For PDF go here: http://www.inkblurt.com/2008/04/15/linkosophy/
Please view full screen to be able to see notes! This was the closing "Plenary" for IA Summit 2008. Hope it starts some new, even better conversations.
This deck is a training presentation for the 2017 IA Summit session on editing wikipedia. The session was a working edit-a-thon and the deck was presented as a guide for attendees to access as needed. Slide 2 of this deck has links to the event dashboard and a list of diversity groups at Wikipedia. I also gave a talk at this conference on diversity and inclusion programs at Wikipedia and referenced a number of active user groups related to supporting diversity in Wikipedia. Attendees at the edit-a-thon were encouraged to either work on information architecture related content selected in the event dashboard, or a diversity project of their choice. Much of the content in this deck is from the Art + Feminism training guide.
Presentation on the role of information architects in improving diversity and inclusion of underrepresented topics in Wikipedia, given at the 2017 Information Architecture Summit in Vancouver on March 25, 2017.
Wikipedia is the world's largest encyclopedia; however, fair representation of notable, but underrepresented people and topics remains a major concern. In response, the Wikimedia Foundation has supported many grassroots efforts including Women in Red, Art+Feminism, Wiki Loves Pride, Black Lunch Table and AfroCROWD, among others, to improve discovery of these topics.
This presentation offered an overview of current efforts to diversify the information available on Wikipedia. Learn how we can use our Information Architecture skills and Wikimedia tools to improve the findability and representation of valuable, but missing information, and start contributing to the topics you care about.
Visit WikiProject:Information Architecture and join the movement: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Information_Architecture
A talk I gave on to the brilliant young people currently on the Squared course, about the social web, marketing, and collaborative ways of working around this. Learn more about Squared here - https://plus.google.com/+WeareSquared/posts
The Semantic Web and the Digital Archaeological Workflow: A Case Study from S...Marcus Smith
The document discusses the Swedish Open Cultural Heritage (SOCH) project and the Digital Archaeological Workflow (DAP) project. SOCH aggregates metadata from 40 Swedish cultural heritage institutions containing over 4.7 million objects and makes it available and queryable via APIs and as linked open data. DAP aims to address problems with the current unstructured and disconnected handling of archaeological data and events by developing a central digital archive, semantically linking data, and expressing fieldwork documentation as linked data. The goals are to improve access, discovery, and reuse of archaeological information through a more integrated digital system.
HTML5 and the dawn of rich mobile web applicationsJames Pearce
HTML5 and its related technologies are enabling new ways to build beautiful sites and applications for contemporary mobile devices. Native mobile developers can now use web technologies to surmount cross-platform headaches, and desktop web developers can reach mobile users in familiar, app-like ways. This session explores the state of the art in HTML5-based mobile web frameworks, and demonstrates the practical possibilities that this powerful and standards-based approach can bring.
Managing Professional Information Overload (K12 Version)Heather Braum
This presentation was given at an inservice for Kaw Valley USD 321 School District in January 2012 on Managing Information Overload. It is targeted at educators, but most people in any profession would find it useful!
Interlinking educational data to Web of Data (Thesis presentation)Enayat Rajabi
This is a thesis presentation about interlinking educational data to Web of Data. I explain how I used the Linked Data approach to expose and interlink educational data to the Linked Open Data cloud
This document discusses mining the World Wide Web for data and knowledge discovery. It notes that while the Web provides a huge source of information, it also poses challenges for effective data mining due to its immense size, dynamic nature, and complexity of pages. Various techniques are described for mining different aspects of the Web, including content, structure, links, and usage data. In particular, it outlines the HITS algorithm for identifying authoritative pages on a topic by analyzing the link structure between pages and propagating authority and hub weights through an iterative process.
