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Odds and ends
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 8:21 PM)
A couple of days ago, I mentioned Mozilla Firebird as a desirable browser and my liking for it grows. I found that it is delightfully easy in import one's bookmarks from other browsers - IE is very straightforward, but even for Opera, all you need is another very useful open source program, BookMark Bridge. This checks what bookmark files are one your system and then merges them under the desired system. There's some tidying up to do, but it works very effectively.
A list member, Carol Cahill, draws my attention to a couple of items worth looking at:
A good read from Peter Jasco of the University of Hawaii on the ups and downs of 2003.
...and some guesses from various persons about what 2004 might hold for us.
Finally, IST Results e-bulletin has the following item:
- Need help navigating the Internet? Maybe Mayva can help. Mayva, the first implementation of the AsAnAngel project, is a conversational and customisable virtual assistant for Internauts and cellular phone users.
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NewzCrawler
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 2:45 PM)
Having used the news aggregator, NewzCrawler, for some months now, I finally decided, when the evaluation period came to an end, that I can't live without it - and the $24.95 seems a modest price to pay. It isn't perfect, but then what software is?
The need for a news aggregator, assuming that you still haven't cottoned on to the need, is the increasing popularity of RSS feeds that provide the raw material for aggregators. A recent development at Yahoo! makes RSS feeds available for news searches. For example, if you want to pick up every mention of Tony Blair (heaven forfend) that occurs in the news sources covered by Yahoo!, use this URL in your aggregator. Read about this development at Jeremy Zawodny's Weblog
My aggregator now has links to fifty news and information sources - it's continually growing and continually being weeded as I find new things and get rid of dross - of which there is much!
Weblog as Intranet
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 10:43 AM)
From Column Two comes a link to a story about the use of a Weblog, using Movable Type, as a hospital Intranet. The story includes a paragraph that tells it all about systems design generally - great for those that grow up with it, hell for anyone else:
The old Intranet had been in place for many years and for the most part, probably because they had to and had grown accustomed to it, people were happy with it. To a new user coming in it was a nightmare, but to those who had learned the eight click path to get to Human Resources, it was fine.
Read the rest.
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Information pollution
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 5:47 PM)
Jakob Nielsen, the usability guru, has a nice piece on 'information pollution' as his first 'Alertbox' of 2004. Much of what he recommends was recommended by David Allen and myself following our project on 'information overload' - in fact, 'information pollution' is a significant element in overload, in our view. Worth reading, and noting!
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Some more old papers...
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 11:52 PM)
Three more of my old papers are now available, adding to the growing archive Ive no idea when Ill get everything converted, but Im getting there!
Information management. The Electronic Library, 3(1), 1985, 61-66
The relevance of theory and a new approach to library structure, by D.A. White & T.D. Wilson (1984) Libri, 34(3), 175-185
Environmental monitoring and information management in county planning authorities, by T.D. Wilson & I.M. Masser (1984) In: H.J. Dietschmann, ed. Representation and exchange of knowledge as a basis of information processes. (pp.271-284) Amsterdam: North Holland.
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Every seen a portal that was not a gateway?
(by Prof. Tom Wilson, posted at 4:44 PM)
Paul Miller attempts to disentangle portals, gateways, and other linguistic
confusions in the latest issue of Ariadne. However, doesn't the definition of
'Gateway' as:
"...collections of links and pointers to content of value, mostly elsewhere on
the Web, and generally within a single defined topic or small set of topics.
Their defining characteristics are that they are primarily a collection of
descriptions of resources, rather than the resources themselves, and that the
bulk of those resources tend to be held elsewhere and belong to others.
Typically, the resources being described tend to be Web sites."
sound like a 'directory', 'guide' or even a 'catalogue'? In analysing the hits
on Information Research, I've come to the conclusion that what I've previously
labelled as 'Directories', 'Guides to resources', and 'Library catalogues' are
all doing essentially the same thing - listing and providing links to
resources.
On this basis, what would the guide to research methods be?
I suspect that 'gateway' was invented by techies who had never seen a catalogue
:-) I'm not referring to Paul here, since he is obviously trying hard to
disentangle the semantic confusion, but to the originators of the term. Does
anyone have any recollection of its first mention?
I should add, that Paul's definition of 'portal' as involving customization, does strike me as a useful distinction to make.
