All posts from
October 2003

Information on the Assembly Line: A review of Information Design and Its Implications for Technical Communicators

“Technological advances have made endless amounts of information on nearly every subject easily accessible, while at the same time fostering an economic climate conducive to international trade and partnerships. The challenge for companies then becomes one of figuring out how best to manage and use this mass of information, a task complicated by the increasingly global nature of business that requires products to be tailored to more specialized user groups in a wider array of formats and in different languages. Hence the emergence of information design, a field that technical communicators would do well to associate themselves with. Information design is centered around solving many of today’s communication problems, and technical communicators are well suited to participate in those discussions. This thesis seeks to understand what information design is and the role that technical communicators can play in this important and emerging field. A comprehensive literature review, this thesis seeks to represent and summarize the overall body of work within the field of technical communication concerning information design and its related issues, as well as to suggest ways in which technical communicators can better participate in the design and implementation of information design systems.” (Jason Nichols – University of Central Florida) – courtesy of victor lombardi

Studying special collections and the Web: An analysis of practice

“Many digital library collections are the virtual analogs of special collections in libraries, museums, historical societies and archives today. A field study of people responsible for collection maintenance across a variety of institutions was carried out. It aimed at improving our understanding of issues involved in collection description and access. A second study examined the current state of Web access to materials from the previously studied special collections. Data concerning the availability of online finding aids, externally accessible databases for collection content, digitized images and Web exhibits are presented.” (Lorriane Normore – First Monday 8.10)

The Architecture of Unusual Things

“Strap on your mental protective gear and join IBM Fellow Grady Booch on a high-energy tour of things unusual, curious, and just plain weird. Of course there are lessons to be learned along the way, as we discover how common design principals inform even the most uncommon of entities. We’ll also explore the evolution of different genres of architecture, the forces that have shaped them, and their practical manifestation in today’s Web- and services-oriented architectures.” (IBM Rational Events)

Setting The Stage For Success: Information architecture earns performance kudos from customers

“Information architecture is the process of organizing and structuring information so that it is logical in design and presentation. It establishes categories and relationships among different pieces of information. It defines metadata schemes, navigation and search interfaces. Good architecture not only helps users find information, but also facilitates updating content by having clear rules for adding new information. And its effects show up on the bottom line with surprising speed when users can get what they need in just a few clicks.” (Judith LamontKMWorld) – courtesy of elegant hack

Compassion and The Crafting of User Experience

“In trying to teach my students and junior employees how to manifest this quality of compassion in their work, I haven’t had an authoritative reference to point them at. How to set up a usability lab, how to produce impressive deliverables, how to categorize and prioritize options: volumes have been written on each of these more concrete facets of the work. But historically I’ve found that the proper mindset is much harder to convey than the toolset, and regarding this question the gurus are largely mute.” (Adam Greenfieldv-2)

Making Rich Web Application Architecture Usable

“Learning requires a cognitive investment by the user. It doesnít make sense to learn new interactions if there’s no return on the investment we must make to learn them. Using standard elements in the interface, and keeping those elements visually consistent among interactions, enables the user to learn once and then apply that knowledge anywhere ” (Viswanath Gondi – SitePoint) – courtesy of lucdesk