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Progressive Reductivity

Could you sum it up in one word, please?
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Some ideas here in the halfbakery have been going for ages, and some ideas attract quite verbose quantities of annotations. For ideas that fall into both those sets, how about a form of gradual compression that assists the future reader also?

Basically, each annotation that is more than a simple one-liner is subjected to a gentle iterative and progressive re-wording. This might change the odd phrase here and there to make it slightly more succinct whilst still retaining exactly the same meaning - or close enough.

The next iteration, some time later, might further compress the expression, whilst still retaining some degree of fidelity to the original proposition.

After a while, and when viewed from a distance of some years, annotations that might once have been quite lengthy might now be represented by a single word that sums up that annotation. The ideal here is that you could sum up the entire annotation by the closest fit single word.

A further stage might see the idea itself collapse in a similar way, and an even further stage might see the sum of all annotations be given a single word summing up that represents the current state of play.

Makes life easier, doesn't it?

Ian Tindale, Aug 18 2006

Automatic Summarizer http://search.iiit....ummarizer/index.cgi
[hippo, Aug 18 2006]

AutoSummarizeReply AutoSummarizeReply
[theircompetitor, Aug 19 2006]

[link]






       Maybe.
zen_tom, Aug 18 2006
  

       Mu.
moomintroll, Aug 18 2006
  

       Meh.
st3f, Aug 18 2006
  

       my my
po, Aug 18 2006
  

      
hippo, Aug 18 2006
  

       [Damn this slow connection - hippo beat me to it.]
DrCurry, Aug 18 2006
  

       Baked
spidermother, Aug 18 2006
  

       RAA
Ling, Aug 18 2006
  

       nope
xandram, Aug 18 2006
  

       If you ask the Automatic Summarizer to compress the idea text into 1 sentence, you get:

"For ideas that fall into both those sets, how about a form of gradual compression that assists the future reader also?"

(I'm pretty sure there are better summarisers out there but they're all Java or ActiveX which I can't see at work...)
hippo, Aug 18 2006
  

       WTCTITJGS.   

       Why do we need this? Can't we just slap people around by extending the usual pedantism to cover anti-verbosity too?   

       By the way, has anyone asked [Vernon] what he thinks aboutt his idea?
Jinbish, Aug 19 2006
  

       Magic.
baconbrain, Aug 19 2006
  

       This is a fairly long body post for a simple idea, dontchathink?
shapu, Aug 19 2006
  

       Perhaps go even more abstract and replace or augment those annotations with a simple tally of positive and negative reactions. Or if that is too complicated, abstract the difference between those positive and negative reactions on a logrithmatic scale that can be represented graphically in say no more than five elements. And to make it even simpler, make the first four of those elements the left and right halfs of a common object.
Galbinus_Caeli, Aug 21 2006
  

       Would vote for a link to large annotations --- voting against this one...
madness, Aug 21 2006
  

       +
methinksnot, Aug 21 2006
  

       Que?
hidden truths, Aug 22 2006
  

       I practice reading long passages using these wads of flimsy stuff that have got lots of text printed all over them. It's quite a useful skill to have.
egbert, Aug 23 2006
  

       //annotations that might once have been quite lengthy might now be represented by a single word //

Or a single symbol like, say, a fishbone or croissant?
DrBob, Aug 23 2006
  

       /Perhaps go even more abstract and replace or augment those annotations with a simple tally of positive and negative reactions. Or if that is too complicated, abstract the difference between those positive and negative reactions on a logrithmatic scale that can be represented graphically in say no more than five elements. And to make it even simpler, make the first four of those elements the left and right halfs of a common object.//   

       =>   

       /Or a single symbol like, say, a fishbone or croissant?//   

       Thus, baked.
egbert, Aug 23 2006
  

       //a fishbone or croissant?// //Thus, baked.//   

       And in the case of fish, automated!
Jinbish, Aug 23 2006
  

       Ohh !!
reensure, Aug 23 2006
  
      
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