Tom
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The Semantic Web... again
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 12:42 PM)
Readers of Information Research will recall Terry Brooks's special issue on the semantic web. Another contribution to this topic is found in Oryon Update - the newsletter of the consultancy group in the Netherlands "Oryon KMD".
The author of the piece appears to have a somewhat restricted definition of 'understanding' - apparently, he believes that 'understanding' is reached when the computer can be programmed to interpret the instructions on a Web page. Not my definition of 'understanding' :-)
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RE: Microsoft trying to be Archivist
(by Stephen Etheridge, posted at 12:00 AM)
Has anyone pointed out to Microslop that, if an email is a business record, it needs to be kept for 6 + 1 years, well it does anyway in the UK, and I think the US has the same legal period of liability.
Kind regards
Stephen Etheridge
Knowledge worker
(by Prof. Tom Wilson, posted at 10:30 AM)
This is actually from Wido Bosch:
The difference in a knowledge worker and a traditional worker is the main
resources he or she is using to perform his or her job. Toffler wrote in
1980 a book, called "the third wave", in which he argues that we moved from
the agricultural age in the industrial age and that we now are moving from
an industrial age into an information age. In the industrial age the main
source for a worker was his labour skills, phisical work. Of course he had
to use his knowledge to perform but the physical element of his work was
larger than the knowledge part, which made him easier to replace (see for
this the power industrial giants had in managing their human assets). In the
third wave, information age (or knowledge society as you wish), for a lot of
employees the main resources for their work is their knowledge, their
brains. These so called knowledge workers form the largest part of the value
of the organization nowadays. In defining the value of an organization we
used to sum up the assets (capital, machines, physical assets, and so on)
but nowadays the organizations value is much higher but with less physical
assets. Cap Gemini Ernst & Young for example is an organisation which has a
high value but they have no assets (they lease everything). When their
employees walk out the door at five and don't come back there is no
organization left. And unfortunately a traditional worker in the sence that
I mean it is easier to replace than a knowledge worker.
Last example, industrial companies are outsourcing the work which has low
knowledge intesivity to countries with lower costs on loans, but they leave
the knowledge intensive work in the western world. Philips is stating that
they trade knowledge and not goods. Knowledge intensivity is increasing
enormously. For more informatoin on knowledge workers and the shift in
thinking in this area I recommend the following books: "The knowledge
creating company" by Nonaka and Takeuchi, "weightless wealth" "Value based
knowledge management" and "Zero space" by Tissen and research performed by
Gartner, Xerox and McKinsey. The book "weightless wealth" might be a good
start since it is easy to read and provides a good profound insight in the
evoluating economy/society.
I agree with you that for all work, no matter how mundane, some knowledge is
required but I disagree with the statement that this obviates the term
knowledge worker.
I also do not think that knowledge optimalisation (or the use and sharing of
knowledge) should be narrowed down as a function for HR only. Since
knowledge management is about creating a culture in which people act and
behave based on the fact that they recognize that sharing knowledge implies
increased value adding, because sharing does not mean dividing but
multiplying. If I share 1 dollar with you, we both have 50 cents, if I share
my knowledge with you we both have this knowledge and I don't lose 50%. So
when we create and stimulate a culture in which knowledge sharing is common
and accepted, organizations can create a differential advantage. But to
achieve this, new ways of organizational structure is needed. To share
knowledge people need to have trust, a common goal or shared ambition, high
attraction to the company, and a fitting rewarding system (amongst
others..), but they way we organizate now we lack all of these aspects (due
to short sighted management, rewarding systems based on hours in the office,
lack of trust due to reorganizations and so on). It is in this context that
I mean that we don't structure our organizations well, or in other words, we
don't structure our organizations to achieve sustainable advantages.
Focussing on only staff knowledge is too narrow, since (as you state) for
all work knowledge is requires, so it would be a focus which is too limited.
Secondly, focussing on HR implies that they are responsible for knowledge
sharing, which will lead to institutionalisation (not invented here
syndrome).
When I posted this issue I was concerned on two things, the place (is IR the
right platform to talk about KM) and the form (these topics require face to
face conversations since there is yet no consensus on knowledge managemement
and the basic assumptions and paradigms). Seen the nature of the discussion
now, I assume face to face conversation would increase the benefit and seen
the number of reactions (1) I feel confirmed in the fact that this topic
does not fit the nature of this platform, which is IR.
