abrar?
so an active mazelike process
we want to live the knowledge too live the content
okay im going very rogue and very inarticulate
yeah
propensity within someone
lol
there is a distinction between western-modern pedagogical systems that's like text-based as in a legal method but there is an idea of "pathshala" or "guru shissho"/ "porompora" i mean how masters relayed knowledge to the student by (oral) transmission often by memorising books. so what was taught was always interactive. knowledge was interactive, you spoke with people rather than read texts.
you cannot feed someone truth
like first name
so i or you can author smaller fragments that get arranged
i want to do that too
i am quite confused, not quite getting the idea of it
in a post. I want to be remembered
i did until you asked which kind of gave it away
not their contents
Thu, 04 Dec 2025 11:31:03
like people can read 100 books and still not have the fire within them
i don't really want to be associated with that one for some reason
my watchlater reached its limit years ago and now i have to create a playlist for each new topic im interested in but it is incredibly hard to create the taxonomy of knowledge because everything seems to be everything else because at the end it is what you get from it that matters not what is given
a version of this existed for a few months last year but it was static. it was HTML with writing and pictures and videos and sounds. i had this feeling that the code should be as important as the content, that structurally each piece in relation to each other piece shouldn't change, that the mazelike quality should emerge from me intricately arranging paths through it. like classic hypertext
Sun, 23 Nov 2025 10:37:17
is this you as well
i struggle with building a personal technical architecture for storing media, both curation and creation. instead i bookmark everything
i love to walk around and see things and take photos and go online and look at websites and click on links and take screenshots i love to surf and i love to browse
we need to be deconstructing our identities
what do you think my name is