I haven't yet used your thing. It strikes me as useful for many people but probably not for me. What I *would* use is that same interface, but publishing to a richly hyperlinked static site as notes (possibly visually navigable). Notes addressed by time-stamp URLs.
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Are.na is both too heavy duty/community oriented and owned by 3rd parties. I want a 1-person journal like space. Maybe closer to a cross between a personal wiki and a blog, or notion. Simple out of the box static page template that's just a near-linear DAG viz.
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Yes... I'm trying to drive my own blog towards this, which is part of the point of my blogchains format, but it's too heavy duty. Among other things, if I published high-frequency tweet-sized blog posts with numbers/dates instead of headlines, it would create very busy RSS
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If this became a way to do true microblogging (twitter isn't really microblogging), then RSS would output periodic "graph diff" updates showing new notes added in some sort of coherent order allowing for back/forward tracking.
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WordPress is dimly recognizing this and heading that way with the block-editor idea in Gutenberg, with support for reusable blocks etc. But the first class citizen is still the addressable blog post, not the block. So it cannot be disaggregated without changing the whole UX.
(I looked up both your sites, and know I'm risking irrelevance here... but just in case... you can make WP's (reusable) blocks closer to first-class citizens with wordpress.org/plugins/fabric and potentially see how often a fragment of thought applies to bigger ideas)
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