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  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2775.

If Veritula did implement articles, the first thing I’d want is the ability to criticize them; to submit deeply nested counter-criticisms; and to render a label showing how many pending criticisms an article has, calculated based on criticism chains.

I agree, and I think here you have inadvertently pointed at a key difference between discussions and articles. In terms of implementation, articles would be a near clone of discussions, except that the articles themselves can be criticised by users, including all the functionality that articles being criticisable may one day come with, like entire articles going dormant if they don’t answer criticisms within a certain period.

A couple of examples: If I wanted to keep and share information on Karl Popper, it would be a lot more intuitive to produce an article on him in encyclopedia style—where I can present information in a hierarchy, rather than creating a discussion and then making each detail about him a top-level idea, which is more chaotic. The same would be true if I wanted to make articles on CR terms—this doesn’t seem very natural to do in a Veritula discussion, but would be very natural in a series of Veritula articles, one for each term.

It also favours this articles idea that implementing it would be fairly straightforward, due to how much could be carried over from the discussions implementation. It makes it low cost to try.

#2775·Benjamin Davies, 1 day ago

If I wanted to keep and share information on Karl Popper, it would be a lot more intuitive to produce an article on him in encyclopedia style—where I can present information in a hierarchy, rather than creating a discussion and then making each detail about him a top-level idea, which is more chaotic.

You already don’t have to do divvy it up like that. Nothing is stopping you from creating a discussion called ‘Karl Popper’ and then posting a single, long-form, top-level idea where you present information in a hierarchy.

  Dennis Hackethal commented on idea #2753.

Idea: Veritula Articles

Currently, Veritula is a discussion website. I believe it could one day do what Wikipedia and Grokipedia do, but better.

A step towards that would be enabling users to produce ‘articles’ or something similar.

An ‘Articles’ tab would be distinct from the ‘Discussions’ tab, featuring explanatory documents similar to encyclopedia entries, and perhaps also blogpost-like content.

Articles focus on distilling the good ideas created/discovered in the discussions that occur on Veritula.

#2753·Benjamin Davies revised 3 days ago

Forget the term ‘article’ for a second. It sounds like you want the ability to post ideas without having to associate them with a discussion, is that right?

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2783.

These are not standalone pages in the sense that a Wikipedia page is a standalone page.

Articles would have the same ‘page’ status as the discussion pages that currently exist. (Forgive my lack of technical vocabulary.)

A possible counter-factual that may or may not be relevant to the goals of Veritula: An article with title metadata ‘Boron’ would presumably be much more search engine-friendly than a top-level ideas for Boron where the metadata title is ‘#[ID]’ and the actual desired title is merely included as the first line of the body text, while it is effectively a subpage of a discussion of another name.

#2783·Benjamin Davies revised 1 day ago

‘page’ status

What is a page status? How did you determine that an idea’s page status is not the same as a Wikipedia article’s?

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2783.

These are not standalone pages in the sense that a Wikipedia page is a standalone page.

Articles would have the same ‘page’ status as the discussion pages that currently exist. (Forgive my lack of technical vocabulary.)

A possible counter-factual that may or may not be relevant to the goals of Veritula: An article with title metadata ‘Boron’ would presumably be much more search engine-friendly than a top-level ideas for Boron where the metadata title is ‘#[ID]’ and the actual desired title is merely included as the first line of the body text, while it is effectively a subpage of a discussion of another name.

#2783·Benjamin Davies revised 1 day ago

As far as search engines are concerned, every idea page is already a standalone page. Not an SEO expert but I cannot imagine search engines penalize URLs containing an ID.

  Dennis Hackethal criticized idea #2747.

Idea: Discussion specific activity feeds

#2747·Benjamin Davies, 3 days ago

Done as of a12ffb3, see eg https://veritula.com/discussions/veritula-meta/activities and the new link to ‘Activity’ at the top of each discussion.

  Benjamin Davies started a discussion titled ‘CR terms’.

A discussion aiming to identify and develop Critical Rationalist terminology

The discussion starts with idea #2803.

Dennis suggested I create this discussion and tag @dirk-meulenbelt and @darren-wiebe.

Logan Chipkin has also suggested I get in contact with @darren-wiebe in regards to putting together a CR encyclopedia or something of the sort.

  Dennis Hackethal revised idea #2793.

I could simply give the footer the same background color as the rest of the page.

I could simply give the footer the same background color as the rest of the page. There’s a discrepancy between light and dark mode anyway. And on horizontal overscroll, the difference in background is painful.

  Dennis Hackethal revised criticism #2795.

In Brave for iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black gap underneath the gray footer. I cannot reproduce the issue in Safari. The cause is unclear.

This UI bug essentially exacerbates a wider issue: that the footer color does not match the background color of the html element, which becomes apparent with scroll inertia on the bottom of the page.

