3 comments

  • Papazsazsa2 hours ago
    &quot;In cultural practice this process of minimal change takes two primary forms. First, we create stories and metaphors that map strange new experiences back to something we already understand.&quot;<p>This is quite common in creative fields as quick shorthand for a new concept. For example, in filmmaking you might introduce a new crime thriller as script as &quot;It&#x27;s like Michael Mann&#x27;s <i>Heat</i> but set in the high finance world of *Wall Street.&quot;<p>Probably true for a lot of innovation programs. &quot;It&#x27;s like Reddit but for hackers&quot;
    • nvader1 hour ago
      Yeah, giving the article more charity, I see it as &quot;Reddit for hackers&quot; really adapting the aesthetics and norms of Reddit, so that hackers who are Redditors have a sense of comfort. Whereas if we&#x27;d designed from first priciples for hackers, we might arrive with something more irc-coded[0], perhaps.<p>[0] Or my personal favourite, a MUD-style environment!
  • et13372 hours ago
    Making normal things feel weird is basically the whole premise of the delightful webcomic Strange Planet: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.instagram.com&#x2F;nathanwpylestrangeplanet" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.instagram.com&#x2F;nathanwpylestrangeplanet</a>
    • nvader1 hour ago
      I&#x27;m a big fan of Strange Planet too!<p>I think one lesson I&#x27;m taking away from the article is that we&#x27;re not so much seeking &quot;weird for weird&#x27;s sake&quot;, but expanding that weirdness into direction that&#x27;s useful, to specifically highlight the novelty of something.
  • shermantanktop2 hours ago
    This is just the Overton Window applied laterally, no? In particular the intentional expansion or movement of the window by someone who seeks gain?
    • nvader38 minutes ago
      Overton E { Social, Political }<p>Normalcy Field E { Commercial, Experiential, Product }<p>I think that&#x27;s quite a significant difference, sufficient to change the tone of the discourse.