About Laddice

  LaddiceLearnings
Monday, Aug. 22 2016, 08:25:52 PM
Edited: Friday, Aug. 21 2020, 01:03:52 PM
1. Laddice - About
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 llvickers - 8 years, 9 months ago Open

I like this because it is trying to implement something very natural, and basically what the brain already does, by making random connections. This should make it easier for people such as myself to gain better control of what they know.

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 bzichett - 8 years, 9 months ago Open

Hey llvickers,

I apologize if I read too much into the word random, but I thought this was worth clarifying.

The software we're developing can be much more particular than "random connections," as can our brain, if given a specific area to focus on.

I like to think of the system as a way to create a natural knowledge structures over time as you tag and create meaningful, directed connections. If performed intelligently, you'll be in a better place to make your digitally externalized information and thoughts (I&T) useful, gaining better control over what one knows, as you said.

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 azichettello - 8 years, 9 months ago Open

Exactly! Thanks, llvickers!

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 azichettello - 8 years, 6 months ago Open

Click here if you want to learn more about Project AMPLE.

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 ProjectAMPLE - 8 years, 11 months ago Open
Welcome to The Project AMPLE Thought Blog

The Project AMPLE team invites you to test out our custom blog site! This blog site was uniquely designed to enhance the usefulness to its participants by implementing a number of nifty features. We really wanted to encourage everyone to externalize as many of their thoughts as possible so we developed the blog platform with user interactivity in mind. It includes the following features:

Enhanced comment threading

Feel free to comment on any article or on any other comment. If you’d like to add to or modify one of your existing comments, you can do that too. If you’re a bit shy but have something to say, you can also comment anonymously and change the comments status if you’d like later. And, just in case you made a mistake, you can always delete your comment. Finally, if you’d like to add your thoughts privately, you can make comments that only appear to you for your own reference.

Pinning

You can also pin any number of articles and/or comments. Pinned content is organized neatly on your account Dashboard so you can easily refer to that content later. Also, all activity associated with the pinned content will be shared directly with you on your Dashboard.

Permalink

Just like each article, each comment has it’s own weblink and is treated like an article in itself. You can easily share this link with others or save it for your personal use.

Save Notes/Thoughts

We also allow users to make their own independent notes/thoughts that can be shared via others in the Laddice Stream, a place where all users see public activity of the Project AMPLE community. Eventually, we will even be posting your content (if you’d like) to the blog site itself.

Integration into Laddice

Best of all, all your blog activity and pinned content will be automatically saved to your Laddice account upon launch. In fact, all of it is already linked using the hierarchical relationships implied by the comment threading. You will be able to easily navigate and use content that you create and/or pin as well as any linked comments made by others.

For all these reasons and more, we feel the Project AMPLE blog redefines blog platforms as a whole. Needless to say, we’d like to hear about what you think. We’d also like to hear if you could use any additional features and if you have any trouble using the features we’ve already implemented. Share your thoughts below!

View in Tree (New!)

Now you can view and edit blog content in a more easy to use interface: the Tree View. This view generates a visual tree from blog articles and their comment threads so you can easily navigate the relationships between each entry. You can also view a users tree to see their public content in the tree. To make things even easier, you can respond to blogs or comments directly from the tree. Check it out now.

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 azichettello - 8 years, 6 months ago Open

The tree view is awesome...I've never seen comment threading like this before. So much easier to use and explore.

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 ProjectAMPLE - 8 years, 11 months ago Open
About Laddice

Laddice is best classified as a PKM (personal knowledge management) environment with emphasis on insight and creativity stimulation. Laddice achieves this by implementing two crucial features:

  1. Node relationships

  2. Node instantiation

Node Relationships

Laddice allows note entries to be connected to each other with various relationships. Rather than continue to call each entry a “note” we prefer to call them “nodes” since this term emphasizes that each entry is a potential piece of a network (modeled after the neuronal structure of the brain). Nodes can have several kinds of relationships to other nodes. Some relationships are created by the user while other relationships are implied indirectly by other user inputs or relationships. The relationships are as follows:

  • Parent: a parent node is one which is above its child node in a hierarchical sense

  • Child: a child node is one which is below its parent node in a hierarchical sense

  • Sibling: a sibling node is one which is related through common parent nodes

Laddice can easily display other implied relationships and we are open to discussing this aspect in particular with our early users. Being able to navigate nodes through relational connections is the core functionality of Laddice.