This deck is a training presentation for the 2017 IA Summit session on editing wikipedia. The session was a working edit-a-thon and the deck was presented as a guide for attendees to access as needed. Slide 2 of this deck has links to the event dashboard and a list of diversity groups at Wikipedia. I also gave a talk at this conference on diversity and inclusion programs at Wikipedia and referenced a number of active user groups related to supporting diversity in Wikipedia. Attendees at the edit-a-thon were encouraged to either work on information architecture related content selected in the event dashboard, or a diversity project of their choice. Much of the content in this deck is from the Art + Feminism training guide.
Presentation on the role of information architects in improving diversity and inclusion of underrepresented topics in Wikipedia, given at the 2017 Information Architecture Summit in Vancouver on March 25, 2017.
Wikipedia is the world's largest encyclopedia; however, fair representation of notable, but underrepresented people and topics remains a major concern. In response, the Wikimedia Foundation has supported many grassroots efforts including Women in Red, Art+Feminism, Wiki Loves Pride, Black Lunch Table and AfroCROWD, among others, to improve discovery of these topics.
This presentation offered an overview of current efforts to diversify the information available on Wikipedia. Learn how we can use our Information Architecture skills and Wikimedia tools to improve the findability and representation of valuable, but missing information, and start contributing to the topics you care about.
Visit WikiProject:Information Architecture and join the movement: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Information_Architecture
A talk I gave on to the brilliant young people currently on the Squared course, about the social web, marketing, and collaborative ways of working around this. Learn more about Squared here - https://plus.google.com/+WeareSquared/posts
The Semantic Web and the Digital Archaeological Workflow: A Case Study from S...Marcus Smith
The document discusses the Swedish Open Cultural Heritage (SOCH) project and the Digital Archaeological Workflow (DAP) project. SOCH aggregates metadata from 40 Swedish cultural heritage institutions containing over 4.7 million objects and makes it available and queryable via APIs and as linked open data. DAP aims to address problems with the current unstructured and disconnected handling of archaeological data and events by developing a central digital archive, semantically linking data, and expressing fieldwork documentation as linked data. The goals are to improve access, discovery, and reuse of archaeological information through a more integrated digital system.
HTML5 and the dawn of rich mobile web applicationsJames Pearce
HTML5 and its related technologies are enabling new ways to build beautiful sites and applications for contemporary mobile devices. Native mobile developers can now use web technologies to surmount cross-platform headaches, and desktop web developers can reach mobile users in familiar, app-like ways. This session explores the state of the art in HTML5-based mobile web frameworks, and demonstrates the practical possibilities that this powerful and standards-based approach can bring.
Managing Professional Information Overload (K12 Version)Heather Braum
This presentation was given at an inservice for Kaw Valley USD 321 School District in January 2012 on Managing Information Overload. It is targeted at educators, but most people in any profession would find it useful!
Interlinking educational data to Web of Data (Thesis presentation)Enayat Rajabi
This is a thesis presentation about interlinking educational data to Web of Data. I explain how I used the Linked Data approach to expose and interlink educational data to the Linked Open Data cloud
This document discusses mining the World Wide Web for data and knowledge discovery. It notes that while the Web provides a huge source of information, it also poses challenges for effective data mining due to its immense size, dynamic nature, and complexity of pages. Various techniques are described for mining different aspects of the Web, including content, structure, links, and usage data. In particular, it outlines the HITS algorithm for identifying authoritative pages on a topic by analyzing the link structure between pages and propagating authority and hub weights through an iterative process.
DBpedia - An Interlinking Hub in the Web of DataChris Bizer
Given and overview about the DBpedia project and the role of DBpedia in the Web of Data and outlines the next steps from the Dbpedia project as well as ideas for using DBpedia data within the BBC.
The document discusses various web application vulnerabilities including cross-site scripting (XSS), SQL injection, and buffer overflows. It provides examples of how XSS and cross-site request forgery (XSRF) attacks work and how they exploit vulnerabilities in web applications. SQL injection is described as occurring when user input is not sanitized before being used in SQL queries.
