Conversation

Peripheral vision offers context. If I mark up a physical book then later flip through to see my margin notes, I’ll always see them in the context of the surrounding text. By contrast, digital annotation listings usually display only the text I highlighted, removed from context.
Image
2
11
133
The primary “unit” in such systems is a single highlight or note, but that’s not how I think. Marginalia have fuzzy boundaries, and I often think of a page’s markings as a single unit. LiquidText is a lovely counterexample: it works hard to display annotations in context.
Embedded video
GIF
5
21
312
In digital note systems, the UI centers on the experience of writing one note. The core operations and representations fixate on “the note you have open,” not on larger structures. I often can’t simultaneously see another note I’ve just finished writing—let alone the last four.
2
9
108
Most systems barely support multiple windows, but even if I can open multiple windows, it’s awkward to arrange them into the spatial relationships I might naturally use for physical index cards. Rather than peripheral vision, it’s like I’m wearing horse blinders and mittens.
Image
6
7
114
Backlinks are a weak peripheral vision, and they help, but they’re generally about switching the one note you have open, not an effective means of sense-making across many notes. Contextual backlinks help, but if you navigate, you lose object permanence.
3
7
100
If I read an old digital note, I get the unnerving sense that it’s part of some “whole” that I can’t see at all—no matter how much hypertext is involved. Working with physical notes, I’d shuffle notes around to make sense of the structure. There isn’t a digital equivalent.
7
16
157
When the environment is "zoomable" rather than "scrollable", we have more periphery. I like working in Miro or OneNote at many zoom levels at once. I'll annotate up close, and organize from far away.
Image
4
4
57
But these don't have the same quantified capture of my notes, especially handdrawn arrows or circles. I'm not providing material that could be backlinked easily (perhaps?) because I'm not talking specifics to Miro or OneNote -- I'm pointing/circling coordinates in a massive image
2
4
Perhaps my ideal way to digitally read a paper is laying all the pages out at once on the zoomable plane how might a system recognize my circles, highlights, stars, underlines, and arrows? Can this by organized, summarized or synthesized for me so that I have an additional lens?
Image
2
3