Window Manager

Laddice treats nodes as live links that can be visualized in multiple ways and in multiple locations, all of which are synchronized. Each view can be repositioned, hidden or shown as the user desires. In this way a user can set up their preferred work environment based on their particular purpose. Some of the views that Laddice implements are:

  • Detail: create new nodes or view/edit node details

  • List: a linear list of nodes and their corresponding various properties

  • Filter: provides a series of advanced options for filtering through your library of nodes

  • Tree: a mind map using the relationship hierarchies of the selected node

  • Connections: a list view showing children, parents and related connected nodes

  • Activity: a history of your actions

  • Notifications: social interactions with other laddice users, including shares, comments and pins

  • Coming Soon:

    • Shares

    • Groups

Each view has advantages and disadvantages depending on the users purpose. That’s why Laddice allows the user to see any combination of views. Laddice is the environment where you have the ultimate freedom as to how you choose to organize, browse and visualize your nodes. Perhaps most interestingly, each view is interactive with the others.

Detail View

The detail view is where you create new nodes and add/edit details to nodes including tags and relationships. A node can be just like any other note but tends to be a piece of information or thought that is brief and stands alone. Nodes can be formatted and include the ability to add hyperlinks. This is where selected nodes will also pop up when you want to see details or edit existing nodes. Perhaps most interesting about this view is that you can see and browse through related nodes simply by clicking them in the “Connection” area of the the detail view.

Detail View

As you can see above, the Node Detail view is a place where a nodes properties can be viewed, edited or created. We have put a great deal of thought into what type of properties are most useful. This is something we are constantly experimenting with internally but the current iterations of Laddice has the below options:

  • Custom tags: the user can create any tag and apply it to a node

  • Task: the user can mark that the node is an incomplete task and easily mark it as completed at any time

  • Time created: the date and time a node was created is automatically stored with each node

  • Time updated: the date and time a node was last edited is also automatically stored with each node

  • Connections: the various relationship types are treated as a property of that node in relation to the connected nodes

As discussed in the Node Relationships section, Laddice emphasizes the connection of one node to another node. For this reason, Laddice allows “embedded connections”. An embedded connection is a node that exists inside of another node. Allowing embedded nodes has very powerful and useful consequences.

List View

This is the primary place to view existing nodes and other entries in the Laddice environment. The List View is at the heart of Laddice because it allows the user to see the full picture of their existing nodes in a spreadsheet-like form, easy to navigate, with the ability to filter to specific types of nodes or to reorder by various attributes.

List View

Filter View

Laddice provides advanced filtering options for navigating through a potentially large library of nodes. The user can filter by tags or combinations of tags using boolean logic (AND/OR at this time). The user can also pin a particular node or multiple nodes and this pin attribute can be included in the filtering. Task nodes can also be treated in the same way for filtering.

It is also notable that Laddice allows for hierarchical tag relationships. That is, the user can group tags inside of other tags (nesting). Unlike other note taking software, Laddice nodes automatically inherit the tags which they are nested inside of. Example: If the user applies a tag called “consumer psychology” to a node and that tag exists nested inside of a tag called “psychology” then the node could be located by filtering either “psychology” or “consumer psychology”. Multiple levels of nesting is allowed in Laddice so the user can easily organize and navigate their library through hierarchical tags.

Filter View

Filter View

Map View

This is effectively an automatically generated mind map (or more precisely a tree map as it stands). Laddice uses the relationships that the user created between nodes to generate mind maps for any node you select. From this view, the user can explore their nodes and visually see the node relationships, both created and inferred.

Map View

Map View

The map view displays the content of the node, any applied tags and whether the node is a task (red box = incomplete task; green box = complete task). From this view the user can select any node and view its details in the detail view pane. Additionally, the map view allows for collapsing and expanding of node trees to provide a better user experience for navigating complex trees.

Concluding Thoughts

This overview has captured the essence of what Laddice does and the features it implements. However, as Laddice is still in development, all of the features above are subject to change based on what is most useful to you, the user. The founders of Project AMPLE strongly encourage you to subscribe for Laddice Beta to evaluate our product upon the beta release. Laddice Beta is currently free for all early subscribers so sign up now.

At this stage, we are eager to get direct feedback from you on what you find most useful as well as not so useful. This feedback will be fed directly back into our development. This is an amazing opportunity for you to influence the development of what can be the single best Personal Knowledge Environment in existence (we benchmarked many PKM and notetaking software before deciding to develop Laddice).

If you have questions, thoughts, suggestions or just want to chat about related topics, please feel free to contact Project AMPLE directly via my email:

Alex Zichettello

az@projectample.com

You can also make comments on our Laddice Forum.

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