michael-dean-k/

On Monday 6/15, I'm hosting a workshop to kick off a reading group for classic essays: RSVP here.

Topic

writing-ui

3 pieces

3D essays

· 200 words

What would a 3D essay look or feel like? The "video essay" is a format, but that's really more like a performed/spoken essay with picture and video over it. I'm curious what it could be if we keep reading prose as the core mode.

Here's a prototype where scrolling brings you in instead of down. Instead of feeling like you're just reading a wall of text, it feels like you're moving forward into a series of spaces.

This breaks the essay into paragraph blocks, where you only see one at a time, which works something like focus mode (and I suppose there could be a way where you could preview the paragraphs behind and ahead). There's opportunity for each paragraph to have unique color, imagery, a distinct vibe to match the content. Additionally, each paragraph can have portals to jet out from this essay into different ones, making it something like a choose your own adventure.

Is anything gained from this? Or is it just a novelty? Best case, it's a new medium to bring prose into the short-form video era; it's much less intimidating to be presented with a single screen of text than a whole wall of it.

SNAKEPIT

· 137 words

You guys said you like snakes, so I built SNAKEPIT: Every dot is a log from last year (so 408 mini-essays), and when they collide, they combine into a new snake that is +1 in length (told Claude to “use traditional snake physics”). Next step is to have it generate new logs based on combos, making this like a petri dish for idea sex, where most mutations are slop, but some could be unexpected/interesting. Step 2 is to make it an experimental open blog, where anyone can upload ideas. Step 3 is to give the snake a sense of smell using vector embeddings, so it’s not just random, and they sniff towards related ideas. Step 4 is to build a Substack Notes integration, so instead of finding writing through an engagement-ranked feed, we find writing through snakepit.

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Theme Visualizer

· 140 words

Just prototyped an essay theme visualizer. This one is for braided essays, so you can see how the main focus shifts around, yet still references other threads to keep the whole thing cohesive. Then you can click into any paragraph and see how those themes weave in at the sentence/word level. I’ve done stuff like this with static images, but it’s a different thing to read an essay with animated overlays and full context. Now realizing that I could go through classic essays and make unique interfaces for each, to focus on different patterns. And then maybe, those same interfaces could help you see things in your own work? I have a lot of experimenting to do; feels like I need to enter a divergence phase, and then see what I can bring back into the Essay Architecture core app.

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