NeoBooks Introduction

Books are prized, recognizable cultural artifacts. Our libraries, personal and public, are our greatest monuments to the things we've learned. The smartest people put their knowledge inside books, right?

They do, but that's where the problems begin.

Alas, books are inert. They are snapshots, frozen in time, like Han Solo locked in Carbonite. Worse, they offer no means for authors to learn from their readers or to invite readers into conversations. Or for readers to meet one another and join (or form!) communities of interest. Or for readers to see and participate in the thinking behind the books. Or for readers to spin off "books" of their own, perhaps re-using parts of relevant works.

Even worse, the Digital Rights Management software that wraps most eBooks makes it hard for us to put their information to use effectively in the world. (To go deeper, see IP Overprotection.)

So a book is a familiar artifact, but the more interesting and useful artifact lives online, openly. It is alive, it is connected, and it is free. We call it a NeoBook.

The book aspect of a NeoBook, visible in your eBook reader or even as a physical book via print-on-demand, is just a starting point. Frankly, it's bait. From there, things get really interesting.

This NeoBook is an act of leveling up media, one of several we're experimenting with.

How do NeoBooks work?

We think of the ideas that compose this NeoBook as "Nuggets" that we string together in Playlists to create Narratives. Playlists organize Narratives, and can be abundant, making room for improving, alternative or even competing Narratives. On top of that, a collection of Narratives becomes a Point of View (see Nuggets, Narratives and Points of view).

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Nuggets Are Really Powerful

Back to Nuggets, which are really powerful:

  • Nuggets live in the open. They are open content.
  • These Nuggets live on Github (for now), which gives us several capabilities:
    • Every change is tracked and available through Github's version-control features.
    • We can improve each Nugget over time, as a social document, via Github's Fork and Pull method.
  • Because they are hypertexts, Nuggets can be woven into their context with links and more.
  • Those links can include:
    • Metadata!
    • Broader context
      • Further reading
      • Relevant Thoughts in Jerry's Brain
    • Parallel versions of the same Nugget
      • in different languages
      • in different levels of difficulty
      • with more (or less) explanation or examples
      • in different modes or media
        • as a slide in a presentation
        • as a segment of video
        • as a graphic novel or animation
      • published in mainstream media
      • mentions in other media
      • in other NeoBooks
    • Conversations
      • In-place chat or comments
      • Communities and conversations you can join now
    • Get more involved
      • Improve this Nugget: offer edits
      • Use this Nugget in your own NeoBook
      • Fork this Nugget and make it your own
      • Source data, with analytic tools
      • Resources to take action
    • Software that instantiates what the Nuggets say
      • (compare to how GPTs might do this; add page about GPTs; Emily Bender tweet)
    • Chatbots that let you talk to this and other Nuggets
    • Prompts for GPT
  • As social documents, nuggets contribute to Collective Intelligence.
  • Nuggets are composable They are reusable in other narratives or NeoBooks.
  • A wish: A memorable trope (like Cut, Copy Paste, Undo) that helps us orient ourselves to all these possibilities.

To create an eBook, we roll these Nuggets up in the order set by the NeoBook's Table of Contents, add front matter and back matter, then use software that exports documentation and books. (Lots more on creating your own NeoBook here.)

Metaphorically, NeoBooks are Mushrooms of The Big Fungus.

This post lives permanently here.