In sincerely apologize for the inconvenience I caused.
Many Regards,
Wido Bosch
And was in reply to:
Hello Wido,
Firstly, I was wondering if you could clarify for me the difference
between a knowledge worker and a traditional worker? It seems to me that
most jobs, no matter how mundane, require some knowledge to perform
them, obviating the need for the term 'knowledge worker'.
I don't think there is a need to restructure organisations to make
knowledge management successful. Knowledge Management (or Knowledge
Optimisation as I would prefer to call it) should just happen in
organisations that that are committed to a particular governance model
that includes optimising the knowledge held by their staff. Ideally it
would happen through the HR area, just as training usually does,
Bob Jackman
'Content' vs information
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 10:27 AM)
It's interesting to see how, at the technology end of the 'km' spectrum, 'knowledge management' has seamlessly segued in 'content management' or, sometimes, 'enterprise content management'. What does this mean? Two things, probably - first, the tech boys have finally figured that, in their bailiwick, 'km' brings them more scorn than cash and, secondly, that it won't be too long before the money men are asking, 'What is 'content', other than data and information?' And, before you know where we are, the next big thing will be 'information retrieval' - what comes around, goes around :-)
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Just what you needed to know.
(by Prof. Tom Wilson, posted at 3:08 PM)
You've probably all read this one already, but it was new to me today.
The School of Information Management and Systems has had a project
runnning to calculate how much 'information' is produced and/or
distributed annually. Their current estimate is that:
Print, film, magnetic, and optical storage media produced
about 5 exabytes of new information in 2002. Ninety-two percent of the
new information was stored on magnetic media, mostly in hard
disks.
What's an exabyte? Here's a definition from SearchStorage.com:
An exabyte (EB) is a large unit of computer data storage,
two to the sixtieth power bytes. The prefix exa means one billion
billion, or one quintillion, which is a decimal term. Two to the
sixtieth power is actually 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes in decimal,
or somewhat over a quintillion (or ten to the eighteenth power) bytes.
It is common to say that an exabyte is approximately one quintillion
bytes. In decimal terms, an exabyte is a billion
gigabytes.
Or, as the authors of the SIMS report put it:
...five exabytes of information is equivalent in size to
the information contained in half a million new libraries the size of
the Library of Congress print collections.
I knew there was too much of the damned stuff!
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RE: Microsoft trying to be Archivist
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 12:00 AM)
Interesting item Graham. One suspects that this is another case of, "We've done it because it can be done." rather than something arrived at after discussions with e-mail users. Your points about needing to build RM processes into the use of these features is an important one, but one fears that, as with so much in organizations, it will be left to the individual users to do what they like with them. In all probability, most won't bother. The dreadful thought is what spammers might do with them! Think of a possible hack that prevented you from deleting!
Microsoft trying to be Archivist
(by Grahame Gould, posted at 2:44 AM)
Microsoft are making sender control over emails more easily available. Records Management (Archival) interests could be compromised.
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Back again
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 8:43 AM)
It's been a little while since the last posting here, because I've been in Lisbon for a week, with very little in the way of Internet contact - just a few minutes on the hotel connection.
However, here's an interesting site, brought to my attention by Current Cites - where you will always find something interesting.
The site is that of the 2003 Dublin Core conference It's interesting for two reasons - the content, of course, but also the mode of presentation, using Siderean's proprietary "Seamark" navigation system.
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Technorealism
(by Grahame Gould, posted at 8:15 AM)
This sounds very interesting. It certainly describes me.
I've mentioned Michael Quinion's site previously, World Wide Words. This is from a section of the site entitled Turns of Phrase and refers to recent terms, or at least they were recent when the article for the word was written. Some of the words are "ancient" (i.e. up to seven years old).
The one that caught my attention today was Technorealist, which our words guru describes as something along the lines of someone who doesn't believe in techno-utopianism (that technology is good and will solve all ills), nor are they a neo-luddite (one who sees all technology as retrograde and evil).
And there's a site for technorealism!
Moderates of the world rejoice (if you can be bothered). And that's one of the problems, isn't it? Being "balanced" is not exciting or sensational, and doesn't tend to attract those with an abundance of energy.
