Personal, anticipated information need

“The role of personal information collections is a well known feature of personal information management. The World Wide Web has introduced to such collections ideas such as filing Web pages or noting their existence in ‘Bookmarks’ and ‘Favourites’. It is suggested that personal information collections are created in anticipation of some future need for that information-personal, anticipated information need, which also underlies the design of formal information systems.” (Harry Bruce – Information Research 10.3)

Context matters

“Context plays a more fundamental role for Asians than for westerners. Asians have a more difficult time thinking of an object as completely separate from its background. Americans, on the other hand, focus on objects… things and categories more than relationships. Asians think in verbs where we think in nouns. And these differences can have profound implications.” (Kathy Sierra – Creating Passionate Users)

Implementing a Pattern Library in the Real World: A Yahoo! Case Study

“The pattern library allowed our small, centralized group to tap into the broad expertise of the Yahoo! design staff. What would have been impossible to write (authoritatively) by a small team is now being contributed to and reviewed by an expert staff. We were able to achieve this by understanding and agreeing on the problem, building a workflow that fit with the existing design process, generating buy-in by creating incentives for contributors, and by carefully designing and building an application with attention to user feedback. We were then able to convert this library of patterns into a workable set of standards by agreeing on an appropriate rating scale and by assembling a representative group of reviewers who rate the content according to the same criteria.” (Erin Malone et al.Boxes and Arrows)

In Defense of PowerPoint

“I started this essay in January 2004 – over a year ago – but it lay hidden in my file of ‘in progress’ writings. I didn’t finish the essay because I gave an interview with Cliff Atkinson on the topic, but the paper goes into the issues in much more depth than the interview. So, here it is: it may be late, but the lessons are just as relevant as ever.” (Donald Norman)

<interactions>: Whose profession is it anyway?

“The May + June issue of <interactions> is a special issue on ‘Whose profession is it anyway?’ – in part a reaction to some of the collaboration and cooperation discussions UXnet has been encouraging. This issue should be arriving in your mailbox any day now – it is also available in the ACM digital library where subscribers can download articles and non-subscribers can purchase items.” (UXnet) – my first pub in print.

The Historical Development of Information Infrastructures and the Dissemination of Knowledge: A Personal Reflection

“With the advent of the Internet and the Web, it has become clear how pioneering and important historically the work of Paul Otlet and his colleagues was. It seems yet even more relevant today with the recently announced agreement between Google and a number of research libraries to digitize and make their collections available through the Web.” (W. Boyd RaywardASIS&T Bulletin April/May 2005)

Social Computing Symposium 2005

“The goal for this event is to foster an awareness of research and innovation in social technologies, and create new lines of communication between research and industry. We have over 80 people from industry labs, new technology companies, and academic research coming this year. The symposium agenda is comprised of a mix of invited speakers and panelists, research presentations, discussion sessions, and demos, to encourage ongoing conversations about new directions in social technologies.” (Microsoft Research) – courtesy of brightlycoloredfood

Visual Communication & Web Application Design

“Visual Communication is a key component of interface design and unfortunately often under-represented in interaction design methodologies. This talk introduces the core principles of Visual Communication (with an emphasis on Visual Organization) and through many practical examples details how they can be put to use during the Web application interface design process.” (Luke Wroblewski – Functioning Form)