Tumblers
Tumblers were proposed by Ted Nelson in "Literary Machines" as a means to address every bit ever written, or a particular span of bits in any text ever written. more...
Home
Bedding
Furniture
Home Decor
Miscellaneous
Bath
Bath Accessory Sets
Bath Mats, Rugs
Bath Pillows
Caddies, Cabinets
Children's Bath Items
Mirrors
Non-Slip Appliques, Mats
Other Bath Items
Plaques, Signs
Scales
Shelves
Shower Curtain Hooks
Shower Curtains
Fabric Shower Curtains
Other Shower Curtains
Vinyl Shower Curtains
Shower Heads
Shower Radios
Soap Dishes, Dispensers
Tissue Box Covers
Toilet Brushes & Holders
Toilet Seats
Toilet Tissue Holders
Toothbrush Holders
Towel Racks
Towels, Washcloths
Bath Towels
Beach Towels
Hand Towels
Other Towels
Towel Sets
Washcloths
Tumblers
Vanities
Wall Hooks, Hangers
Wastebaskets
Whirlpool, Spa
Lamps, Lighting, Ceiling...
Pools & Spas
Window Treatments
Patio & Grilling
A tumbler is a unique numerical address of an interesting artifact. The address resembles an IP address, but is much larger and has much more detailed structure. The structure looks like this.
1. < node >.0. < user >.0. < document >.0. < element >
The "1." is used in order to mark the start of a new address. The individual fields of the address are divided with ".0." so that they can be arbitratily long. Each < element > has the format "n. n. ... . n", a hierarchy of subaddresses.
The last element denotes the special kind of element, for example:
1. Text/Bytes 2. Links 3. Bitmaps 4. etc.
The 9287th byte of this version of the document would be 1.2368.792.6.0.6974.383.1988.352.0.75.2.0.1.9287 and the 356th link would be 0.2.356 on the end instead.
Tumblers are only issued once and never changed again. The structure can grow at will, the address space is practically infinite.
Nelson also introduces the concept of "spans", and the idea of direction. One can speak of "2 chapters back" or "300 bytes forward".
Read more at Wikipedia.org
|