Similarities and differences between evergreen note-writing and Zettelkasten 書いたものは「メモ」とはいえ、公共性を帯びる。
たとえば思考途中だろうが、差別や問題発言があれば糾弾される可能性がある
今後はブログ記事は読まれないかもしれない。長いから。
moriteppei.icon 今のSNSは、自分が「個」であると認めてもらうために「場」に「個」を一体化させるモーメントが非常に強い。本当は逆で、しっかり「個」でバラバラになって考えた上で、それを他の誰かの思考の材料としても使えるように、インターネットという「場」においておくイメージ。