| 
  • If you are citizen of an European Union member nation, you may not use this service unless you are at least 16 years old.

  • You already know Dokkio is an AI-powered assistant to organize & manage your digital files & messages. Very soon, Dokkio will support Outlook as well as One Drive. Check it out today!

View
 

How To Contribute to LikeInMind

Page history last edited by Dmitry Sokolov 4 years, 3 months ago

Go:

 Visual Taxonomy Links   Hide/Show:

Taxonomy Path

To experiment, you can use the sandbox page.

 

Welcome to LikeInMind!

 

If you wish to contribute, please create an account by clicking here.

Here is the Patreon page for monthly or other donations.


 

Disclaimer

LikeInMind is a prototype of the P2P Collective Intelligence Platform realised in the PBWorks environment. PBWorks is criticised for a number of issues. Currently, it is suggested to have our Collective Intelligence activities realised with the help of a facilitator/curator capable of following the LikeInMind Best Practices, either invited or trained. Please contact Dmitry Sokolov for arrangement of either options.


LikeInMind provides a tools for co-working and project management in different fields of general knowledge, science and technology, and our daily life.
LikeInMind is structured as a wiki, a collection of on-line pages, editable by their readers. Every page is a topic on a specific subject, very much like in Encyclopedia but with almost no restrictions to content, ways of participation and communication platforms.
LikeInMind is being developed by a team of LikeInMind Participants, and we welcome contributors from around the world to join us. The process of creating LikeInMind itself is an example of collective intelligence, the purpose of LikeInMind.


Goals

LikeInMind is the reflection and blending of the associative networks (Conceptual Maps) formed in individual minds (Personal Virtual Associative Networks) within the Unified Conceptual Space (UCS). See IVAN for more on the methods of capturing, arrangement and delivery of knowledge used in LikeInMind.
Unlike Wikipedia, this handbook is structured as a combination of “vertical” taxonomy structure as well as a collection of "horizontally" interlinked short articles, Topics. Topics can form structured sub-networks. A number of Topics can belong and reused in a number of sub-networks by researchers in different fields of knowledge. A knowledge network formed in such a way can be used for building conceptual frameworks on related or independent subjects, as well as for the projects management purposes. A list of current projects run on LikeInMind can be found at the Top page. The Top page is the root of the Taxonomy of LikeInMind.
Topics on LikeInMind are thought to be written for very different auditorium with different sets of experience and skills so as to be understandable from a very broad general audience through to specialists in particular fields of knowledge. This idea is realised by division of Topic pages into zones for different kinds of readers.

Being a Knowledge Network, many if not all pages of LikeInMind have links to separate pages that elaborate on specific points or issues. Often, these separate pages will include specialized material and references for one or more of the many different related fields of knowledge. Even though some of this specialized material may be understandable only by specialists, every page should be "translated" so that other readers will be able to understand the issues involved and actively participate in the projects or pages of their interest. Ideally, LikeInMind will become a platform connecting people with different experiences and interest based on their knowledge and intents.

Using and contributing to this handbook

Participation in LikeInMind is completely voluntary and participation will be subject to terms and conditions that will be added at a later date.
Thank you for your participation in this very exciting and groundbreaking project.
Please bear in mind we keep inventing methods and protocols of Transmedia communication and experimenting with several different approaches to creating and management of the content of LikeInMind.
This work is licensed under a CC BY-NC-SA Creative Commons License.


Wikis use software that allow users to easily create and edit interlinked community Web pages. Please read the following instructions to find out how to contribute to this wiki.

Editing

Click on the EDIT button at the top of the page you want to edit. If you do not have an account the system will prompt you to create one for approval by the administrator. If you already have an account, you must log in before editing. If someone else is editing the same page the page will be locked. Please allow the other person to finish and try again later.

To view the web page without the sidebar at the right, click on the arrow at the top (in the EDIT line) for full page view.

Typing

Typing in a wiki is similar to working in a simple Word document, with the same formatting and font features. It is better to type in a wiki page and not copy and paste from another document because hidden codes may interfere with your posting and formatting. When you are working in a posted table please follow the existing format. You can create a new row by right clicking in the table, choosing "row" and selecting "insert row after" or "insert row before."

Saving

Be sure to save your work frequently. The SAVE button is at the bottom left corner of each page in the EDIT mode.

Save and Continue will keep you in the Edit mode while saving the changes to the page.


Links  

 

Subcategories

 

Pages

 

Pages in Other Languages

 

Categories

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.