Wikipedia Envy Syndrome

Ars Technica has a new 12,000-word article “Open access: All human knowledge is there — so why can’t everybody access it?”. For those already versed in open access, it’s only really interesting for the final kicker idea…

“As the price of storage continues to fall, and capacities increase, in the not-too-distant future it will be possible for most people to have a local copy of every academic paper ever written if they wish to.”

Otherwise the article seems a prime example of ‘Wikipedia Envy Syndrome’, an unfortunate trend increasingly common among long-form journalists. In which the reader is forced to work through page after page of potted history on the topic, in the hope that a few interesting insights or connections may eventually be made. Which entails skim-reading that is fairly tedious on a Kindle ereader, and probably similarly annoying when slipping down the pages on a tablet.

To overcome this problem might we not re-invent the sidebar, which is where such background matter really belongs? For instance, one click on the button titled “I Know All This Already, Just Get To The Point” and the umpteen-page history-lesson-for-dummies would be snipped out and shunted to the foot of the article.

“It’s a date, Duck…”

The fine search-engine DuckDuckGo is getting sort-by-date filters and website sub-section links very shortly.

Also, Google is now back to honouring site: searches in full. Over the last month or so, a site: search (with no additional keyword or phrase) only ever returned one lone link. Now the full set of links is showing up again, as they used to.

And Yandex has started enforcing word substitutions, when it ‘thinks’ a word is spelled incorrectly. This change makes Yandex useless for academic search, because there’s no way around it. For instance…

yandex

Starlog archive

The monthly magazine Starlog is now available free on the Internet Archive, from 1977 through to about 2008. A famous pre-broadband monthly U.S. magazine of cult media, Starlog tried to survey or note just about everything released commercially in non-literary sci-fi. Alongside (what looks today like) large slabs of 1970s-90s cheese there were longish survey-articles written by devoted fans, plus in-depth interviews with industry creatives.

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