From
reviewing the inbound links to my blog, it is clear that my (woefully
in need of updating) Table of Contents is quite heavily used
by readers, especially the index of my business ('Working Smarter') and
technology articles. But it is both difficult
to maintain (it is kept in six HTML files which I update manually) and
awkward to use. I don't mind the maintenance, but I'd like to make it
more user-friendly.
At
present, the TOC is accessed through the right sidebar. The six major
categories and 21 subcategories are displayed, and when you click on
them the actual TOC pages you go to have a total of 53
sub-subcategories, with
about 1000 of my articles (the ones that I hope may be of some enduring
value) indexed and abstracted within those sub-subcategories. The
problem is that listing all 53 sub-subcategories in the right sidebar
would push my blogroll down another eight inches into virtual
obscurity. Besides, the sidebar is too narrow to contain the full names
of some of the sub-subcategories, and a simple list of all 53 would be
visually boring and tedious to navigate.
I can imagine two ways
of making the TOC easier and more intuitive to navigate, but I don't
have the HTML or CSS skills to do either:
I could move the
left sidebar over to the right side, which would double the width
available for the TOC and other sidebar content. Or just widen the
right sidebar to 300px. Then I could use
outlining, with the 6 main categories opening to show the
sub-subcategories either when you scroll over them or click on them.
If you 'opened' all 6 categories you'd see something like what is
displayed at right. Clicking on one of the 53 buttons would then take
you to the list of articles
for that sub-subcategory.
I could instead put a graphic of the
whole TOC, something like what is shown at right but with some better
design than I am capable of, at the bottom centre of
the Home Page (or even on a separate page),
with a link from the top of the page to it. Then when you click on any
of the 53 buttons it would take you to the list of articles for
that sub-subcategory.
In either case I'd like to start adding a
'Posted in Category:' link at the bottom of each article that would
likewise take you to the TOC where other articles in the same
sub-subcategory
are listed.
So what, oh HTML-and-CSS-savvy readers, is the simplest way to do this?
TABLE OF CONTENTS (MOCK-UP)
Technology
Weblogs
Social
Networks / Blogs in Business
Communications
& Presence
Technology
& Society
New
Technologies
Working
Smarter
Knowledge
Management
Personal
Knowledge Management
Personal
Productivity / Getting Things Done
Complexity
& Discovery
The
Innovation Process
Industry-Specific
Innovation
Collaboration
The
Wisdom of Crowds
Innovation
& Society
Advice
for Entrepreneurs
Natural
Enterprise
Saving
the World
Diagnosis
Prescription:
This Way Out
A Different Way of Thinking
Overpopulation
Activism:
What You Can Do
Community
/ ICs
Gift
& Other Alternate Economies
Animal
Rights
The
Educational System
Society
Writing
Fiction
Writing
Non-Fiction
Conversation
& Language
Narrative
& Story-Telling
The
Arts
Science
& Health
Culture
Being
Human (Psychology etc.)
Miscellany
Politics / Economics
War
& Peace
Global
Democracy
Canadian
Politics
US
Politics
Bush
vs Kerry 2004
Third
World Politics
MidEast
Politics
The
Political Process
The
Media
Frames,
Left & Right
Corporatism
'Free'
Trade
Consumer
Power
Economics
Creative
Works
Memoirs
& Dispatches
Short
Stories
Poetry
Satire
& Fables
Art
& Photography
After learning that Aleah is an INFJ, I was inspired again to try the Myers-Briggs test.
After schizophrenically jumping between eNTj (the General, in my
people-loving moments) and iNTp (the Architect, in my
contemplation-loving moments) for a decade before I took up blogging, I
was surprised last year to find I had moved over to eNfP (the
Champion), with the (P)erceptual second only to the i(N)tuitive in
dominance. Neither the (e)xtroversion energy focus nor the (f)eeling
decision-making style was beyond the 55% level, however, so I was still
not that far from iNtP, the Architect role that governed my personality
in my quieter moments in the previous decade. But after taking three
variants of the test today, I was consistently over the 60% mark in all
four dimensions that prevailed last year, so I'm now a full-fledged
ENFP (Champion).
But I've concluded that Sensing is a
misnomer: The answers that correspond to an S are all about a
preference for facts and rigorous analysis, and I would argue that a
better term would be Analytical. In fact, strong sensory awareness, as
opposed to intellectualization and abstraction, seems to me to be
reflected in the (P)erceiving score. With those clarifications I'm
content that the results of the test do reflect my personality today:
The
E reflects my preference for conversation over personal reflection, and
my decreasing need for privacy (though I still value time for
contemplation, I have learned to fit it in effectively in the spaces
between interactions with others, which I find more valuable and
productive)
The N reflects my right-brained, lateral-thinking,
instinct-trusting personality, and my impatience with excessive
analysis and abstraction
The F reflects my growing
emotionalism, and conviction that what we feel is more important than
what we think, though I suspect that this puts me offside the majority
of my fellow progressives
The P reflects my open-mindedness and
comfort with ambiguity, and my gradually improving ability to pay
attention to what is happening in the real world
It is
interesting to compare the profiles of bloggers with those of the
population at large. Averaging data from several sites I came up with
these numbers:
73% of bloggers are I rather than E, compared to 60% of the population as a whole
74% of bloggers are N rather than S, compared to 64% of the population as a whole
53% of bloggers are F rather than T, compared to only 38% of the population as a whole
67% of bloggers are P rather than J, compared to only 35% of the population as a whole (but 64% of Rhodes scholars!)
So
while bloggers are even more reflective, contemplative,
lateral-thinking and creative than the average citizen, they are
starkly different in their emotional and sensitive, rather than
analytical, approach to decision-making, and in their open-minded and
adaptable, rather than decisive and disciplined, approach to personal
life management. I differ from the prevailing personality of bloggers
only in the first dimension -- I am decidedly more outgoing and less
private than the majority of bloggers.
If blog readers are more
like the population in general, how should bloggers tailor their INFP
writing to a predominantly INTJ audience? According to this site,
they should lay out the objective of their writing up-front and make
their writing clear, concrete and action-oriented (T personalities
prefer this), and they should be brief, well-organized, useful and
unambiguous (J personalities prefer this). This also suggests that
online debates and blog posts that include two sides of an argument
without a clear resolution are more likely to appeal to other bloggers
than to their readers. This is a generalization, of course, but worth
thinking about.