
Cosmik awarded $1M grant from Open Philanthropy and Astera Institute for new social knowledge networ…
The grants will support the development of Semble, a new knowledge sharing and discovery network for researchers

Overcoming information overload with circular attention economies
SenseNets alpha launch retrospective
Experiments at the bleeding edge scientific publishing

Subscribe to Cosmik: Collective Sensemaking Networks
Re-imagining how we make sense of science
Share Dialog

Hello everyone,
March was an action-packed month!
We just got back from AtmosphereConf and ATScience in Vancouver, which we sponsored and have been busy co-organizing for the last few months. ATScience was fantastic - registration was maxed out at 125% and the day was full of great presentations, discussions and new connections sparking every which way. More details to follow in a separate post!
AtmosphereConf in general was a delight - the ecosystem is fun, vibrant and diverse. We also really appreciated the opportunity to engage with Semble users and hackers in real life. So many interesting leads and ideas to follow up on!
Check out our 2 talks here:
Semble: Rediscovering the Magic of Trails (main conference)
Semble: A social knowledge network for research (ATScience)
Ronen and friend-of-Cosmik Francisco were accepted to the

Hello everyone,
March was an action-packed month!
We just got back from AtmosphereConf and ATScience in Vancouver, which we sponsored and have been busy co-organizing for the last few months. ATScience was fantastic - registration was maxed out at 125% and the day was full of great presentations, discussions and new connections sparking every which way. More details to follow in a separate post!
AtmosphereConf in general was a delight - the ecosystem is fun, vibrant and diverse. We also really appreciated the opportunity to engage with Semble users and hackers in real life. So many interesting leads and ideas to follow up on!
Check out our 2 talks here:
Semble: Rediscovering the Magic of Trails (main conference)
Semble: A social knowledge network for research (ATScience)
Ronen and friend-of-Cosmik Francisco were accepted to the

Cosmik awarded $1M grant from Open Philanthropy and Astera Institute for new social knowledge networ…
The grants will support the development of Semble, a new knowledge sharing and discovery network for researchers

Overcoming information overload with circular attention economies
SenseNets alpha launch retrospective
Experiments at the bleeding edge scientific publishing
Share Dialog
We’ve been hard at work on a new Connections feature we’re really excited about, inspired by our collaborations with the modular research and Discourse Graphs initiatives - more to follow soon!
Based on community feedback, we did some performance optimizations on card saving to make the core curation flow a lot snappier. Shout out to Roberto for his suggestion.
Following specific collections unlocks a new pattern we’re calling "faceted following" — instead of following someone wholesale, you can follow specific facets of their work. Faceted following also serves as a signal for curators: as a curator, you can see which facets people are gravitating toward. If a subtopic you've explored quietly keeps attracting followers, that's an interesting signal from your community to dig deeper into that subject.

We really appreciate the thoughtful feedback we're getting from community members — it's directly shaping our development priorities and helping us make Semble work better for you. Shout out to Chris and Tyler for especially valuable input!
“Living libraries” are an exciting pattern emerging from the community: personal links pages or research literature reviews powered on the backend by Semble collections. For example, Nick Vincent's Data Counterfactuals site pulls from his curated Semble collections at build time, creating a reference shelf with dozens of papers that stays current as he adds and reorganizes content on Semble. What makes this powerful is that the content now lives on Semble rather than in static HTML files. Contributors can add references to a shared collection without pull requests or HTML editing. And because it's on Semble, you get all the affordances that come with it: anyone can follow the collection, get notified when new papers are added (coming soon!), and discover the content through Semble's network alongside everything else being curated there. The website becomes just one view of a living, collaborative resource. We're excited to see more of these.
One more wonderful emergent pattern has been collectively curated Semble collections that feed into newsletters. Shout out to Chris (again) who started at://news which is powering a Leaflet publication called Atmospheric weather report, with contributions from several regular contributors.
Tim Disney added Semble and Margin integration to their SkyReader RSS reader app!
Chive shipped a Semble intergration so you will be able to curate publications on Chive and mirror the collection to Semble.
Communities coming together to curate content of interest is a simple but highly effective way to build shared knowledge, and we’re excited to be seeing early signs of this on Semble
That’s all for now, happy Spring, touch grass and may our community gardens (real and digital) bloom 🌻
We’ve been hard at work on a new Connections feature we’re really excited about, inspired by our collaborations with the modular research and Discourse Graphs initiatives - more to follow soon!
Based on community feedback, we did some performance optimizations on card saving to make the core curation flow a lot snappier. Shout out to Roberto for his suggestion.
Following specific collections unlocks a new pattern we’re calling "faceted following" — instead of following someone wholesale, you can follow specific facets of their work. Faceted following also serves as a signal for curators: as a curator, you can see which facets people are gravitating toward. If a subtopic you've explored quietly keeps attracting followers, that's an interesting signal from your community to dig deeper into that subject.

We really appreciate the thoughtful feedback we're getting from community members — it's directly shaping our development priorities and helping us make Semble work better for you. Shout out to Chris and Tyler for especially valuable input!
“Living libraries” are an exciting pattern emerging from the community: personal links pages or research literature reviews powered on the backend by Semble collections. For example, Nick Vincent's Data Counterfactuals site pulls from his curated Semble collections at build time, creating a reference shelf with dozens of papers that stays current as he adds and reorganizes content on Semble. What makes this powerful is that the content now lives on Semble rather than in static HTML files. Contributors can add references to a shared collection without pull requests or HTML editing. And because it's on Semble, you get all the affordances that come with it: anyone can follow the collection, get notified when new papers are added (coming soon!), and discover the content through Semble's network alongside everything else being curated there. The website becomes just one view of a living, collaborative resource. We're excited to see more of these.
One more wonderful emergent pattern has been collectively curated Semble collections that feed into newsletters. Shout out to Chris (again) who started at://news which is powering a Leaflet publication called Atmospheric weather report, with contributions from several regular contributors.
Tim Disney added Semble and Margin integration to their SkyReader RSS reader app!
Chive shipped a Semble intergration so you will be able to curate publications on Chive and mirror the collection to Semble.
Communities coming together to curate content of interest is a simple but highly effective way to build shared knowledge, and we’re excited to be seeing early signs of this on Semble
That’s all for now, happy Spring, touch grass and may our community gardens (real and digital) bloom 🌻
Ronen Tamari, Wesley Finck and Cosmik: Collective Sensemaking Networks
Ronen Tamari, Wesley Finck and Cosmik: Collective Sensemaking Networks
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