With 825 books across dozens of shelves and seven library types, Quarex had a discovery problem. You could search. You could browse. But you couldn't see the whole thing at once.
Now you can.
The Library Navigator is an interactive map of the entire Quarex taxonomy—all seven library types, every library, and every shelf, displayed as a clickable visual hierarchy.
What you can do:
This solves a real problem. With hundreds of books organized into a deep hierarchy, it's easy to miss what's available. The Navigator shows you everything, organized visually. In one glance, you can see the entire knowledge structure.
The Ecosystem Navigator shows all the Quarex properties in one view—the central platform and all the satellite sites that connect to it.
Click any node to navigate there instantly. It answers the question "What is Quarex, exactly?" with a picture instead of a paragraph.
A platform with 825 books isn't useful if people can't find what they're looking for. These tools make discovery effortless:
Both load instantly and work on any device. Small files, fast performance. Built with D3.js for visualization—the same library used by the New York Times and Bloomberg for interactive graphics.
Also this week: a new 10-chapter book in the Security Infrastructure library covering America's 18-agency intelligence apparatus. Topics include the CIA, NSA, FBI, military intelligence agencies, congressional oversight, civil liberties tensions, cyber threats, and intelligence failures.