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RE: Some Definitions
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 12:00 AM)
I think the problem with this much repeated, so-called hierarchy, is that no one can actually find anything to do with it. It is quoted time after time, often in ways that lead one to think that the writer assumes s/he has invented it, but, in the end, the only parts of the hierarchy that have any practical significance are 'data' and 'information' - in fact, since information is so difficult to define, one could probably remove that and claim that virtually all so-called information systems are simply data processing systems. And no matter who the writer may be, once the hierarchy has been quoted, s/he gets down to the practicalities of data processing or information systems.
Bellinger, et al., who wrote this piece are a prime example of the problem - where does it lead? Nowhere as far as I can see. Or am I being too unkind?
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Some Definitions
(by Grahame Gould, posted at 4:33 AM)
I was forwarded the following link that deals with definitions for various KM concepts.
Data, Information, Knowledge, Understanding and Wisdom are defined separately according to Ackoff, however the author of the article below considers understanding to not be a level but the x-axis, a measuring tool that separates the other four. I didn't delve much deeper than that (and the article probably doesn't say much more than that). I didn't find anything to disagree with.
http://www.systems-thinking.org/dikw/dikw.htm
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Knowledge management - again.
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 10:45 AM)
Grahame Gould has drawn my attention to some discusson on a records management list RECORDS-MANAGEMENT-UK@JISCMAIL.AC.UK, relating to the proposed British Standard on 'knowledge management'. Evidence for how much confusion there is regarding the concept is found in a statement from one Ian Brewer, a marketing manager:
"KM is more about information as an asset whereas RM is about creating a process by which you can store and retrieve information. For example, RM is simply about saying "all of our records on a specific topic are here". He adds that "a records management policy can add to an overall KM strategy".
Note that km is about "information as an asset" - now where have we heard about information being an asset to be controlled and managed in the same way as other assets? From the early days of information management of course. Just as an example, here's a title from the Proceedings of the 1984 annual conference of the ACM on The fifth generation challenge: "Treating information as an asset". 1984 you note - almost 20 years ago, and the BSI imagines it is something new?! In fact, the idea goes back to the Commission on Federal Paperwork of 1977 (which included electronic documents).
It really is astonishing, or is it? We have what appears to be a whole group of people entirely disconnected from information management or records management, who see fit to pronounce on so-called 'knowledge management' without having the slightest idea of what they are talking about. Ignorance rules these days!
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The Visual Thesaurus
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 1:45 PM)
John Holgate has drawn the attention of IR-Discuss members to the:
Plumb Visual Thesaurus developed since 1996 in the Princeton University Concept Labs. IMO it's the biggest breakthrough in semantics since Carnap invented 'intension'.
It is interesting that the VT's 'view' of the concept information comes directly from
the Princetonian definition:
'a message sent and received that reduces the receiver's uncertainty' (ho hum)
but it also separates out facts/documents/data from 'selective information'
(a la Shannon communication theory) and the entropy/ectropy strand beloved
of the physicists.
The strange little entity labelled 'info', which is appearing more and more in
biology circles is, perhaps fittingly, without a definition.
I suggest you try playing with 'knowledge' and 'experience' for good measure
and see how meanings appear to have their own momentum and relationships -
like in the world beyond thesauri and dictionaries.
Thanks for that, John.
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Odds and ends
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 5:21 PM)
An interesting item on The Shifted Librarian caught my eye: "When does 'own' not mean 'own'?" It's a cautionary tale about the US library supplier Baker and Taylor who have plans for the electronic delivery of texts using the .pdf format. No problem you think? Well - read all about it for another example of the desire of business to sell you something and hold on to it at the same time.
The same source has a defense of news aggregators. I never realised that a defense was needed: I can't think how I'd scan as much material as I do without NewzCrawler. However, The Shifted Librarian points to an article by one Steve Bell (presumably not the Guardian satirical cartoonist) on a e-zine called Ex Libris in which, among other things, he notes:
RSS and news aggregator enthusiasts will emphasize that these technologies will save you time as they improve your access to news and information. But does the time required to obtain the necessary skills to use them payoff in the long run? I'm suspicious of anyone who claims something is easy and fast to learn and implement, but tells me I need to first read a four-page article that explains how it works.
