cj.v ... I often think: "I'm not sure what his problem is, but I'm sure it 
is hard to spell."

Yeah!

Ted Nelson was/is very interesting. Why? Because he is passionate about the 
cognizance of how the human brain is not hard coded, it is organic 
flexibility.
The human knows more than the computer and  can immediately grasp and use 
newness. Computers are quite a blunt tool really.
It is an on-going saga how the internet, especially HTML, is driving in a 
direction that is not the wet-ware we are.

For a long time I was very interested in Nelson's Project Xanadu  
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Xanadu>but it didn't really fruit.
Nelson,  I think, points towards the importance of information design. And 
that representation of information matters a lot. 
HTML has limits that are actually quite restrictive. For instance, the 
"list" construct is very crude. Descendant hierarchies are fine, but it is 
all so binary if you can't go "wet" when you need to.

Rambling
TT
On Sunday, 6 June 2021 at 17:48:15 UTC+2 [email protected] wrote:

> Just in case this is of any interest for a coffee break:
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pX0UN-gXBZE
>
> I do find Ted Nelson eccentric.
>
> I often think: "I'm not sure what his problem is, but I'm sure it is hard 
> to spell."
>
> I always enjoy listening to him.  I always find what he has to say 
> fantastic.
>
> Whenever he says something, it gives me new insights into sometimes 
> unrelated things, but usually things that have me thinking about how I 
> organize stuff in TiddlyWiki, or how TiddlyWiki handles things so well
>

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