Most of this didn’t seem new to my thinking, but I appreciated this post as a comprehensive writeup of the various issues here.
(This post also motivates me to work on a Table Of Contents view that is more optimized as a primary reading experience. Because most of the points where things I’d heard before, I found myself preferring to skim the ToC and then click to zoom into particular arguments that seemed new or interesting)
I got the idea of Table of Content as primary reading experience form Drexler’s CAIS, where each subsection’s name is a short sentence with a statement, like “I.6 The R&D automation model distinguishes development from functionality.”
Most of this didn’t seem new to my thinking, but I appreciated this post as a comprehensive writeup of the various issues here.
(This post also motivates me to work on a Table Of Contents view that is more optimized as a primary reading experience. Because most of the points where things I’d heard before, I found myself preferring to skim the ToC and then click to zoom into particular arguments that seemed new or interesting)
I got the idea of Table of Content as primary reading experience form Drexler’s CAIS, where each subsection’s name is a short sentence with a statement, like “I.6 The R&D automation model distinguishes development from functionality.”