Archive for January, 2010

WikIT, the mind mapping wiki in 3D

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

OK now we’re getting there. 

Here is the mind mapping wiki in 3D

Hover over a topic, and if it has a link, you’ll see an ‘open link’ button.  Click that to open the appropriate article in WikIT.

This is Topicscape WebView and it’s getting better all the time with user feedback, like the request to open web pages more easily.

You can fly, zoom, search and re-center the landscape on a different topic, just as with Topicscape itself.

There’s WebView Help here: http://www.topicscape.com/topicscape-wiki/index.php?title=WebView_Help but for an even shorter version try these:

  • To search: Just type.
  • To fly: Use keyboard cursor arrow keys (then add Shift, Alt or Ctrl).
  • Press the Home key to return to the starting position.
  • Slow zoom with + and - on the number pad.
  • Dramatic Quickzoom: Hold Shift, then click on topic cones.
  • Hover over topics to see …
    • details in the Details Panel,
    • an enter button, and
    • sometimes an “open link” button.
  • Click a topic cone to reorganize the landscape around it.

Don’t forget you need an up-to-date driver for your 3D graphics hardware for WebView to work (just like Topicscape).  Here’s reference for Troubleshooting.

Roy

University of Dundee medical mind map links

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

University of Dundee medical mind maps links in 3D information landscape on-line.  The first time you visit, please give the program time to download.

These Dundee Uni mind maps cannot be linked to directly, or downloaded, but a read-only viewer for the software needed can be accessed from a link at the same site and this allows the mind maps to be explored dynamically.  This Topicscape WebView shows what is available but you will have to go to the web site to view the maps themselves.  The structure in the 3D WebView reflects the way the maps are organized at that site.

Roy

AllergyCases.org in a 3D Topicscape

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

The medical mind maps source Allergy Cases has maps about allergies and immunology.  Links to all the allergycases.org mind maps can now be found organized in an on-line 3D Topicscape.

Roy

Back to Hodges’ Health Career Model – in 3D

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

I wrote about this a couple of weeks ago.  Now that I have permission from Peter Jones to use the lists on his pages of links organized according to Hodges’ Health Career Model, I can announce that it is on-line and live in the form of a read-only Topicscape.  You can search (just type) and visit the pages (links are in the details panel – just click).  Links to the four main pages of links in the Hodges’ Health Career Model site are in the four main topic cones: Intrapersonal, Political, Science, Sociology.

Give it time to load the Topicscape software first time.  Subsequent visits will be much quicker. 

For you to fly around and explore this you will need a PC with 3D graphics hardware with an up-to-date graphics driver (requirements here).

There’s a wiki page with some helpful pictures that explain the few things you need to know to get you flying and zooming with the best of them.

If you need any help, email me at r dot g at topicscape dot com.

Roy

The medical profession and mind maps – the quiet ones

Friday, January 15th, 2010

WikIT (the mind mapper’s wiki) has had an article on the use of mind maps by the medical profession for a while.  Recently I’ve been adding to this and it turns out that they are quiet giants in the use and publication of mind map collections.

If this most important discipline is making heavy use of mind maps, both in study and after graduation, perhaps there’s hope yet for those of us who believe that one day, mind mapping will go mainstream.

I expect to be expanding on this.  [UPDATED Jan 23 '10]

Roy

Hodges’ Health Career Model

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

I came across this site by Peter Jones long ago, and at the time spent several hours browsing its collection of well-organized and very interesting links on subjects organized under its main domains:

Recently Peter left a comment on a post at another of my blogs, and that reminded me of his interesting collection.  I started looking at how it might fit into a Topicscape.

Here are some screenshots showing the top level, a focus on one of the four domains (Sociology) and a deeper focus on one of the topics under that domain (Patients, Carers and Self-care):

      Larger image              Larger image              Larger image

Each topic cone has a link to the relevant page.  This renders four enormous pages of links as a 3D landscape organized under multiple topics and sub-topics.  You can zoom and fly around this, as well as center the landscape on different topics at will. 

I’m hoping to be able to publish this as an on-line Topicscape soon so that you can try for yourself, but I need to make sure that’s OK with Peter Jones first.

Watch this space!

Roy

Major update to Topicscape Student Edition (the free one)

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

At long last, Topicscape’s free Student Edition has been upgraded to version 2.0, with many ease-of-use enhancements, incorporating some of the elements first seen in Topicscape Pro 2.0 :- 

  • Halo menu and associated dynamic help
  • Innovative swinging panels
  • Topic footprints
  • More Association line choices
  • Hotkeys on menus
  • Neighborhood views
  • Customize the Home view position
  • ‘Meaning of structure’ button
  • New demo covering multi-parent topics
  • Verified on Windows 7 

Topicscape Student Edition version 2.0

Here are the What’s New page and the main page of Topicscape SE information where you can download it. 

Topicscape SE is aimed at students wanting an easy and attractive way to record their web research and revision notes, and prepare homework and term papers.  It can import from FreeMind and export back to FreeMind.

It may not have the 2D/3D, tagging, import/export juicyness of Topicscape Pro 2.5, but it’s a useful tool for study . . . and it’s fun.

Oh, and did I mention it’s free?  . . .  and always will be.

Roy