User:Simon/Etherpad timed writing/editing experiment

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
< User:Simon
Revision as of 12:07, 5 June 2020 by Simon (talk | contribs)

Description of task

In November 2018, I experimented with a timed writing task using Etherpad, a collaborative realtime browser-based text editor. Etherpad automatically assigns authorship colours to users, and I wanted to explore how a text that I was writing, reading and editing over a specific time period could be visualised.

Method

The method was to begin writing a text about what I was doing (writing, reading and editing). I began by establishing writing periods of 3 minutes, and a rest period of 2 minutes. After 6 iterations, this shifted to 5 minutes for both respectively. I kept writing and opening up new private tabs in my browser to give each iteration new authorship colours. These are lost when exported, so I recreated the text and authorship colours to make visualisations.

The entire text, recreated with authorship colours

Isolated outcomes

Each iteration is isolated in the following visualisations:

18 11 21 Pad difs 910.jpg 18 11 21 Pad difs 915.jpg 18 11 21 Pad difs 920.jpg 18 11 21 Pad difs 925.jpg 18 11 21 Pad difs 930.jpg 18 11 21 Pad difs 940.jpg 18 11 21 Pad difs 950.jpg 18 11 21 Pad difs 1000.jpg 18 11 21 Pad difs colours.jpg

The authorship colours with text removed:

Authorship colours with text removed

The experiment showed me that editing is a way of writing, kind of like making growing a tree while making furniture from it. Whatever is written is there to be pruned and shaped into pieces that are joined together to form a supportive text structure. The software of Etherpad makes this visible with its authorship colours, all the more so when it is used as it has been designed; collaboratively.