Recently-ish popular term for a kind of public personal PKM / wiki. [[A Brief History & Ethos of the Digital Garden]] is a great read to learn more about digital gardens.
Also see [[the Garden]] metaphor for some history.
an online space at the intersection of a notebook and a blog, where digital gardeners share seeds of thoughts to be cultivated in public.
I think "wiki" is a term that focuses on a particular tool, whereas "digital garden" is a more user-intention high level phrase
β https://chat.indieweb.org/dev/2021-11-26#t1637964070215800
Sounds a bit like blogging, no?
I prefer to think of digital gardening as a new variation of blogging. Blogging that is:
- Constantly evolving
- Less performative
- Community-focused
Contrary to a blog, where articles and essays have a publication date and start decaying as soon as they are published, a digital garden is evergreen: digital gardeners keep on editing and refining their notes.
I tend to think of it more as that intersection of notebook/blog/wiki, but it is sometimes also framed as ‘old school [[personal website]]‘.
A growing movement of people are tooling with back-end code to create sites that are more collage-like and artsy, in the vein of Myspace and Tumblrβless predictable and formatted than Facebook and Twitter.
β Digital gardens let you cultivate your own little bit of the internet
Digital gardens explore a wide variety of topics and are frequently adjusted and changed to show growth and learning, particularly among people with niche interests. β Digital gardens let you cultivate your own little bit of the internet
βWith [[blogging]], youβre talking to a large audience,β he says. βWith digital gardening, youβre talking to yourself. You focus on what you want to cultivate over time.β
β Digital gardens let you cultivate your own little bit of the internet
Through them, people are creating an internet that is less about connections and feedback, and more about quiet spaces they can call their own.
β Digital gardens let you cultivate your own little bit of the internet
βGardens β¦ lie between farmland and wilderness,β he wrote. βThe garden is farmland that delights the senses, designed for delight rather than commodity.β
β Digital gardens let you cultivate your own little bit of the internet
Should you really publish your half-baked notes-to-self to the Internet?
To me that is unthinkable: my notes are an extension of my thinking and a personal tool. They are part of my inner space. Publishing is a very different thing, meant for a different audience (you, not me), more product than internal process. At most I can imagine having separate public versions of internal notes, but really anything I publish in a public digital garden is an output of my internal digital garden.
β 100 Days in Obsidian Pt 6: Final Observations β Interdependent Thoughts
To be honest, I donβt see much appeal in publishing your entire unfiltered notes to the web. Synthesize interesting portions of them occasionally into coherent blog posts that other people can consume without digging through a forest of links, backlinks, and footnotes.
β hpfr
Believe it or not, you’ve probably already started planting the seeds of your digital garden. You don’t necessarily need an organized wiki on your self-hosted personal site. Posting on social media is still the most common form of digital gardening.
Agree with that wholeheartedly. Although the [[indiewebber]] in me says that if you’re doing it on a big social media platform, it won’t work out in the long run.
Because a digital garden exposes my ideas to the world, it puts me in a vulnerable position. Therefore, I ask that you follow the Digital Garden Terms of Service, and I promise to do the same.
Rationality Stuff This is
Rendering context...
Digital garden is a metaphor and a practice for a digital resource such as a website, usually managed (βgrownβ) by one person. Its content is usually placed not chronologically, but in a different way. Incompleteness of content units such as articles is pretty common. An unfinished article is a sapling, and the webmaster is a gardener.
A digital garden is a sort of a personal website.
See [[ΡΠΈΡΡΠΎΠ²ΠΎΠΉ ΡΠ°Π΄]] for more information in Russian.
Some gardens and personal [[wiki]]s:
=> http://webseitz.fluxent.com => https://pbat.ch/wiki => https://gavart.ist => https://nchrs.xyz => http://anish.lakhwara.com => https://sona.kytta.dev => https://chotrin.org => https://www.paritybit.ca/garden => https://smallandnearlysilent.com => https://caffeine.wiki
See the rest of personal sites, some of them being digital gardens, at [[]].
[[Agora]] aggregates digital gardens.
= What to keep? [[2022-07-22]] Maybe I should delete everything related to things I dislike from my digital garden? Make it a bouncespace with smiles and joy
@neauoire@merveilles.town
I don’t think you should delete things that you once liked, and no longer do, I think you should just write that you’re ideas about this thing changed instead.
= Abyss J3s has an interesting take: => https://abyss.j3s.sh/hypha/digital_abyss
to me, it feels wrong. i don’t write for meticulous care & growth, i write because i’m desperate to (connect, understand, remember, leave something behind)
it reminds me that i’ll die someday & i want people to remember who i was, and how i thought. i leave tracings of myself in this abyss, hoping that it’ll help other people. it’s fragments of me.
that’s no garden. it’s a mortal abyss. and i find a lot of meaning staring into it.
= Links => https://doubleloop.net/2021/05/16/heh-nice-the-digital-garden-metaphor/
Heh nice the digital garden metaphor makes an appearance in Free, Fair and Alive
<= Flux Garden