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September 2nd, 2009event, geek, information architecture, inspiration, speeches
UX Australia’s Keynote – Alex Wright, Information Architect nytimes.com
A fly by history of information management. Beginning with how tribal cultures created categorical systems for understanding the world around them, through to the use of symbols, the first written word and the evolution of hypertext, a connected web and just who inspired Google’s pagerank.
“Tim would have launched the web in 1984, if he didn’t crash his hard drive… just goes to show you should back up your work. It took him 5 years to re-write it.”Interesting tid-bits:
- Folk Taxonomy is not the same as a folksonomy.
The former is the anthropological study of the classification / naming conventions by cultures for understanding the relationships between things such as animals and plants. The latter is when people collaboratively tag stuff on computers. - Jewelery was used as an information system by using symbols to indicate social standing and the wearers relationship to others in the community. The use of this system came about when people began living in larger groups than 5 – 15 or so. This occurred during the time Alex describes as the Ice Age Information Explosion, around 30-40,000 years ago.
- The first forms of handwriting we know of emerged around 5000 BC on Bullae, by the Sumerians. (Now the south of Iraq)
- Charles Cutter wrote an essay in 1883 imagining the library of 1983 called “The Buffalo Public Library in 1983” in which he predicted the library would have desks equiped with keyboards and little bits of wire connecting them to a catalog that would call up and display books for the user to read.
- Paul Otlet was the creator of the universal decimal system. He had imagined a sort of paper internet, where not only would a catalog asist people to find a book, but it revealed the content of the book and its relationship to other books as well as the history of the document’s use, who has read, refereneced etc. His work took place in 1934, much of it was lost to to World War 2. A video on his 1934 vision of an internet is below… truely amazing.
- Check out the memex, a large microfilm desk which is considered one of the conceptual precursors to the web from Vannevar Bush’s essay As We May Think (1945)
- Eugene Garfield inventor of the Science Citation Index, which is a system for acknowledging the weight of links between various documents in the footnotes. It is considered that his work heavily influenced the founders of google and their page rank system.
- Doug Englebart, inventor of the mouse also author of an eassy called Augmenting Human Intelect. In 1968 he delivered a presentation often refered to as “The Mother of All Demos.” This demo was the first to demonstrate the mouse, copy and paste, creation of files, folders, links, video conferencing and email etc.
Some of Alex’s references:
Glut, Alex Wright
- Mastering Information Throughout the Ages
- http://www.alexwright.org/glut/Women, Fire and Dangerous Things, George Lakoff
- What categories reveal about the mind.Everything is Miscellaneous, David Weinberger
- The Power of the New Digital Disorder
- http://www.everythingismiscellaneous.com/Facetag
- Working prototype of a semantic collaborative tagging tool
- http://www.facetag.org/Some references I found:
Alex speaking at Google Masterclass
- The Web That Wasn’t: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=72nfrhXroo8&NR=1Wikipedia’s Timeline of Hypertext Technology
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_hypertext_technology - Folk Taxonomy is not the same as a folksonomy.
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February 21st, 2009event, online communities, social media, social movements, speakers, speeches
Ben Self is the founder of Blue State Digital which was responsible for the online social media activities that helped fundraise millions of dollars for the Obama campaign to presidency. As he is introduced at Fairfax Digital’s Media09, Ben Self is credited with engaging the largest civic involvement in US politics in history. The Obama campaign is the most successful start up in internet history to date.

Self explains that Obama knew he was never going to raise money for his campaign in the traditional way.
“What Obama did,” Self says “was to gather 10,000 people together at a rally and ask each and every one of them to use their mobile phones to sms a number and pledge five bucks”. Certainly not a big ask but there you have it – $50,000 in 50 seconds.
This sort of activity is a great example of how Obama focused on a grass roots campaign rather than doing the traditional fancy dinner party for maximum donations of $2300. Read the rest of this entry »
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February 21st, 2009UGC, journalism, news media, online communities, social media, social movements, speakers, speech club, speeches, user experience
Meg Pickard, Head of Communities & User Experience – The Guardian (London)
There are many ways for users to consume content online, begins Pickard. They consume, react, curate and create. Unfortunately we spend most of our time and efforts engaging them to consume and not enough engaging users to react, curate or create.

UCG or user generated content is considered a pretty dry term by Meg, she’d prefer to think of it as users expressing themselves about stuff they are passionate about.
People also tend to get social media and social networking confused. To often the media tends to provide social media tools in a separate environment to the content, rather than having that engagement interacting with the content.
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February 21st, 2009news media, social media, speakers, speeches, user experience
Nic Newman, BBC Future Media and Technology at Media 09
iPlayer moto: “Making the unmissable, unmissable”
iPhone users are using their iphone 25x more than smart phone users to access the internet.
Looking at the history of the web, in 1994 the goal was for companies to have an online presence, in 2007 they were offering support to their linear media and in 2009 and beyond we will see much more made for web content that is rich, dynamic and on demand.
2007 -2008 showed the tipping point for many online activities including the iPhone (mobile interaction), social media went mainstream (Barak Obama on twitter) and video on demand grew. BBCs own, iPlayer went from launch to 300 million views in just one year. Read the rest of this entry »
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August 2nd, 2008social media, social movements, speakers, speeches
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Pesce is always an interesting listen – he cases topics at hand in real world examples which are really engaging.
All the Friends I’ve Never Met details how a group of bloggers took down the US Attorney General and how Twitter informed him of the recent earthquake in China before it hit the wire. Great inspiring examples of social media as hyper-connected and powerful information sources.
Excellent use of 15 minutes of your day.
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January 6th, 2008speakers, speech club, speeches
I’ve made some quick from reading and thinking about speech writing this afternoon. These notes are good for reading through before you get started and assessing first drafts against. This is a first rough.
You Should:
- Reflect your personality, passion & perspective
- Establish a purpose – what would you like the audience to take away from this?
- Keep it fairly simple – try not to confuse the audience ( clear sentences & clear arguments)
Audience analysis
- Who are they? What does each member have in common?
- Why would they want to listen?
- What do they have to benefit?
- What level of detail is useful to them?
Opening:
- Thought provoking
- Ask a question, show a stat, tell an anecdote
- Establish context / motive – why is it important
- Tell your audience your what you are proposing & how it will be supported
- Tell the audience what you will cover
Middle:
- Make few points and do it well than bombard with many
- Reiterate throughout – remind audience of the main point & refer to how the information supports your argument
End:
- Recap
- Summary
- Leave food for thought… pose a question, tell an anecdote
- Call to action / where to from here / recommendation
Theme:
Choosing a theme throughout helps audience remember main points and retain the central message
Evidence:
What backs up your thoughts?
Illustrations:
Stories to convey a message in a more interesting way
Terminology / language:
Don’t use new terminology or add variety in that way, this dilutes the message. Ie, say “review” throughout rather than – “reflection”, etc.
Tone:
Be careful of content that may offend
Ensure you don’t condescend your audience or talk over their heads
Know who your talking to (see audience above)
- Reflect your personality, passion & perspective
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October 2nd, 2007speakers, speech club, speeches
Oh yeah. My organization paid for me to attend Web Directions South and I’m a bit of a speech addict. So I looked up two of the stand out key note speakers who were inspirational and also people who I think focus on the universal issues. So this is stuff I think my media loving, artsy, creative and deep thinking friends would be into. If your not one of these – look anyway. He he.
Video Links:
http://www.scottberkun.com/services/speakingsamples/
I love casting.















