Yes, this. Though Zero to Geo is one of the links at the bottom of the article.
It is really a shame that article does not clarify that, btw, what we've just derived is a re-derivation of a thing that has already been expressed and named, by Clifford, and well-characterized: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_algebra
Such a bummer to see very slick but very ahistorical articles.
Hi. I wrote whole section on the history of GA and what happened and why it isn't already the norm, but I chose to remove it because the article is already far too long, and I don't think that my intended audience (engineers, compsci people, university undergrads) would care about the history. Apologies that wasn't what you would have preferred.
I think the article is great, and I think the interactive illustrations are sweet. Thanks for the taking the time to write it.
As an educator, though, when I see presentations of existing ideas that present them as if they were new, I die a little. You're standing on the shoulders of giants whether or not you think so, and whether or not you say so. It's best to figure out who the giants are, and how you're standing on them. When you are up front about the connections to past scholars, you are giving the credit to those scholars that they deserve, and you are strengthening the storyline, and you are setting a good example for the people that look up to you.
You can add a few sentences at the bottom saying, if you've gotten this far, congrats, you understand some basics of GA, and then link to other resources about the history and current applications of it.
It is really a shame that article does not clarify that, btw, what we've just derived is a re-derivation of a thing that has already been expressed and named, by Clifford, and well-characterized: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_algebra
Such a bummer to see very slick but very ahistorical articles.