The document provides an overview of the deep web and digital investigations. It defines the deep web as data that is inaccessible to regular search engines but exists on the internet. This includes dynamically generated web pages, private websites requiring login, and files accessible only through direct filesystem access. The document estimates the deep web is 400-550 times larger than the surface web that is indexed by search engines. Standard digital forensic procedures can be applied to investigate the deep web, but tools may need to be adapted to handle specialized browsers and access methods used to retrieve deep web resources.
Final Destination: Creating a better afterlife for our digital treasures.Melissa Falconett
The document discusses designing digital services and products to better support users navigating death and loss. It notes that death is a universal human experience that will impact users and their relationships over time, so services should be designed to accommodate this. The document advocates embracing difficult conversations about death, balancing individual and community needs after death, and allowing flexibility for how digital content is accessed and shared after someone passes away.
A Taxonomist, a Software Engineer, and a UX Researcher Walk Into a Bar: Brid...Jenny Benevento
video available here: https://blueprintdigital.com/ia-summit-2017/jenny-benevento-giovanni-fernandez-kincade-jill-fruchter/
This was a talk given at IA Summit 2017 in Vancouver, BC by Jenny Benevento, Gio Fernandez-Kincade, and Jill Fruchter.
Etsy is a marketplace where people around the world connect, both online and offline, to make, sell and buy unique goods. Etsy is also a tech company that invests in the craft of coding and data-driven product development as a strategic priority. Etsy has employed AI and machine learning to tackle personalization, recommendations, image understanding, item similarity, search relevance, spelling correction, and many other tasks. We’ll talk through several examples of how Etsy leverages data, where it’s excelled, and where this hammer hasn’t quite hit the nail on the head.
We will be asking ourselves hard questions, recognizing the limitations of decisions driven purely by big data:
- Who are we satisfying? Our customers or our mathematical models?
- Are those models even an accurate reflection of the outcomes we want?
- In a dual marketplace, where complex changes depend on interactions between both sides of the market, can one metric or measure of success tell the full story?
- How do we consider the impact our models are having on our users?
- Are we even addressing real human needs and motivations in the first place?
- How do we inform and enrich AI with expert created & applied taxonomy & metadata?
'Designing for everyone is designing for no-one' is the admonition in design circles. But what do you do when you are legally or morally mandated do design for the widest possible audience? I discuss how my UX tools break down, and heuristics to go forward anyway.
- Karen VanHouten is a UX therapist who worked to help "tame the enterprise" of a large software company over several years
- Early on, design efforts were unsuccessful due to unrealistic goals, lack of research and testing, and poor communication between design and development
- Later, the focus shifted to more achievable wins through research, collaboration, and building better design tools and processes, leading to more projects being successfully delivered
The document discusses colour theory, including the origins and perception of colour, light decomposition, and how the colour of objects is determined by light absorption and reflection. It covers hue, saturation, value, additive and subtractive colour mixing, primary and secondary colours, complementary colours, and limitations of three-colour mixing systems. Optical colour mixing through pointillism and layering of transparent colours is also summarized.
The document provides guidance for an activity where students will create a PowerPoint presentation with audio explaining how information and communication technologies (ICT) can enhance language teaching and learning. Students will discuss how ICT helps education and is useful for teaching English as a foreign language. They will also explore three Web 2.0 tools they could use in their English classroom and explain how. Students will upload their presentation, with audio, to Slideboom and post the link in the forum for others to view, receiving feedback from peers on two presentations. The goal is for students to reflect on using technology in their current or future experience learning English.
This document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint presentations. It recommends keeping presentations simple with less text and more visuals like images, using a consistent layout and formatting across slides, and designing each slide to be easily readable on its own. The goal of a presentation should be to summarize a longer written document for discussion, not replace it.
This document provides tips and instructions for creating effective presentations. It discusses choosing the right presentation tool, designing clean slides with minimal text and high quality images, embedding videos, using fonts effectively, and provides a tutorial on how to create a presentation using Prezi. The overall message is that presentations should be simple, engaging, and focus on communicating the speaker's message rather than just displaying information on slides.
