That is very interesting. An exception might be “Google search pages.” Not only is there no hierarchical structure, there is also no explicit tag structure and the main user engagement model is search-only. Internet Archive is similar but with their own stored content.
With respect to TV Tropes, I’d note that while it is nominally organized according to those indexes, the typical usage pattern is as a sort of pure garden path in my experience.
With respect to TV Tropes, I’d note that while it is nominally organized according to those indexes, the typical usage pattern is as a sort of pure garden path in my experience.
I have encountered a truly shocking degree of variation in how people use TVTropes, to the extent that I’ve witnessed several people talking to each other about this were each in utter disbelief (to the point of anger) that the other person’s usage pattern is a real thing.
Generalizations about TVTropes usage patterns are extremely fraught.
Since then I’ve thought of a couple more sites that are neither hierarchical nor tag-based. Facebook and eHow style sites.
There is another pattern that is neither hierarchical, tag-based nor search-based, which is the “invitation-only” pattern of a site like pastebin. You can only find content by referral.
That is very interesting. An exception might be “Google search pages.” Not only is there no hierarchical structure, there is also no explicit tag structure and the main user engagement model is search-only. Internet Archive is similar but with their own stored content.
With respect to TV Tropes, I’d note that while it is nominally organized according to those indexes, the typical usage pattern is as a sort of pure garden path in my experience.
I have encountered a truly shocking degree of variation in how people use TVTropes, to the extent that I’ve witnessed several people talking to each other about this were each in utter disbelief (to the point of anger) that the other person’s usage pattern is a real thing.
Generalizations about TVTropes usage patterns are extremely fraught.
Sure.
Since then I’ve thought of a couple more sites that are neither hierarchical nor tag-based. Facebook and eHow style sites.
There is another pattern that is neither hierarchical, tag-based nor search-based, which is the “invitation-only” pattern of a site like pastebin. You can only find content by referral.
It is therefore not a coincidence that Facebook is utterly terrible as a content repository. (I am unfamiliar with eHow.)