quotes – Parerga und Paralipomena http://www.michelepasin.org/blog At the core of all well-founded belief lies belief that is unfounded - Wittgenstein Mon, 12 Jan 2015 16:02:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.11 13825966 Take control of your digital annotations with ResQuotes.com http://www.michelepasin.org/blog/2015/01/05/introducing-resquotes-com/ Mon, 05 Jan 2015 21:19:29 +0000 http://michelepasin.org/blog/?p=2580 Over the last weeks I had a chance to complete a personal project I’ve been working on for a while: www.resquotes.com. This is a personal information management site that allows one to collect and organise snippets of text (‘highlights’) made while reading digitally.

It’s an alpha release, still much untested and rough around the edges, so I’d encourage anyone interested in the topic to play with it and get in touch with questions or feedback or even proposals to collaborate so to make it better.

Screen Shot 2015 01 06 at 08 48 30

Why?

These days anyone who’s reading and studying as part of their daily routine is probably doing it via some digital device too. May that be an e-reader like the Kindle, or just the default pdf viewing software that comes with a mac or pc. Digital reading saves lots of time, in many cases, but also makes it very cumbersome to annotate texts and especially keep track of these annotations.

Resquotes.com comes out of this experience: I needed a way to save and organise the important snippets I read and wanted to be able to get back to, sometime in the future, even if I didn’t know when.

This is the same spirit (I assume!) that made Chomsky write these words in one of his latest works:

..reading a book doesn’t just mean turning the pages. It means thinking about it, identifying parts that you want to go back to, asking how to place it in a broader context, pursuing the ideas. There’s no point in reading a book if you let it pass before your eyes and then forget about it ten minutes later. Reading a book is an intellectual exercise, which stimulates thought, questions, imagination.
Noam Chomsky

Likewise, all the hours spent reading PDF files and Kindle books felt to me not as beneficial as they could have been – unless I had a way to collect and get back to the quotes that caught my attention in the first place.

How it works

In a nutshell, ResQuotes currently allows to import text snippets, either from the web or from your Kindle, and use them to create collections of related content via topics and folders.

Navigate2

A topic is like the main gist a quote is about. Topics can (and are supposed to) be reused and provide a basic organising mechanism for the quotes one saves. So, you can have many quotes on the topic of ‘science teaching in the 20th century’, or on ‘information architecture’.

So you can have a Topic page which collects together a bunch of quotes which focus on the same idea or concept.

Screen Shot 2015 01 07 at 5 37 31 PM

Quotes and topics can be added to the application in two main ways. Either by filling out a web form…

Screen Shot 2015 01 07 at 5 34 26 PM

…or by extracting it directly from your Kindle.

Screen Shot 2015 01 07 at 5 39 59 PM

Once you’ve imported a bunch to stuff into the system you will be able to search for it or organize it further using collections.

That allows also to automatically create ‘topic maps’ based on the relatedness and similarity between quotes and topics.

Navigate3

Screen Shot 2015 01 06 at 4 54 53 PM

What’s next

Difficult to say what is going to happen next. I’d like to add more import mechanisms, download options, improvements to the way collections are created. But really, I’d like to get more feedback from real users!

So please please please – send me comments if you have any (by the way, next week I’ll be in Oxford (UK) giving a demo of the app at the Force11 conference in Oxford).

Happy reading with resquotes.com!

 

]]>
2580
Quotation from Gregory Bateson http://www.michelepasin.org/blog/2008/07/10/quotation-from-gregory-bateson/ Thu, 10 Jul 2008 08:13:50 +0000 http://people.kmi.open.ac.uk/mikele/blog/?p=288 Gregory Bateson (9 May 1904 – 4 July 1980) was an English anthropologist, social scientist, linguist, visual anthropologist, semiotician and cyberneticist whose work intersected that of many other fields. In the 1940s he helped extend systems theory/cybernetics to the social/behavioral sciences, and spent the last decade of his life developing a “meta-science” of epistemology to bring together the various early forms of systems theory developing in various fields of science.

From: Bateson, G., 1978, ‘Afterword’, in J. Brockman (Ed.) About Bateson, London: Wildwood House pp. 244-245

Consider for a moment the phrase, the opposite of solipsism. In solipsism, you are ultimately isolated and alone, isolated by the premise “I make it all up.” But at the other extreme, the opposite of solipsism, you would cease to exist, becoming nothing but a metaphoric feather blown by the winds of external “reality”. (But in that region there are no metaphors!) Somewhere between these two is a region where you are partly blown by the winds of reality and partly an artist creating a composite out of the inner and outer events.

 

]]>
288