The document provides eight tips for delivering effective presentations: select a theme and slide design; limit fonts and bullet points per slide; add graphics and minimal animation to engage audiences visually; include hyperlinks for supplemental information; share presentations online; engage audiences with questions; and relax while presenting well-rehearsed material. The tips are meant to help create presentations that are visually appealing, well-organized and interactive for learning.
This document provides an overview of the iPod Notes feature and how to create interactive multimedia presentations using notes, folders, media files, markup, and links. It describes basic uses like simple text notes and advanced uses like directed or self-guided tours. It explains the components that make up a notes presentation, including notes, folders, media files, and how they work together. It also provides examples of how notes could be used for a course tutorial or museum tour.
The ultimate findability challenge: the decisions you make as you find your way through your career in user experience design. Here's some things to think about, much of it crowdsourced from the community.
What We Talk About When We Talk About Navigation (IA Conf 2019)Andrew Hinton
- The document discusses how the term "navigation" has come to narrowly refer to menus on screens, but navigation actually refers to how people navigate and understand their entire environment.
- It argues that as professionals, we should think of navigation more broadly as how people perceive and act in an environment to understand it and meet their needs, rather than just focusing on menus.
- We are designing for people's entire lives and ecosystems, not just individual screens, so we need to consider how people navigate complex, multi-screen systems and understand underlying meanings and relationships.
Designing a Future We Want to Live In - UX STRAT USA 2017Andrew Hinton
The document discusses the importance of user experience strategy in the context of new technologies like artificial intelligence. It argues that as technologies become more pervasive in our environments and able to perceive and act on their own, it is crucial to understand them not just as products but as "users" themselves that experience the world differently than humans. The document advocates taking a holistic, service design approach to understand how technologies fit into and shape human contexts and experiences. It also stresses the need for UX professionals to engage at strategic, organizational levels and consider all stakeholders to ensure technologies are developed and used in truly human-centered ways.
Understanding Context for UX Strategy UXSTRAT 2015 Andrew Hinton
1) The document discusses three themes for how context relates to UX strategy: environmental complexity, principles and facts, and framing and narrative. As environments become more complex with new digital technologies, UX strategy must address this complexity beyond just interfaces.
2) UX strategy requires understanding both the systemic principles behind human experience and behavior, as well as specific facts and realities. Projects often focus only on assumptions and theories without testing against real data.
3) Human context is shaped by how experiences are framed and narrated. Strategies need to regularly re-examine narratives to avoid "narrative debt" that obscures realities. Framing complexity with clarity is important, rather than just pursuing simplicity.
DBpedia - An Interlinking Hub in the Web of DataChris Bizer
Given and overview about the DBpedia project and the role of DBpedia in the Web of Data and outlines the next steps from the Dbpedia project as well as ideas for using DBpedia data within the BBC.
The document discusses various web application vulnerabilities including cross-site scripting (XSS), SQL injection, and buffer overflows. It provides examples of how XSS and cross-site request forgery (XSRF) attacks work and how they exploit vulnerabilities in web applications. SQL injection is described as occurring when user input is not sanitized before being used in SQL queries.
The document provides an overview of the deep web and digital investigations. It defines the deep web as data that is inaccessible to regular search engines but exists on the internet. This includes dynamically generated web pages, private websites requiring login, and files accessible only through direct filesystem access. The document estimates the deep web is 400-550 times larger than the surface web that is indexed by search engines. Standard digital forensic procedures can be applied to investigate the deep web, but tools may need to be adapted to handle specialized browsers and access methods used to retrieve deep web resources.
Final Destination: Creating a better afterlife for our digital treasures.Melissa Falconett
The document discusses designing digital services and products to better support users navigating death and loss. It notes that death is a universal human experience that will impact users and their relationships over time, so services should be designed to accommodate this. The document advocates embracing difficult conversations about death, balancing individual and community needs after death, and allowing flexibility for how digital content is accessed and shared after someone passes away.