In Brave for iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black gap underneath the gray footer. I cannot reproduce the issue in Safari. The cause is unclear; seems to be a Brave quirk.

This UI bug essentially exacerbates a wider issue: that the footer color does not match the background color of the html element, which becomes apparent with scroll inertia on the bottom of the page.

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2797.

That wouldn’t remove the gap.

#2797·Dennis HackethalOP, about 22 hours ago

Correct, but the gap wouldn’t be noticeable anymore.

  Dennis Hackethal criticized idea #2794.

I could prevent vertical overscroll.

#2794·Dennis HackethalOP, about 22 hours ago

That wouldn’t remove the gap.

  Dennis Hackethal criticized idea #2793.

I could simply give the footer the same background color as the rest of the page.

#2793·Dennis HackethalOP, about 22 hours ago

That wouldn’t remove the gap.

  Dennis Hackethal revised criticism #2791.

In Brave for iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black bar underneath the gray footer. I cannot reproduce the issue in Safari. The cause is unclear.

This UI bug essentially exacerbates a wider issue: that the footer color does not match the background color of the html element, which becomes apparent with scroll inertia on the bottom of the page.

In Brave for iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black gap underneath the gray footer. I cannot reproduce the issue in Safari. The cause is unclear.

This UI bug essentially exacerbates a wider issue: that the footer color does not match the background color of the html element, which becomes apparent with scroll inertia on the bottom of the page.

  Dennis Hackethal commented on criticism #2791.

In Brave for iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black bar underneath the gray footer. I cannot reproduce the issue in Safari. The cause is unclear.

This UI bug essentially exacerbates a wider issue: that the footer color does not match the background color of the html element, which becomes apparent with scroll inertia on the bottom of the page.

#2791·Dennis HackethalOP revised about 22 hours ago

I could prevent vertical overscroll.

  Dennis Hackethal commented on criticism #2791.

In Brave for iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black bar underneath the gray footer. I cannot reproduce the issue in Safari. The cause is unclear.

This UI bug essentially exacerbates a wider issue: that the footer color does not match the background color of the html element, which becomes apparent with scroll inertia on the bottom of the page.

#2791·Dennis HackethalOP revised about 22 hours ago

I could simply give the footer the same background color as the rest of the page.

  Dennis Hackethal revised criticism #2789.

In Brave for iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black bar underneath the gray footer. I cannot reproduce the issue in Safari. The cause is unclear.

In Brave for iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black bar underneath the gray footer. I cannot reproduce the issue in Safari. The cause is unclear.

This UI bug essentially exacerbates a wider issue: that the footer color does not match the background color of the html element, which becomes apparent with scroll inertia on the bottom of the page.

  Dennis Hackethal revised criticism #2787.

On iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black bar underneath the gray footer.

In Brave for iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black bar underneath the gray footer. I cannot reproduce the issue in Safari. The cause is unclear.

  Dennis Hackethal revised criticism #2627.

On iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page.

On iPad, the footer doesn’t extend all the way to the bottom of the page. As a result, in dark mode, there’s a black bar underneath the gray footer.

  Dennis Hackethal archived idea #2572 along with any revisions.
  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2700.

I can still reproduce the issue by clicking on the button to collapse/expand an idea.

#2700·Dennis HackethalOP, 5 days ago

Fixed as of 0178828.

  Dennis Hackethal archived idea #2626 along with any revisions.
  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2626.

Changing the query on the search page moves the cursor to the start of the query input. It should move to the end or, ideally, keep its position.

#2626·Dennis HackethalOP, 10 days ago

Done as of 765ba05.

  Dennis Hackethal archived idea #451 along with any revisions.
  Dennis Hackethal restored idea #451 from the archive, along with any revisions.
  Dennis Hackethal archived idea #451 along with any revisions.
  Benjamin Davies revised criticism #2781.

typo


These are not standalone pages in the sense that a Wikipedia page is a standalone page.

Articles would have the same ‘page’ status as the discussion pages that currently exist. (Forgive my lack of technical vocabulary.)

A possible counter-factual that may or may not be relevant to the goals of Veritula: An article with title metadata ‘Boron’ would presumably be much more search engine-friendly than a top-level ideas for Boron where the metadata title is ‘#[ID]’ and the actual desired title is merely included as the fist line of the body text, while it is effectively a subpage of a discussion of another name.

These are not standalone pages in the sense that a Wikipedia page is a standalone page.

Articles would have the same ‘page’ status as the discussion pages that currently exist. (Forgive my lack of technical vocabulary.)

A possible counter-factual that may or may not be relevant to the goals of Veritula: An article with title metadata ‘Boron’ would presumably be much more search engine-friendly than a top-level ideas for Boron where the metadata title is ‘#[ID]’ and the actual desired title is merely included as the first line of the body text, while it is effectively a subpage of a discussion of another name.