Read a four-page article? I've installed Newz Crawler and used it for months now without reading anything at all about how to use it. I also used Amphetadesk for a while and that, too, required no reading - you just get on with using it!
Talking of aggregators, I came across an interesting one - SNARF - which lives on your Internet Explorer 'links' bar and which you can pop up at any time - worth a look.
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A many faceted thing...
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 8:20 PM)
There seems to be a buzz going these days on the applications of faceted classification - it's a little curious that in the days of search engines and the wide belief that they can solve all retrieval problems (even if the IR researchers do not claim this) the 'information architecture' and 'knowledge management' fraternity should be turning to a method I first learnt about almost fifty years ago. I even sat at the feet of Shiyali Ramarita Ranganathan when he made his farewell tour of library schools in the UK. We had spent two days talking with him (conversation was his teaching method - he let you learn things, rather than trying to teach you) and by the time came for him to give a public address, he had lost his voice. It was a little curious to hear the whispered words of Ranganathan repeated in a strong Scottish accent by the then Head of Department! I still have the sheet of paper upon which he wrote the Five Laws of Library Science and then signed his name in English, Hindi, Sanskrit and, I think, Tamil. I went on to teach the subject for quite a few years - including following a number of well-known British teachers to the University of Maryland for a year because the Dean, Paul Wasserman, felt that there was more to classification than the schedules of the Dewey Decimal and Library of Congress classification schemes. The students in those years - between about 1965 and 1970 - were possibly the only ones in the USA getting that treatment.
Now the Weblogs buzz with the novelty of the ideas that Ranganathan first developed in his Colon Classfication of 1933 - yup, seventy years ago.
Links to chase down:
The Knowledge Management Connection - which is very keen to tell us that faceted classification is "Not just a library science technique", almost as though that would taint it.
Ranganathan for IAs
Faceted Movable Type
Ranganathan's rigorous analysis of the principles upon which all classification is based is contained in his 'Prolegomena to library classification' - but you can find a simplified version here:
A simplified model for facet analysis - I only put this one in because I get cited :-) (Only joking)
A tribute to SR Ranganathan, the father of Indian Library Science by Eugene Garfield - who also met SRR. See also Part II of the tribute.
Was Ranganathan a Yahoo!?
Ranganthan ahead of his century.
Ranganathan and Facet Analysis - an unlikely source, perhaps, but he is creeping in all over the place.
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"Intranet road map"
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 7:31 PM)
Here's something for those who are involved in, or about to be involved in, setting up a corporate intranet. The Intranet Road Map
Thanks to Column Two for that one.
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Saying what we mean.
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 8:12 PM)
The Gurteen Knowledge Letter is a useful pointer to things that are happening around the world, if only to remind us how sloppy is the use of the English language. An example is found in a link to Stakeholder interviews as simple knowledge mapping which includes questions such as:
- What information do you rely on during a normal working day?
- Where do you obtain this information from?
- If you have a question, where do you go to find an answer?
- Which sources of news do you regularly read?
Those seem like quite ordinary 'information needs' questions to me - and quite why a selection of staff in an organization should be called 'stakeholders' escapes me.
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The top ten papers in Information Research
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 4:24 PM)
For some time I have been drawing attention in my quarterly Editorial to the papers with most hits. I only got round to putting counters on the papers in the first three volumes last December, so those papers have been recording hits for a shorter period of time than others. It made sense, therefore to present a list that takes this into account, so here we are. This is a list of the 'top ten' based on a ranking by 'hits per month' since a counter was attached.
Two interesting points emerge out of the exercise: first, as one might expect, the 'knowledge management' issue has an extremely well-hit set of papers, and secondly, apart from this, there are popular papers throughout the series, including one from volume 1 no. 1.
