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WikiTok

(wikitok.vercel.app)
1459 points Group_B | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.216s | source
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duxup ◴[] No.42936755[source]
I like the idea, but one thing about Wikipedia is that with technical or granular topics it approaches things in a focused way. A specific molecular biology term's page isn't there to explain exactly how it fits into a larger biology topic. It makes random pages difficult to glean information from.

Even wikipedia articles I understand, more on computer topics, fall into the category of "the only people who understand this page are people who ... already understand it / don't need to read this".

Granted sometimes the social media context is kinda opaque, but usually "man fall down it funny" is pretty universal.

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myself248 ◴[] No.42936967[source]
Math articles are excruciatingly bad on this. I find myself setting the language to "simple english" and it helps.
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duxup ◴[] No.42937108[source]
Wikipedia math articles all remind me of what i learned in High School, that math is absolutely the worst to learn from someone who "just gets it" as often those folks have no concept how someone else might not "just get it". I suspect the wikipiedia articles are written by folks who "just get it".
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1. hnuser123456 ◴[] No.42938623[source]
I'm around calc 2 level, and spent some time learning ANN architectures, but it's taken a very long time to increase my ability to parse the more arcane topics since graduating.

For example, this[1] is something I'd like to be able to just glance over and know all the applications and appreciate the beauty... but it's very hard to prevent my eyes from glossing over. Maybe someone has a youtube video on the topic that makes it easier to catch up.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lp_space