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The problem with books is that they are long (hundreds of pages each), sparse and have very important things interleaved with trivia.

Makes me prefer to read some fiction instead. Helps personal development also.

The tech book of future would probably look like a list of narrow theses each unwrapping into a list of smaller things and so on eventually to a long and exhaustive explanations. Same with science papers - findings first, explanations on demand.



I wrote a post-mortem for a research spike at $work yesterday with a tl;dr at the top, the president loved it. (it's a very small company)


Very nice! Though academic papers have had tl;drs for a long time now, they're called the abstract. (I wish technical blog posts would use them more.)


Abstracts have two problems:

They are very short and the only way of getting a bit more details is to read the whole article. It should zoom smoothly. For some reason authors tend to withhold something important from the abstract. If they write what they did, they don't tell what they got; if they tell the result, no clues on how they figured it out.


I don't know about other fields, but math papers have an abstract, then a section called "Introduction" which has some background and motivation and ends with an overview of the rest of the paper, and then the remainder has the details.


It believe that is -- or used to be -- the standard and is/was called the executive summary.


That is a brilliant idea, which is properly also the first radical invention of the book since scrolls were first cut into pages.


Wikified hypertext is not less radical and it already works and brings huge rewards.




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