link_tag("FrontPage","",$this->icon[home],"")?> link_tag("UserPreferences","",$this->icon[login],"")?> link_tag("Members","",$this->icon[member],"")?> link_tag("Researches","",$this->icon[researches],"")?> link_tag("Alumni","",$this->icon[alumni],"")?> link_tag("Board","",$this->icon[board],"")?> link_tag("Links","",$this->icon[links],"")?> link_tag("TitleIndex","",$this->icon[titleindex],"")?> link_tag("RecentChanges","",$this->icon[recentchanges],"")?>
link_tag("","?action=edit",$this->icon[edit],"")?> link_tag("","?action=info",$this->icon[info],"")?> link_tag("","?action=deletepage",$this->icon[delbtn],"")?>

The WikiNature is typing in a bunch of book titles and coming back a day later and finding them turned into birds in the Amazon.
Writing on Wiki is like regular writing, except I get to write so much more than I write, and I get to think thoughts I never thought (like being on a really good Free Software project, where you wake up the next morning to find your bugs fixed and ideas improved).

It reminds us of minimalist Japanese brushstroke drawings; you provide the few, elegant slashes of ink, and other minds fill in the rest.

It befuddles and enlightens.

Really, it's not accurate to talk about a WikiNature, we would do better recognizing that Nature itself, is Wiki.

See http://www.c2.com/cgi/wiki?WikiNature for more.



Condensed Matter Theory Group in Seoul National University