public page reading guide - yasufumi-nakata/mind-upload GitHub Wiki
A map for deciding which page to enter from based on your goal
This learning page is generated for GitHub Wiki. The public portal is managed on mind-upload.com.
- Updated: 2026-03-14 / Role: Reading guide
This page is a companion guide that explains how Mind-Upload's public pages differ from one another. They are not all repeating the same explanation. Their roles are split across orientation, platform design, practical work, literature, and participation routes.
What we will be dealing with here is the use of pages. Please be sure to return to the main text of each page to check the individual theories and technical conditions.
- Wiki Home - Returns to the entrance to the entire learning wiki.
- Wiki: How to read the first block of a public page - We will organize how to read the information block that appears at the top of each public page.
- Wiki: How to read the literature and evidence page - The differences between the literature pages will be covered in detail on a separate page.
- Wiki: How to read suggestions and state labels - Issue and proposal integration section status labels will be organized on separate pages.
- The public page is divided into roles as an information portal that shows key points, known/unknown, and next directions.
- Verification, Roadmap, and Perspective may look similar, but their roles are quite different.
- WBE 101 and EEG 101 are effective reading as a stepping stone before entering the long text pages.
- Which public pages will be expanded independently in the future will change depending on the amount of information and reader demand.
- For some themes, there is room for further supplementary lectures to be added to the wiki in the future.
There are five main types of public pages: Entrance, Blueprint, Introduction, Practice, and Literature and Participation Guideline. Just by separating the pages according to their role first, the reading order becomes fairly stable.
When you want to narrow down your search to only theoretical or practical fields
Among the blueprints and introductions, Theoretical page reading guide explains the differences between WBE 101 / Perspective / Theoretical frame section / Roadmap, and Practical page reading guide covers the Verification / Datasets / L0 practice section / Casework section / Proposal integration section You can follow the differences in detail.
When you only want to decide how to go around the first 30 minutes
If you want to fix the first 3 to 4 pages depending on whether you want to start from the big picture, theory, practice, literature, or participation, please see First 30 minutes route by goal.
When you want to know how to read the "What we know/what we don't know" on each public page
If you would like to read the meanings of known/unknown, accuracy assumptions, and external dependencies at the top of the page, please see How to read ``What we know/don't know''.
When you are confused about the order of the guide blocks at the top of the public page
Public pages commonly include ``How to read this page,'' ``Who is it suitable for,'' ``Accuracy assumptions,'' ``What we currently know,'' and ``Check the basics on the wiki.'' If you want to organize what to look at and how to look before entering the main text, please see How to read the opening block of a public page.
If you're not sure where to go after reading Verification
If you understand the difference in the roles of the public pages as a whole, but want to see in one page where you go after Verification, including L0 practice in Datasets, L2 verification, L3 closed loop, and L4 authenticity, please see Four paths to follow after Verification.
| Type | Main page | What page to decide |
|---|---|---|
| Entrance | index | First decide where to start. |
| Blueprint | verification / tech_roadmap / perspective / idea | Decide what to call progress, what is unresolved, and how to connect theory and implementation. |
| Introduction | wbe_101 / eeg_101 / faq / glossary | Before entering a long page, align the strength of your words and argument. |
| Practical | datasets / hands_on | Decide what to try and which minimal loop to create. |
| Literature and participation guide | research_harvest_50 / mind_uploading_papers / proposals / issue / collaborations / content_hub | Decide the rationale, proposal, how to participate, and where to update. |
| What I want to know now | First page to open | Next page |
|---|---|---|
| What will this site create | Verification | Roadmap. |
| I want to understand the story of WBE briefly | WBE 101 | FAQ or Verification. |
| I want to know what EEG can tell me | EEG 101 | Go to Datasets or L0 practice section. |
| I want to follow the theory and limits in a long text | Perspective | Goes back and forth to Theoretical Frame Clause. |
| I want to work with public data | Datasets | L0 practice clause. |
| I want to decide on the first one only on the theory page | Reading guide for theory pages | WBE 101 / Perspective / Theoretical Frame Section. |
| I want to choose the first one only from the practical pages | Reading guide for practical pages | Verification / Datasets / L0 practice section. |
| I want to know how to read a mountain of literature | Research Harvest | Papers and Proposal integration section. |
| I want to decide what to update and where to write it. | Content Hub | Look at Issue and External Dependency/Collaboration Section. |
| Groups that look alike | The difference in one word |
|---|---|
| Verification / Roadmap | Verification is the victory condition and public goods, and Roadmap is the question dependency. |
| Perspective / Theoretical Frame Section | Perspective is a long note on theories and limitations, and the theory frame section is a page that focuses on design principles. |
| WBE 101 / FAQ | WBE 101 is a comprehensive introduction, and FAQ is a short answer to your questions. |
| Datasets / L0 Practice Section | Datasets is the input data selection, and the L0 practice clause is the actual minimum loop creation. |
| Research Harvest / Papers | Research Harvest is a map of each unsolved problem, and Papers is an archive of widely collected papers. |
| Issue / External dependence/cooperation clause | Issue is a task that can be completed at this moment, and External Dependency/Collaboration section is a list of candidates for external collaboration. |
- Starting from Perspective all of a sudden: It's easy to lose the big picture in the long text, so it's safe to take Verification or WBE 101 first.
- Finish by looking only at Datasets: You need to supplement what to leave as deliverables with L0 practice section and Verification.
- Judging from the FAQ alone: The FAQ is the entry point, so if you have a strong argument, always return to the main text.
- Read Content Hub as a body page: This is an operational hub for deciding where to update, not a theoretical body.
Use Start Page to return to the first entrance, Wiki Home to return to the entire learning wiki, and Content Hub to decide where to update.