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- https://www.wired.com/1995/06/xanadu/
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- https://www.wired.com/1995/06/xanadu/
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> A core technical difference between a Nelsonian network and what we have become familiar with online is that \[Nelson's\] network links were two-way instead of one-way. In a network with two-way links, each node knows what other nodes are linked to it. ... Two-way linking would preserve context. It's a small simple change in how online information should be stored that couldn't have vaster implications for culture and the economy.[\[16\]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Nelson#cite_note-16)
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> - [Jaron Lanier](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaron_Lanier "Jaron Lanier") explains the difference between the World Wide Web and Nelson's vision, and the implications:
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> A document is not necessarily a simulation of paper. **In the most general sense, a document is a package of ideas created by human minds and addressed to human minds, intended for the furtherance of those ideas and those minds.** Human ideas manifest as text, connections, diagrams and more: thus how to store them and present them is a crucial issue for civilization.
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> A document is not necessarily a simulation of paper. **In the most general sense, a document is a package of ideas created by human minds and addressed to human minds, intended for the furtherance of those ideas and those minds.** Human ideas manifest as text, connections, diagrams and more: thus how to store them and present them is a crucial issue for civilization.
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> - Theodor H. Nelson in “[Transliterature: A Humanist Format for Re-Usable Documents and Media](http://transliterature.org)” \[site seems to be offline\]
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> - Theodor H. Nelson in “[Transliterature: A Humanist Format for Re-Usable Documents and Media](http://transliterature.org)” \[site seems to be offline\]
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