• Accountants and Visionaries

    In David Stutz’s resignation letter to Microsoft, he despairs of the toll the downturn will take on management: ‘Being the lowest cost commodity producer during such a recovery will be arduous, and will have the side-effect of changing Microsoft into a place where creative managers and accountants, rather than visionaries, will call the shots.’

    I expect that’s the situation in many places, it’s an economic necessity. The question is: when the economy swings back up can the company re-institute the visionaries or is the culture irreparably altered?

    Link courtesy Mark.


  • The Killer, Open Search Engine

    What the independent publisher needs now is a killer, free, open-source search engine for our sites. The Movable Type of search engines, with a plug-in architecture allowing individuals to add features. None of the free search engines currently available achieve what MT has in terms of simplicity, usability, performance, and usefulness. Lazy Web, I invoke thee.



  • A Simplified Model for Facet Analysis

    We republished an article by Louise Spiteri which attempts to boil down all the complex – and often confusing – original thinking on faceted organization into something managable.



  • Newish Wine in Newish Bottles

    In the latest ASIST Bulletin (PDF) Andrew Dillon asks if, ‘research in information architecture is nothing more than old wine in new bottles.‘ Not unlike an < href="http://www.asis.org/Bulletin/Dec-01/dillon.html">older column in which he asked, ‘I need more convincing that any one person could be described accurately as an information architect.‘ In this new issue James Kalbach itemizes the ways IA work is different than traditional LIS work: digital media, project-based time spans, not in physical space, and distance from the user. He points out how IA and librarianship can benefit each other and calls for more connections between the communities.




  • Havel on Iraq

    The recent New Yorker interview with Václav Havel is interesting for many reasons. Of timely interest is his comment on the Czech support for aggression towards Iraq:

    “I think it’s not by chance that the idea of confronting evil may have found more support in [eastern European] countries that have had a recent experience with totalitarian systems compared with other European countries that haven’t had the same sort of recent experience,” he said. “The Czech experience with Munich, with appeasement, with yielding to evil, with demanding more and more evidence that Hitler was truly evil‹that may be one reason that we look at things differently than some others. But that doesn’t mean automatically that a green light is to be given to preventive strikes. I always believed that every case has to be judged individually. The Euro-American world cannot simply declare preëmptive war on all the regimes that it doesn’t like.”

    Havel coughed and took a sip of wine. I asked him why he thought a policy of containment could not work in Iraq more or less indefinitely.

    He put his glass down and said, “Civilization has changed. Today, any crazy, practically any crazy person can blow up half of New York. That was hardly possible fifteen or twenty years ago. That’s not the only reason. On the whole, the world has changed. There once was a bipolar world, a balance of two great powers, who made agreements on weapons reductions, so that they were capable of destroying the world seven times instead of ten. Now we live in a multi-polar world. . . . Of course, the question is: When is the best time for action? Should it have happened a long time ago? That is a political issue, a diplomatic issue, a sociological issue. But, generally, it’s a matter of the functioning of the world’s immune system, whether the world can deal with such a case of extreme evil before it is too late.”


  • Google Buys Pyra

    Holy Shit! Google is buying Pyra! (and therefore Blogger). As one of the earliest Blogger users and beta testers I’ve seen for a long time how that crew, particularly Evan, has worked hard to keep Blogger up and running. Although I’ve graduated to Tinderbox and Movable Type it’s still a thrill when I see a friend start his or her first blog on Blogger, just as when they create their first hyperlink, there is such power of expression there. Good luck to Evan and Co.


  • Metadirectories

    Fragmentation of the online movie ticket industry is frustrating customers who don’t know which service(s) to use to buy tickets at which theaters. Seems like it would be legal enough to build a metadirectory that handles the usual searches and then directs you to the right site. Hell, the ticket vendors might actually pay you to develop it as it’ll drive traffic to their site.



  • Why Corporations are Failing Individuals

    Peter Morville reviews (PDF) “The Support Economy” by Shoshanna Zuboff and James Maxmin: ‘While individuals search for psychological self-determination, organizations sap time and freedom from employees and withhold service and support from consumers, all in the merciless pursuit of cost-efficient (read value-starved) transactions…


  • AIfIA, Come talk to us

    Adam interviews some leaders from the Asilomar Institute: ‘… these are
    the right people, organized in the right way, and appearing at the right
    time, to proselytize on behalf of our young profession…If you’re
    interested in arguing the point…all of us will be at the IA Summit in
    Portland next month. We’ll all have those little nametags on. Come talk to us.


  • Building New Mental Modals

    The new B&A article What’s Your Idea of a Mental Model? reminds me of an idea that’s been circling my head lately. In some respects, many of our most nicely designed products address the physical shape and perhaps the hardware-software user interface, but not the way the technical architecture contributes to our mental model. Sometimes advancing technology demands we adopt mental models that reflect the underlying technology rather than allow us to design user interfaces that mirror the old models that reflect the old user interfaces.

    For example, we pick up a landline phone, hear a dial tone and dial. Now we look at our mobile phones to see that they are on and have a signal, then dial, then press send. It’s as if we combined the action of addressing a letter (punching in the number) with the act of opening a connection (pressing send/picking up the receiver).

    Perhaps this transition was made generally understandable by the in-between step of cordless phones which introduced the modal states of being on or off, but once on immediately present a dial tone. Once we adapted our mental model to handle that modality the idea of dialing first was only one more step.

    Of course, mobile phones bring a host of new issues such as audio quality, service coverage, and the ability to transmit data in addition to voice. These qualities may be understood by migrating our mental models of radio and computers. And because we’re basically using the electromagnetic waves of radio and the digital circuitry of computers, our mental models are following the actual underlying technology, not the grand vision a designer set down.

    [ Bill Gaver’s work suddenly appears as an anti-example ]

    This differs from the way I was taught mental models, which is that you first learn the models your users have, then reuse them in new ways. With our current pace of consumer technology we alter and combine more than we merely reuse.

    Basically, I’m saying people are perhaps better at developing new mental models to fit the situation than we designers sometimes give them credit for. Sure, it’s not easy, but consumers have gotten used a certain degree of satisficing and ambiguity. This adaptability will only increase as the world becomes more complicated and each field of technology spawns new and more specific fields that we will accept without understanding.

    A colleague recently tried video-on-demand (VOD) that is now offered on cable television in New York. For $4 you obtain the ability to play your choice of movie repeatedly for a span of 24 hours. The mental model was problematic, but it didn’t keep him from using it successfully. ‘Like Tivo,‘ he explained, ‘you can rewind and forward. But what are you rewinding and forwarding?