Ambient findability what we find changes who we become

How do you find your way in an age of information overload? How can you filter streams of complex information to pull out only what you want? Why does it matter how information is structured when Google seems to magically bring up the right answer to your questions? What does it mean to be "&q...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morville, Peter (-)
Format: eBook
Language:Inglés
Published: Sebastopol, California : O'Reilly 2005.
Edition:First edition
Subjects:
See on Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009627137306719
Table of Contents:
  • Ambient Findability; Preface; Safari Enabled; Contacting the Author; Contacting O&Reilly; Acknowledgments; 1. Lost and Found; 1.2. Information Literacy; 1.3. Business Value; 1.4. Paradise Lost; 2. A Brief History of Wayfinding; 2.2. Human Wayfinding in Natural Habitats; 2.3. Maps and Charts; 2.4. The Built Environment; 2.5. Wayfinding in the Noosphere; 2.6. The Web; 2.7. The Baldwin Effect; 3. Information Interaction; 3.2. Information Retrieval; 3.3. Language and Representation; 3.4. The People Problem; 3.5. Information Interaction; 4. Intertwingled; 4.2. Wayfinding 2.0; 4.3. Findable Objects
  • 4.4. Imports4.5. Exports; 4.6. Convergence; 4.7. Asylum; 5. Push and Pull; 5.2. Design; 5.3. Findability Hacks; 5.4. Personalization; 5.5. Ebb and Flow; 6. The Sociosemantic Web; 6.2. The Social Life of Metadata; 6.2.2. Ontologies; 6.2.3. Folksonomies; 6.2.4. Networks; 6.3. Documents; 6.3.2. Antelopes as Boundary Objects; 6.3.3. The End of Data; 6.4. A Walk in the Park; 7. Inspired Decisions; 7.2. Informed Decisions; 7.3. Network Culture; 7.4. The Body Politic; 7.5. Information Overload; 7.6. Graffiti Theory; 7.7. Sources of Inspiration; 7.8. Ambient Findability; Colophon