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hypotext's profile
Katherine Ye
Katherine Ye
Katherine Ye
@hypotext

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Katherine Ye

@hypotext

hand-eye conversation

Pittsburgh, PA
hypotext.co
Joined July 2012

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    1. Katherine Ye‏ @hypotext Jan 19

      Lately I've been struck by how the tools I use subtly shape the way I write, and so how I think. A few months ago, a friend and I wondered: what if we made our own interface for writing? how would it change us?

      4 replies 21 retweets 146 likes
      Show this thread
    2. Katherine Ye‏ @hypotext Jan 19

      What frictions do we feel in tools like pen & paper, mobile text editor, desktop text editor? My friend thought writing in conventional interfaces felt too final, so she became afraid to set down words. I realized that I think most clearly in conversation with another, not solo.

      1 reply 4 retweets 31 likes
      Show this thread
      Katherine Ye‏ @hypotext Jan 19

      So we designed an interface for conversational writing called "part of speech." You can write and edit as usual on the left, and talk with a partner on the right. Its responses are meant to evoke and suggest, not answer. Everything you say on the right will appear on the left.pic.twitter.com/0y0nYPxEVT

      3:17 PM - 19 Jan 2019
      • 28 Retweets
      • 119 Likes
      • Dan 태영 🌿/🌱 Yuki Arsenio Dev Rich Felker Tiver Foucault fmap Another user 🎹 Roelof Pieters
      4 replies 28 retweets 119 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Katherine Ye‏ @hypotext Jan 19

          “part of speech” is a simple, rough prototype that we banged out in a weekend. But it worked. With it I wrote things I couldn’t have written alone—articulated thoughts I couldn't have had alone. Here’s something we wrote: red like an ocean green like a tomato blue like a dollar

          1 reply 2 retweets 12 likes
          Show this thread
        3. Katherine Ye‏ @hypotext Jan 19

          I wanted to explore visual tension in language, so I started by saying: “Red like an ocean. Green like a tomato. Blue like a...” I struggled to complete the trio. Consulting "part of speech" yielded the phrase “income levels,” suggesting “blue like a dollar.” A stunning image!pic.twitter.com/fYOY5O59Qz

          1 reply 1 retweet 10 likes
          Show this thread
        4. Katherine Ye‏ @hypotext Jan 19

          When you make your own tools, you tend to mold them to fit your hands. So they may fit others' poorly. Other people who tried "part of speech" told me that the experience felt dehumanizing, that the conversation partner's responses felt irrelevant and jarring. I feel that too.

          2 replies 3 retweets 27 likes
          Show this thread
        5. Katherine Ye‏ @hypotext Jan 19

          I also don’t use “part of speech” for some forms of writing, for example if I'm coming with a clear outline in mind. I use it for exploratory writing—when I don’t know where I’m going and want to find myself in a place that resonates somehow. Just as in conversation.

          5 replies 2 retweets 10 likes
          Show this thread
        6. End of conversation
        1. New conversation
        2. Amjad Masad‏ @amasad Jan 20
          Replying to @hypotext @devonzuegel

          Amjad Masad Retweeted Fermat's Library

          How can I try it? I would imagine if it also asked you somewhat straightforward questions it might be really helpful. I think about the following a lot: like had someone asked him "what if the opposite was true?" He would've saved years:https://twitter.com/fermatslibrary/status/1046020525817057280?s=19 …

          Amjad Masad added,

          Fermat's Library @fermatslibrary
          Christopher Zeeman tried for 7 years to prove that one cannot untie a knot on a 4-sphere. Then one day he decided to try to prove the opposite, and he succeeded in a few hours. pic.twitter.com/noN0cIKbly
          2 replies 0 retweets 4 likes
        3. Katherine Ye‏ @hypotext Jan 20
          Replying to @amasad @devonzuegel

          here: https://part-of-speech.herokuapp.com/ 

          0 replies 0 retweets 3 likes
        4. End of conversation
        1. New conversation
        2. David Manheim‏ @davidmanheim Jan 20
          Replying to @hypotext

          David Manheim Retweeted Katherine Ye

          I very love the "chat" overlay that already does this for @overleaf! You can write an actual academic paper while chatting, since it's LaTeX document. (If Latex isn't your thing, use WSIWYG and it's very similar to this demo.) cc: @devonzeugelhttps://twitter.com/hypotext/status/1086764728502898690 …

          David Manheim added,

          Katherine Ye @hypotext
          So we designed an interface for conversational writing called "part of speech." You can write and edit as usual on the left, and talk with a partner on the right. Its responses are meant to evoke and suggest, not answer. Everything you say on the right will appear on the left. pic.twitter.com/0y0nYPxEVT
          Show this thread
          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        3. Katherine Ye‏ @hypotext Jan 20
          Replying to @davidmanheim @overleaf

          how can I use this in overleaf?

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        4. David Manheim‏ @davidmanheim Jan 20
          Replying to @hypotext @overleaf

          If you start a new project, there's a "chat" button on the top right. You can invite people to collaborate, and both of you will see the chat.

          0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
        5. End of conversation

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