1. The nonsense of knowledge management, by T.D. Wilson
Total hits 25.7.03 - 14790 Months counting - 9 Hits per month - 1643
2. Web search: how the Web has changed information retrieval, by Terrence A. Brooks
Total hits 25.7.03 - 3757 Months counting - 3 Hits per month - 1252
3. Understanding knowledge management and information management: the need for an empirical perspective, by France Bouthillier and Kathleen Shearer
Total hits 25.7.03 - 6020 Months counting - 9 Hits per month - 669
4. The duality of knowledge, by Paul M. Hildreth and Chris Kimble
Total hits 25.7.03 - 5925 Months counting - 9 Hits per month - 658
5. An action research approach to curriculum development, by P. Riding, S.P. Fowell, and P.C.M. Levy
Total hits 25.7.03 - 3461 Months counting - 7 Hits per month - 494
6. Environmental scanning as information seeking and organizational learning, by Chun Wei Choo
Total hits 25.7.03 - 9399 Months counting - 21 Hits per month - 448
7. Scanning The Business Environment For Information:A Grounded Theory Approach, Zita Correia and Tom Wilson
Total hits 25.7.03 - 2987 Months counting - 7 Hits per month - 427
8. Student attitudes towards electronic information resources, by Kathryn Ray andJoan Day
Total hits 25.7.03 - 19714 Months counting - 54 Hits per month - 366
9. Determining organizational information needs: the Critical Success Factors approach, by Maija-Leena Huotari and T.D. Wilson
Total hits 25.7.03 - 9232 Months counting - 27 Hits per month - 342
10. Knowledge management: another management fad?, Leonard J. Ponzi and Michael Koenig
Total hits 25.7.03 - 3071 Months counting - 9 Hits per month - 341
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The INISS project - a bit of history :-)
(by Prof. Tom Wilson, posted at 7:35 PM)
The final report on the first stage of Project INISS has long been out of
print. Now I'm scanning in and creating a Web site for it, since it was a
fairly unusual piece of work for the time.
I'm putting up the Chapters as I produce them and you can find the first at
http://informationr.net/tdw/publ/INISS/index.html
This chapter deals with the structured observation method used in the research
and may be of continuing interest because that method is still relatively
little-used.
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The Value of IT, Free Speech, etc.
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 10:28 PM)
The 'public prints' over the holiday period have brought us accidentally
related news - a pity, really, that one or two journalists had not read the
words of another before enthusing over the possibility that the value of
investment in information technology might now be discovered. Both the
Financial Times and the Sunday Telegraph carried news of
Bill Gates's investment in the Centre for Information Work Productivity (we
can only be glad that the word 'knowledge' was rejected!) at MIT. The aim of
the Centre is to discover, through a study of 100 companies, best practice in
the application of IT and to measure its impact on the bottom line.
No matter that it has all been done before - members of this list will recall,
I'm sure, Strassman, P.A. (1990) The business value of computers, New
Canaan, CT: The Information Economics Press - which signally failed to uncover
the magic formula. Strassman found that investment in IT failed to deliver
increased 'management productivity' until that investment exceeded 50% of
total investment in management productivity - if my memory serves me right and
his scatter diagram of the relationship of spend to productivity showed no
trend line at all, but a fog of points.
The reason, of course, is that investment in IT (including the software that
Microsoft is so anxiuous to sell) will have no impact at all unless the
information managed by the software and the technology is
appropriate, timely, accurate, etc., etc. - and very few companies are
interested in spending the amount of money required to get that right.
There's another reason why IT spend may fail to deliver - and that was
conveyed in an article in The Observer on the extent to which people
are fleeing the city and its stresses for a more relaxed life. It noted:
A recent American study found that even in the boom year of 1993,
nearly half of all US employers laid off workers. That pattern has been
mirrored on this side of the Atlantic. And if employers are no longer
perceived to be loyal to us, even in the good times, why on earth should we be
loyal to them?
Good question! I recall a study by Dahl, but can't locate the reference,
which showed that the principal driver of improved productivity was staff
motivation. Mmmm.
Another information-related topic hit the newsprints - the increasing
totalitarian slant of US institutions. Clear Channel is a media giant I'd
never even heard of, but one of its Board members is Thomas O. Hicks, who
helped Bush to become a millionaire. The report says, "Clear Channel is
accused of drumming up support for the war in Iraq, while muzzling those who
oppose it. When Natialie Maines, singer of the Texas band The Dixie Chicks,
commented that she was ashamed of the president, Clear Channel country radio
stations were the first to drop the band from playlists." New York
Times writer Paul Krugman is reported as saying: "We should have realised
this is a two-way street. If politicians are doing favours for businesses that
support them, why shouldn't we expect businesses to reciprocate by doing
favours for those politicians?"
