Visual Thesaurus

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Years ago, I used SideKick as my PIM, then I ran into Tornado Notes for DOS, which became InfoSelect for DOS, which got ported to Windows 3.1, and which is, in it’s latest incarnation, still my PIM of choice.

But during my search, I kept coming back to a very interesting little app called TheBrain.

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A static picture doesn’t do it justice, you need to navigate around in it to get the full effect. It’s gaming meets info management if ever I’ve seen it.

I never could see the benefit of that kind of arrangement for managing your personal information because, for my personal info, I already know how things are connected, I just can’t remember the details.

But for navigating information that you don’t know much if anything about in the first place… Now that’s where this kind of thing can shine.

And back in the present, I just stumbled onto The Visual Thesaurus that does just that. It’s a pretty nifty way to explorer around seeing relationships to words visually. I could definitely see children learning lots of new words by navigating through similar words they already know. Plus, its got that “video game” flare that screams Play With Me!

Or how about a visual code navigator, for developers new to a large project. Browsing through a project using that metaphor could be very illuminating, very quickly.

I’m not sure that Visual Thesaurus will actually make it or not. I don’t see many people paying even their low $2.95 “subscription” for it. But the idea, and more importantly, where it’s been executed, seems like a good one to me.

Can I get that in an OCX?

2 Comments

  1. Ralf says:

    God, I love stuff like this. When you need it, you REALLY need a tool like this.

    I can visualize uses such as documenting new software libraries to avoid that glazed look developers get when they finish the install and open the docs for the first time. I evaluate a *lot* of software and that empty / lost is very familiar. It would be nice to have a standard kind of "visual readme" that everyone included in their distributions.

    As far as PIMs go, I kinda of gave up on formal software when Outlook tanked the last time. Now I keep everything in a (10MB and growing) Word document and just use Word’s [craptastic] search function. Keywords are your best friend…

    For dangerously complicated searches, I fire up X1 search engine and it finds all sorts of bizarre things I didn’t know I had.

    Tangental question: know of a Word add-in that improves the native search capability? I mean really, it’s been pretty much unchanged since Office95.

  2. Darin says:

    That reminds me of an app I used ages ago (back with using Novell Netware was actually a cool thing to do<g>).

    It was called Folio Views. It had a document metaphor, but was completely multi-user. Anybody on the net could open the doc, make edits and save while other people were working on it. And changes showed up on your screen when made by someone else.

    Plus the search was really good. Word’s definitely sucks. And, unfortunately, I can’t help on the utility front. I’ve never seen any addin for Word that improves on its search.

    Hey, a New Product Idea?

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