If you can program a machine why not yourself?
Publish human oriented algorithms. Each one should have a definite and measurable goal, clear steps, and produce the desired goal when followed. Only publish algorithms that qualify according to these rules. Each step can and should have a small explanation of why it’s included, and can also link to a more elaborate explanation.
Daily you can see the following kind of article: “7 simple ways to lose weight,” “10 things to make you happier,” etc. The problem is that, by the time you finish reading through the list you might remember a couple of the items from the ones listed in the article. Implementing them is even more unlikely because it’s hard to do so many.
A place where only “one” articles are published. Instead of “7 habits to …”, the article should be about “One simple habit to …”
Infographics are fun and exciting, but they can also be a valuable teaching tool.
A website dedicated solely to infographics that teach you something. Allow anyone to publish these, and readers to subscribe to a daily dose of new ones in one or more areas of interest.
Technology today makes it very easy to continue and expand a story online.
Publish daily, weekly or monthly new chapters in a never-ending story. It’s similar to long-running TV series. You star the story, gather momentum by creating fans, and continue the story rolling until it “viewership” starts going down over a longer period. The. You can end it.
So you can show others how you would have written it.
An online software/website where you give simple editing tools and a popular original article to anyone who would like to show their version of it – a version that can come to an entirely different conclusion, use a different train of thought, etc. The author of the new version can use any or all text from the original article, rearrange it, do whatever you like to it.