Also in The Observer was the keynote address to journalists by Tim
Robbins at the National Press Club - read it here. If you
weren't worried before, you'll be worried after reading it.
Have a good week!
[I tried mailing this to the log, but for some reason, my messages don't seem to be getting through to Free-Conversant - can't understand why. Perhaps I'll start using one of my other e-mail systems]
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"My Best Docs" - Rick Barry's site
(by Grahame Gould, posted at 8:42 AM)
An interesting site for those interested in Information Management, Content Management and Records Management is a site by Rick Barry. There is a massive amount of information on there, and personally I find it confusing to navigate, but then I also don't profess to be expert at searching the web.
I did see somewhere on there that Rick has admitted the site has expanded faster than he could keep up with to catalogue it, so hopefully he'll get time to have a look at it some time. However, don't take that as a criticism - it does have excellent information on it and is well worth wading through to find all the gems.
Ah, I was just about to give you some examples of pages on his site, but it's all in frames, so go hunting ...
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RE: Confessions of a Programmer
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 7:39 PM)
Very interesting site, Chris - it will also be interesting to see how the rankings change as other things come on line.
Your point about the lack of communication among the various areas of the 'information field' is also spot on - this is one of the things that IR is trying to change, by publishing information systems papers, as well as information management papers. David Ellis, David Allen and I wrote a paper a couple of years or so ago which looked at the lack of cross citation between information science and information systems in two areas where one might expect common interests - information retrieval and information seeking behaviour (user requirements in info. systems parlance). We found very few people who were cited in both fields.
Ellis, D., Allen, D.K. & Wilson, T.D. (1999)
Information science and information systems: conjunct subjects disjunct disciplines. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 50, 1095-1107
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Social networking and the Internet
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 9:05 AM)
Social network theory seems to me to be one of those techniques that simply reports the obvious: however, if you are into that kind of thing you might be interested in a site, Buddy Zoo, that applies the ideas to 'buddy lists' in instant messaging systems. You have to have an AOL Instant Messaging user-name to sign up to see the information - and I couldn't be bothered to do that, since I get enough stuff by other means already. Still, the maps on the top page look pretty enough - according to Slashdot the site was created by a student at Caltech, and I imagine that students are among the prime users of IM.
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ALIA Conference papers
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 8:25 AM)
Colleagues may be interested in a block of papers from the ALIA Conference. Some well known names there, with generally quite brief papers.
Visualizing the structure of Dewey
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 10:48 AM)
No - not the old man's bone structure, but the skeleton of the classification scheme.
An interesting presentation on "Improving Subject Access in OPACs using Dewey and View-Based Searching" by Steve Pollit and Amanda Tinker. Also, a guided tour of the system here.
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More on portals
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 3:16 PM)
Following up Grahame Gould's recommendation of the Canadian site, I see that ZDNet has an item on enterprise portals that might be interesting to some.
The article, by Kevin Foster, talks of 'navigating the seven-Cs' - I'll leave it to you to find out what they are (and how far 'C' is stretched to accommodate the pun!)
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Portals
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 10:10 AM)
Thanks to Grahame Gould for drawing attention to a Canadian government Web site with some interesting links to various documents on Web portal policies. The page gives links to other sites which cover Architecture, Focus Studies and Public Opinion Research, Case Studies, Portal Examples, Content Management, and Strategies and Implementation.
The site also includes pages on other useful information management topics such as: Classification, Thesauri and Controlled Vocabularies, Electronic Publishing, and Records & Document Management.
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Information resources
(by Tom Wilson, posted at 3:49 PM)
Occasionally I receive a message telling me that Information Research, or one of the other resources at InformationR.net has been linked to from another site. I usually take a look to find out what is there. On this occasion, yesterday, it was from Keith Hamilton, who runs a site called Nature IQ, which provides links to all kinds of information resources on all kinds of subjects. Now, you might ask, What is the point of this, when so many directories exist? I think the answer is that a personal view on what is available, which you have selected according to your own quality guidelines, probably has something going for it, which a simple directory, based on spiders running around the Web looking for possible additions, does not.
One of the things it guided me to was the Online Dictionary of Library and Information Science - a pretty impressive piece of work. Slow to load, because it is all one big page, but useful for newcomers.
Well - take a look for yourself and see what you think. The interface is pretty basic and rather ugly, but...
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