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Hypertext vs Cybertext - What's the difference?

hypertext | cybertext |

In uncountable terms the difference between hypertext and cybertext

is that hypertext is digital text in which the reader may navigate related information through embedded hyperlinks while cybertext is mutually interactive, technologically enhanced text as described by Aareth.

In countable terms the difference between hypertext and cybertext

is that hypertext is a hypertext document while cybertext is a specific example of cybertext.

hypertext

Noun

  • (uncountable) Digital text in which the reader may navigate related information through embedded hyperlinks.
  • * 2009 , Christian Vandendorpe, Phyllis Aronoff, and Howard Scott (Phyllis Aronoff, Howard Scott, transl.), From Papyrus to Hypertext: Toward the Universal Digital Library , University of Illinois Press, ISBN 0252076257, p 1:
  • We do not read hypertext the same way we read a novel, and browsing the Web is a different experience from reading a book or newspaper.
  • * 1999 , Ray McAleese, Hypertext: Theory into Practice , Intellect Books, ISBN 9781871516289, p 2:
  • Further, hypertext systems, because of their ease of construction, are very rich in text, graphics and visual illustrations.
  • * 1995 , Gary Wolf, "The Curse of Xanadu", WIRED
  • Did Nelson realize at the time that he had met Xanadu's second parent? Probably not. The inventor scattered his ideas as widely as possible, with little care about where they landed. But as the decades passed, it would be Gregory who oversaw the attempt to transform Xanadu into a real product. He never received much public notice, but through all the project's painful deaths and rebirths, Gregory's commitment to Nelson's dream of a universal hypertext library never waned. If Ted Nelson is Xanadu's profligate father, Roger Gregory is Xanadu's devoted mother, and in retrospect, his role appears to have been intertwined with a terrible element of sacrifice.
  • (countable) A hypertext document.
  • * 1969 , S. Carmody, W. Gross, T. Nelson, D. Rice, and A. van Dam, “A Hypertext Editing System for the /360”, in Michael Faiman and Jurg Nievergelt, Pertinent Concepts in Computer Graphics: Proceedings , University of Illinois Press, p 296:
  • A hypertext' system, then, is a memex-like device for creating and manipulating ' hypertexts , both for on-line browsing, and for reducing selected portions of such texts to . .

    Synonyms

    * non-linear text

    Derived terms

    * Hypertext Transfer Protocol, HTTP * Hypertext Markup Language, HTML

    cybertext

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (uncountable) text on a computer, particularly hypertext
  • * {{quote-book, 2002, title=Women's studies then and now, author=Cheryl J Fish, Yi-Chun Tricia Lin
  • , passage=Cybertext may promote such a strong feeling of distance between readers, writers, and texts that referentiality to material conditions is downplayed. The very physical act of holding a book and turning its pages-in a sense, much more interactive than clicking a mouse
  • (uncountable) mutually interactive, technologically enhanced text as described by Aareth.
  • * {{quote-book, 2005, title=Theory into poetry: new approaches to the lyric, author=Eva Müller-Zettelmann, Margarete Rubik
  • , passage=Procedural and generative cybertext work undermines the concept of authorship and encourages the discussion about 'cyborg authorship'}}
  • (countable) A specific example of cybertext.
  • * {{quote-book, 1999, title=Systems development methods for databases, enterprise modeling, and workflow management, author=Wita Wojtkowski
  • , passage=The sense of mystory[sic] opens up for academics the conceptual space of allowing students a singular journey through a cybertext.}}

    See also

    * hypertext * ("cybertext" on Wikipedia)