Comment by bosswipe
5 years ago
Every blog? That's silly. People are allowed to have conversations about niche topics that you are not familiar with. You aren't the audience of every blog.
5 years ago
Every blog? That's silly. People are allowed to have conversations about niche topics that you are not familiar with. You aren't the audience of every blog.
People are allowed and encouraged to speak freely about anything on the internet, but people seem to forget that this is the world wide web, and writers can't control who in the world shows up to their blog or site. With a little help, someone who might not be in the core audience, might actually enjoy or learn something. If everything is written with jargon and abbreviations with no context, it's really just lazy inconsiderate writing.
It never ceases to amaze me how many websites for restaurants or whatever neglect to mention basic things like what state (and country) they're in. Even newspaper web sites assume that we know that the "Chronicle" or the "Ledger" or whatever generic name is the local paper for East Bumblefuck.
> With a little help, someone who might not be in the core audience [...]
Which they can easily provide themselves.
> If everything is written with jargon and abbreviations with no context [...]
It is not, for the intended audience.
That's true, but most people underestimate how opaque their writing can be even to other experts. It doesn't mean you have to explain every piece of jargon, but you can often greatly improve the clarity of your writing, including for expert readers, by targeting at least a few levels of expertise below where you think your audience is. We all have gaps in our knowledge that will seem basic or obvious to others, no matter how expert we are in a topic.
Yep. Its the paradox that the more you understand something, the harder it is to teach it because its more work to empathise with people who don't know the concept.
Anyway, blog author here - sorry I didn't explain CRDTs earlier in the piece. It didn't occur to me that people would be confused.
https://wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/Inferential_distance