Comparison of Scrapbox and Notion co-editing
I've been co-editing with Scrapbox for years, and recently experienced co-editing with Notion, so I'll note what I feel... I'm not familiar with Notion compared to Scrapbox, so "there is no equivalent feature to ~" means "I don't know, let me know if there is".
Notion is useful for collecting a large number of items with a fixed format.
- Social Hack Day #50

- Twitter and Github IDs are taken from personal records in lookups.

- The first field is the record of the profile, or in programmers' terms, the "type", so it can be used to provide input assistance
- They would use the information in this field to lookup Twitter and other information.

- What's on this page is being treated as a record.
- In addition, just by clicking on the link of the name, the linked page comes up from the right side without page transition.
- I would like to see this feature in Scrapbox!
Unlike Scrapbox, there are no telomeres, so you can't notice when others are editing off-screen.
Scrapbox has a prominent search bar, and there is a sense of focus on making it easier to search.
Scrapbox is bulleted, so you can insert a line anywhere and comment on it.

- Notion allows you to select a string and comment on it.
- It's a divide and con depending on the culture.
- The style of commenting on the side of the Notion separates the subject from the audience.
- Some people may feel safer that way (e.g., they can't bear to pollute the text).
- Scrapbox's "insert line anywhere style" can make the whole thing difficult to read due to sentences inserted by others in the middle of your chunks of text
- A "no monopoly on blocks of text" kind of culture.
- Culture that says if you think it's hard to read, then the person who thinks it's hard to read should write a clean copy, and it's not a good idea to restrict the freedom to write anywhere.
- I think the members of the community need to really believe that they are each other's equals.
- Otherwise...
- The "big guy" gets mad at the person who writes to him or her.
- People who "think they are new" are hesitant to write or
Each Scrapbox page is a separate page
- Notion's "what looks like a page" is sometimes a table record.

- Is there a page in here about individual events? I think so, but this is a table of events
- In fact, it's right here.
- The nested structure of the data structure does not match the structure of information as humans think of it.
Notion's editor's cursor comes out line by line.
- Scrapbox is character-based
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