A Taxonomist, a Software Engineer, and a UX Researcher Walk Into a Bar: Brid...Jenny Benevento
video available here: https://blueprintdigital.com/ia-summit-2017/jenny-benevento-giovanni-fernandez-kincade-jill-fruchter/
This was a talk given at IA Summit 2017 in Vancouver, BC by Jenny Benevento, Gio Fernandez-Kincade, and Jill Fruchter.
Etsy is a marketplace where people around the world connect, both online and offline, to make, sell and buy unique goods. Etsy is also a tech company that invests in the craft of coding and data-driven product development as a strategic priority. Etsy has employed AI and machine learning to tackle personalization, recommendations, image understanding, item similarity, search relevance, spelling correction, and many other tasks. We’ll talk through several examples of how Etsy leverages data, where it’s excelled, and where this hammer hasn’t quite hit the nail on the head.
We will be asking ourselves hard questions, recognizing the limitations of decisions driven purely by big data:
- Who are we satisfying? Our customers or our mathematical models?
- Are those models even an accurate reflection of the outcomes we want?
- In a dual marketplace, where complex changes depend on interactions between both sides of the market, can one metric or measure of success tell the full story?
- How do we consider the impact our models are having on our users?
- Are we even addressing real human needs and motivations in the first place?
- How do we inform and enrich AI with expert created & applied taxonomy & metadata?
'Designing for everyone is designing for no-one' is the admonition in design circles. But what do you do when you are legally or morally mandated do design for the widest possible audience? I discuss how my UX tools break down, and heuristics to go forward anyway.
- Karen VanHouten is a UX therapist who worked to help "tame the enterprise" of a large software company over several years
- Early on, design efforts were unsuccessful due to unrealistic goals, lack of research and testing, and poor communication between design and development
- Later, the focus shifted to more achievable wins through research, collaboration, and building better design tools and processes, leading to more projects being successfully delivered
The document discusses colour theory, including the origins and perception of colour, light decomposition, and how the colour of objects is determined by light absorption and reflection. It covers hue, saturation, value, additive and subtractive colour mixing, primary and secondary colours, complementary colours, and limitations of three-colour mixing systems. Optical colour mixing through pointillism and layering of transparent colours is also summarized.
The document provides guidance for an activity where students will create a PowerPoint presentation with audio explaining how information and communication technologies (ICT) can enhance language teaching and learning. Students will discuss how ICT helps education and is useful for teaching English as a foreign language. They will also explore three Web 2.0 tools they could use in their English classroom and explain how. Students will upload their presentation, with audio, to Slideboom and post the link in the forum for others to view, receiving feedback from peers on two presentations. The goal is for students to reflect on using technology in their current or future experience learning English.
This document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint presentations. It recommends keeping presentations simple with less text and more visuals like images, using a consistent layout and formatting across slides, and designing each slide to be easily readable on its own. The goal of a presentation should be to summarize a longer written document for discussion, not replace it.
This document provides tips and instructions for creating effective presentations. It discusses choosing the right presentation tool, designing clean slides with minimal text and high quality images, embedding videos, using fonts effectively, and provides a tutorial on how to create a presentation using Prezi. The overall message is that presentations should be simple, engaging, and focus on communicating the speaker's message rather than just displaying information on slides.
The document provides eight tips for delivering effective presentations: select a theme and slide design; limit fonts and bullet points per slide; add graphics and minimal animation to engage audiences visually; include hyperlinks for supplemental information; share presentations online; engage audiences with questions; and relax while presenting well-rehearsed material. The tips are meant to help create presentations that are visually appealing, well-organized and interactive for learning.
This document provides an overview of the iPod Notes feature and how to create interactive multimedia presentations using notes, folders, media files, markup, and links. It describes basic uses like simple text notes and advanced uses like directed or self-guided tours. It explains the components that make up a notes presentation, including notes, folders, media files, and how they work together. It also provides examples of how notes could be used for a course tutorial or museum tour.
The ultimate findability challenge: the decisions you make as you find your way through your career in user experience design. Here's some things to think about, much of it crowdsourced from the community.
