Knowledge Space
Author lets you write notes on your Mac and transform them into spatial knowledge structures on Apple Vision Pro, turning linear documents into spatial thinking environments. Knowledge Space is the visionOS application optimized for integrating with that knowledge.
To understand is to stand among. The word itself has this within it. Old English understandan meant “to be in the midst of,"“ to be surrounded by.
To know something is not to possess it but to be in relationship. A flat document gives you knowledge as a list of propositions. A spatial map gives you knowledge as a landscape you inhabit. When you move through the Map in Author — reaching toward a node, drawing out its connections, repositioning yourself relative to what you find — you are not browsing information. You are understanding it. The interaction is not a feature, it is the epistemology. Interaction is not a convenience layer on top of understanding. At the cellular level, interaction is how understanding is physically made.
the research : Spatial Thinking
From Notes on Mac to Nodes in Vision Pro
In the bottom left toolbar, choose Ask AI, then Define Concepts
You will then be presented with the concepts the AI process discovered, in the Define Concepts dialog for you to choose to ‘Edit’, ‘Skip’ or ‘Save and Continue’, until you have gone through all the concepts found in your notes.
Put on Apple Vision Pro and open Author
Open the document, which will appear just like on your Mac, including the toolbar at the bottom. You can read and edit your text as you would on your Mac and when you pinch ‘Map’ you will see your Defined Concepts. In addition to moving your concepts right, left, up & down, as you can on your Mac, you can now also pull them towards you and push them away. Your notes have been turned into knowledge objects with which you can now build spatial knowledge structures.
Defined Concepts as Nodes in Space
Use the visionOS interactions you are used to, to move, select and open your Defined Concepts. You can also use the commands on the Toolbar and more Advanced Gestures, as described below, to get more out of the spatial experience.
Interactions
Core Gestures
To Select a node, look at it and pinch.
To Open a node to see more information, look at it and double pinch.
To Move a node, look at it, pinch-and hold and move, then let go. Note that this does not select or deselect.
To Edit a node, look at it and long-hold-pinch. Note that the dialog to edit it appears on the toolbar, not on the node.
To Focus by hiding all nodes not selected or connected to,select node(s) and pinch both hands close together and move them apart, while still pinching. To un-Focus repeat gesture.
To Snap nodes to the plane of origin (Zero Z) pinch-zoom in to center using both hands (the opposite of Focus).
To DeselectPinch and flick your wrist down.(experimental)
To Select all of Same CategoryPinch and flick your wrist up. (experimental)
Toolbar Options
Depending on whether you have selected one node, several nodes or no nodes, the options in the toolbar will be different.
Always Available:
Focus hides any node not selected or connected to. This is very powerful to reduce visual complexity.
Views where you can choose to save or load layouts.
[D] to ‘Deselect’ quickly.
Select allows you to select by category, such as ‘People’ or ‘Events’.
Show allows you to reduce what to see, to only include what you select, also by category.
[A] to show ‘All’ nodes.
+ to create a new node.
With One Node Selected you also get:
Snap moves any selected node back to their plane of origin. This gives you a useful plane to work with when you want to.
Hide allows you to hide selected nodes. You can choose to ‘Reveal’ them again later.
Like lets you ‘Like’ a node as a favorite, which you can use for selections later.
Edit to edit the contents of the node.
< to deselect the current node(s) and select any it links to instead of currently selected node
= to select all other nodes of the same category.
Select Several Nodes and you get:
Layout where you can choose to configure the selected nodes spatially alphabetically or by time.
If you have Hidden or Liked any nodes you will also have the following:
Hidden to un-Hide.
Liked to choose to see only Liked, only Not liked, select liked or only Not Liked nodes.
When you Like and Hide, these options are available to you in Author macOS.
Settings
You can specify themes, font size (for Write view), and more.
Notes on ‘Context’
Context is an aspect we are experimenting with, allowing you to define concepts as a Context to your current work. This aspect of interactions in XR is currently ongoing and experimental.
Notes on the ‘Toolbar’
The ‘Write’ view of your document does not disappear when you pinch ‘Map’.
A second Toolbar for the Map view appears on top of the standard Toolbar, giving you further controls.
If you want to concentrate on the Map, you need to reduce the size of the document, which you can do by looking at the bottom right of the document, pinching and re-sizing, as is visionOS standard interaction. Unfortunately this cannot currently be done automatically, at least yet. We are looking at ways to make this cleaner.
Further Notes
The audio for the video introductions was made using AI (using suno.com). This is part of experimenting with music as another medium to think about text, something we have been using for summaries of our Open Office Hours at the Future Text Lab, which you are very welcome to listen to and also, should you like, to join in, any given Monday: futuretextlab.info.
Author Features
Elegant Writing Environment with light and dark mode, focus mode & more.
Powerful Views for powerful insights through advanced folding, finding and focus.
Integrated Concept Map allows you to map and write in the same workflow.
Quick & Robust Citations from any book, academic paper or website.
Export Formatted PDF with automatic References & more.



