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Peter Merholz |
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Work: http://epinions.com |
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Play: http://peterme.com/ |
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http://peterme.com/ia2000/ |
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Increasingly, websites corral massive amounts of
information |
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In fact, a strength of the Web is access to
unlimited information |
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But how to present the information meaningfully? |
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Providing a singular, top-down editorial
structure isn’t feasible |
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But nor can you allow a morass like USENET or an
unstructured Web |
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Web sites don’t respond to use |
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They’re static, and assume all information is of
equal importance |
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Productopia, R.I.P. |
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Dozens or hundreds of employed people are costly |
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Adaptive information architectures |
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Bottom-up organization based on qualities of the
information and how the information is used |
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Information spaces that metamorphose based on
use |
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Rich information spaces are complex systems, the
study of which can inform our designs |
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Linguistic processing and categorization schemes
like Autonomy and Northern Light |
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Display systems like Self-Organizing Maps (http://websom.hut.fi/websom/),
Thinkmap (http://www.thinkmap.com/), Cartia (http://www.cartia.com/) |
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While the Thing qua Thing is important, |
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It’s more important how people relate to
and interact with that thing |
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Cognitive scientists have found that people
categorize the world not on the inherent qualities of things, but on how
they interact with those things. (Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things,
Lakoff) |
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What is an information space that adapts to use? |
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An obvious and popular example: The Bestseller
List |
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- People are interested in what’s popular |
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Self-policing |
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Word of mouth |
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Footpaths |
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The Agora |
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Nearly 700,000 opinions—no editing |
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Community can |
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- Rate content |
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- Trust each other |
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You tell people about a movie you saw, a book
you read, a car you drive |
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Known experts are sought out for their input |
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Epinions.com – Other products written about,
other opinions worth reading |
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Launch.com – Collaborative filtering |
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Napster – Hot lists |
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That HREF tag carries a lot of meaning |
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PageRank – measures importance through linking |
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How is the information traversed and used? |
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Take advantage of what people do |
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Designers begin with a form… |
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But people will make it their own… |
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http://swiki.sics.se/ |
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Footprints and
Dinosaurs |
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Explicates what’s there,
doesn’t make new
connections |
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People who bought X also bought… |
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Creates meaningful relationships that can break
typical taxonomic bounds |
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Purchase Circles |
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Localized Bestseller lists |
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The Page You Made |
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Personalized clickstream analysis |
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Track use passively—don’t expect people will do
the work for you |
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People in the same place at the same time likely
have something in common |
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Purple-moon.com |
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H2G2.com |
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A bottom-up network of thought connected by |
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Hard links – explicit |
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Soft links – implicit |
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Ranked by voting |
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Tiered community |
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‘Who’s online’ |
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Difficult to figure out |
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Community is double-edged |
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In an email from Will Sargent: |
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The downfall of Everything2 (the site, not the
architecture) is sadly linked into its quality control. Editors are picked
from users who have made significant contributions to the site and have
been there for a while. These
editors/gods have free license to downvote and nuke as they see fit. So far
so good. |
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The problem is that the editors are not
impartial observers. They have been known to downvote nodes which use
language which they don't like, political opinions they don't agree with,
and nuke any nodes critical of E2
editorial policy itself. In one case, they outright banned a user who had
extreme right wing opinions nobody liked very much. Of course, the guy who
writes thestileproject.com got banned in seconds flat. There is no appeal, and if a node gets
nuked there's no way for the writer to retrieve that content. |
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Obviously, there must be an initial organization |
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Create an organization that is flexible, not
rigid |
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But make sure what changes are the connections,
not the addresses |
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Data analysis – sooper-dooper important |
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Make sure your project has a real mission |
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Close watch—site structures based on use require
a community… And online communities require gardeners to nurture them |
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http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/INFOJB.html |
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Frequency—reinforce a link (AàB)
that a person traverses |
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Symmetry – reinforce reverse link (BßA),
a little less |
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Transivity – If a person goes AàB
and BàC, reinforce AàC |
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This is what leads to true restructuring |
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Think beyond music |
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Think of an ever-shifting stream of information |
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“Architect” that |
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If I’m involved in SO/HO, I’m not interested in
‘electronics’ or ‘computers,’ ’I’m interested in what can help me |
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Again and again it’s been shown that attempts at
God-like ‘organized’ top-down design typically fail |
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Too many contingencies, too chaotic |
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Bottom-up, rules-based structures adopt, adapt,
and improve |
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Organization without explicit design is very
powerful |
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“We believe the laws of evolution, in which
natural selection guarantees the survival of the fit and the extinction of
the unfit, apply in all cases whether living beings, dead matter or
knowledge is concerned. Ideas, chunks of knowledge, can be considered
specific entities that rely on human or other carriers to multiply, mutate,
adapt and survive. The human population and the technology devoted to
communication can likewise be regarded as a huge ecology populated by
ideas, theories or knowledge in general. The Internet has in the most
recent years been becoming an integral part of this so-called ecology of
knowledge…” |
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Evolution requires |
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An Environment |
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In which elements are |
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Selected |
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Based on their |
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Fitness |
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--Natural Selection |
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Structures require |
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Principles |
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In which |
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Meaningful organization |
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Arises from a |
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Significantly complex system |
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--Self organization |
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Astronomical phenomena, crystal structures |
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Principia Cybernetica Web - http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/SUPORGLI.html |
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Self-Organizing Systems FAQ - http://www.calresco.org/sos/sosfaq.htm |
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The Symbiotic Intelligence Project - http://ishi.lanl.gov/symintel.html |
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Cosma Shalizi’s Notebooks on Self-Organization -
http://www.santafe.edu/~shalizi/notebooks/self-organization.html |
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Social Computing Program - http://www.sics.se/humle/socialcomputing/ |
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ReferralWeb - http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/kautz/referralweb/index.html |
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The Origins of Order and At Home in the
Universe, Stuart Kauffman |
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Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things, George Lakoff |
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How Buildings Learn, Stewart Brand |
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