Arkhive - About
Naming Scheme for Arkhiver 3.0:
1. Top-Level Items (Main Categories)
These are the broadest categories in the system, corresponding to the most general themes of knowledge. Each will have a clear name that reflects its scope.
Proposal:
Arkhive - Main (Core Arkhive)
Arkhive - Alt (Alternative structures not part of the main Arkhive)
For top-level categories, we can continue using intuitive categories like Who, What, Where, When, How, Why, as suggested in your initial note, which are already part of the current hierarchy:
Who: People
What: Things, Objects
Where: Locations, Places
When: Time, Events
How: Processes, Methods
Why: Reasons, Motivations
These can be referenced as Top-Level Categories.
2. Subcategories (1st Level Sub-Items)
These are more specific than the top-level categories and provide a deeper level of detail.
Proposal:
Who -> People Types (Individuals, Groups)
What -> Objects (Physical Items, Concepts)
Where -> Places (Countries, Cities, Locations)
When -> Historical Events (Dates, Periods)
How -> Methods (Techniques, Workflows)
Why -> Motivations (Philosophical, Practical)
These can be referred to as Subcategories or 1st Level Sub-Items (e.g., Who-People, Where-Places).
3. Sub-Subcategories (2nd Level Sub-Items)
Sub-subcategories dive even deeper into the specific details of a subcategory.
Proposal:
Who-People -> Famous Figures, Groups, Roles
What-Objects -> Tools, Technologies
Where-Places -> Cities, Regions
When-Historical Events -> World Wars, Technological Revolutions
How-Methods -> Scientific Procedures, Business Processes
These will be referenced as Sub-Subcategories or 2nd Level Sub-Items.
Hierarchy Example Using Numbers (1, 1a, 1a1)
To match your example:
Who (Top-Level Category)
1a. People (Subcategory)
1a1. Famous Figures (Sub-Subcategory)
1b. Groups (Subcategory)
What (Top-Level Category)
2a. Objects (Subcategory)
2a1. Tools (Sub-Subcategory)
2a2. Technologies (Sub-Subcategory)
Distinctions Between Arkhives:
Arkhive - Main: Refers to the core data structure.
Arkhive - Alt: Alternative structure for specialized cases or temporary categorizations that are outside the current structure.
Communication and Menu Design:
Dynamic Menus: Seamlessly update based on the category being worked on, using clear, contextual headings like "Who," "What," and others.
Sub-Menu Navigation: Dynamic sub-menus that follow the current view, helping users to drill down without getting lost.
This structure provides clarity on how each item is referred to and makes the hierarchy intuitive for both humans and AI interaction.