Poor Aristotle. He had only anaphora, paronomasia, syllepsis,
and so forth to work with.

But you, you my friend, you have Flash.


About This Site

This site explores some of the possibilities and techniques of electronic documents, rethinking the traditional, two-dimensional static versions that professional and technical writers must routinely produce. Throughout, the goal is responding more usefully to the shifting needs of readers.

Because those readers increasingly expect new media solutions to their documentation problems, professional writers must be able to provide them, especially those delivered via the Web.

These explorations, therefore, are all Web-based, using standard, free plug-ins (such as Flash and occasionally QuickTime). A discussion of the ideas and techniques accompanies each demonstration.

Click here for a note on books.

Click here to check to see that you have the necessary plug-ins.

What's Worth Clicking?

Given an electronic text, what should you annotate? What should your reader click?

Text is my shorthand for any primary document, whether it is in fact a literal text, an image, a video, a piece of music, an experiment in natural or social science, a mathematical theorem, a historical document, an artifact, or anything else.

The Explorations

Drag Things

Abstractions are difficult to grasp for many people. But make them not only concrete but manipulable, and the abstractions become real.

Business Charts

Common business and statistical charts go electric.

Exploding Diagrams

An exploded diagram is helpful—and exploding one, more so. (They also implode.)

Virtual Experiments in Psychology

Document: History

Timelines: The four flights of 911, in synch.

Document: Literature

One Gesture, Many Meanings: An example of an electronic variorum edition of a play. Video, text, and commentary, with the latter covering several topics.

Document: Theater

An Annotated Video Hamlet: Advice to the players, professional-writer style.

Document: Geography

The Re-Purposed Map: Readers not only vary in their interest in a particular map, but that interest varies over time. Only an electronic can accommodate that. Read more about the ideas behind making such maps.

Document: Sports

The Horse Race: The smart money is one the electronic version.

Document: Fine Arts

The Works of Pieter Bruegel

A proof of concept slide show in which when the user clicks an image, it scales up (with a zoom effect) so that it can be viewed with more detail. In addition, a scrolling window supplies a discussion of the image.

When the user clicks the scaled up image again, it zooms back to its original position and size, and the discussion is replaced with a reminder of how the page works.

If you wish, d rag the bottom-right corner of the window to scale the site to a size that works best for your monitor.

Document: Business

Break-Even Analysis: A rich-internet application that lets users visualize what it takes to make a profit.


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Questions and comments to Arnie Keller at akeller@uvic.ca
Enhancing reality since