from Scrapbox goodness (part 2)#5c46d82eaff09e0000668f90 2019-01-22 - 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 can't be clearly defined where it's located, it's out of order. - Information Organization 2.0: Don'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 "sorted by update time", etc. - Sorting by access order is a rule of thumb that "things that have been used recently are used more often again". - Information Organization 3.0 : - Networked organization, connected by links - Place it in a frequently used location" 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. - → Linkage by relevance of information to realize "place near". - Relevance" 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
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