Digital garden
A digital garden is a personal site organized around ideas rather than chronology. Posts are not "published" once and then frozen — they grow, get rewritten, link to each other, and sometimes die.
What makes it different from a blog#
A blog is a stack of dated posts. A garden is a graph. The unit is the note, not the post; the connective tissue is backlinks and wikilinks.
| Blog | Garden | |
|---|---|---|
| Unit | Post | Note |
| Order | Chronological | Topical |
| State | Finished | Always growing |
| Discovery | Latest first | Follow links |
Why it works#
- Writing things down is the cheapest form of thinking.
- Connecting two notes is more valuable than writing a third.
- The pressure to "finish" kills more writing than it ever produces.
See also: Andy Matuschak's notes and Maggie Appleton on digital gardens.
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