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A Brief History & Ethos of the Digital Garden
Digital gardens have largely been understood as websites that allow users to explore and publish thoughts in more fluid and unpolished ways. The term âdigital gardenâ is not new. Itâs been shaped by almost two decades of pondering, from early tinkerings in Mark Bernsteinâs 1998 essay âHypertext Gardensâ to Mike Caulfieldâs 2015 talk âThe Garden and... See more
Annika Hansteen-Izora ⢠On Digital Gardens: Tending to Our Collective Multiplicity
What can go wrong when youâre building a digital garden for the internet? đ¸đˇđť
craftwithannainstagram.comA garden is usually a place where things grow.
Gardens can be very personal and full of whimsy or a garden can be a source of food and substance.
We gather and work together in community gardens to share the labor as well as the rewards of a collective effort.
It's a comparison that you can take very far. From "planting seeds" and "pulling weeds" to... See more
Gardens can be very personal and full of whimsy or a garden can be a source of food and substance.
We gather and work together in community gardens to share the labor as well as the rewards of a collective effort.
It's a comparison that you can take very far. From "planting seeds" and "pulling weeds" to... See more
joelhooks.com ⢠đą My Blog Is a Digital Garden, Not a Blog

The web needs more digital gardens đ
https://t.co/BsT2Gnx5Jp https://t.co/Qx0USH4k1U
A garden is made up of the following parts:
Seeds: the content contributed by gardeners,
such as text, photos, video, audio, or other digital media.
Gardeners: the users that invest in tending to and growing the garden.
Soil: the framework, meaning the design system and processes the garden is rooted in.
Elements for growth (such as water, sunlight, and
... See more