What We Talk About When We Talk About Navigation (IA Conf 2019)Andrew Hinton
- The document discusses how the term "navigation" has come to narrowly refer to menus on screens, but navigation actually refers to how people navigate and understand their entire environment.
- It argues that as professionals, we should think of navigation more broadly as how people perceive and act in an environment to understand it and meet their needs, rather than just focusing on menus.
- We are designing for people's entire lives and ecosystems, not just individual screens, so we need to consider how people navigate complex, multi-screen systems and understand underlying meanings and relationships.
Designing a Future We Want to Live In - UX STRAT USA 2017Andrew Hinton
The document discusses the importance of user experience strategy in the context of new technologies like artificial intelligence. It argues that as technologies become more pervasive in our environments and able to perceive and act on their own, it is crucial to understand them not just as products but as "users" themselves that experience the world differently than humans. The document advocates taking a holistic, service design approach to understand how technologies fit into and shape human contexts and experiences. It also stresses the need for UX professionals to engage at strategic, organizational levels and consider all stakeholders to ensure technologies are developed and used in truly human-centered ways.
Understanding Context for UX Strategy UXSTRAT 2015 Andrew Hinton
1) The document discusses three themes for how context relates to UX strategy: environmental complexity, principles and facts, and framing and narrative. As environments become more complex with new digital technologies, UX strategy must address this complexity beyond just interfaces.
2) UX strategy requires understanding both the systemic principles behind human experience and behavior, as well as specific facts and realities. Projects often focus only on assumptions and theories without testing against real data.
3) Human context is shaped by how experiences are framed and narrated. Strategies need to regularly re-examine narratives to avoid "narrative debt" that obscures realities. Framing complexity with clarity is important, rather than just pursuing simplicity.
Practical Conceptual Modeling at UX Detroit Feb 2015Andrew Hinton
See the slides with all CORRECT notes here: http://understandinggroup.com/2015/02/practical-conceptual-modeling/
A presentation by Kaarin Hoff, Andrew Hinton, and Joe Elmendorf (not present at the event), for UX Detroit's Feb 2015 meetup. An introduction to some of the content that will be in the IA Summit 2015 workshop
Language is Infrastructure for InteractConf London 2014Andrew Hinton
I had the pleasure of speaking at Interact London in October 2014. I presented an updated version of this talk, which I originally gave at IA Summit earlier in the spring. The talk is based on content from my book, Understanding Context. You can read more about it at http://contextbook.com.
In this version, I have updated the way I'm talking about how language works as environment: instead of 'semantic affordance' I'm now calling it 'semantic function.' (Which is in keeping with how it's now being described in the book.)
A Model for Information Environments - Reframe IA Workshop 2013Andrew Hinton
My five-minute ignite-style talk for the Reframe IA workshop. Please note, for SlideShare purposes, I had to embed my notes into the slides, because PowerPoint wasn't behaving with other options.
(Information about the workshop: http://2013.iasummit.org/program/workshops/the-amazing-academics-practitioners-round-table/)
Context Design (beta2) World IA Day 2013Andrew Hinton
This document discusses the concept of information environments and context design. It begins by providing context about the origins of information architecture and defines information environments as highly curated, complex digital and physical spaces connected to form a shared experience. It then discusses how information shapes our experience of physical contexts and realities. The document argues that as the digital and informational increasingly blend with the physical world, information architects are responsible for designing not just for existing contexts but the contexts themselves.
Context Design (beta) CHI Atlanta Nov 2012Andrew Hinton
A very beta version of a talk I'll continue to be working on, related to an in-progress book on designing context. Presented at CHI Atlanta November 2012. (check out @contextbook on Twitter )
My presentation at WebVisions Portland in May 2012. Speaker notes / narrative included! Please forgive the cues & odd little notes to myself for presenting purposes.
1) The document discusses how users don't always have clearly defined goals when interacting with technology and argues designers should not assume users are working towards explicit goals.
2) It notes how early models of human-computer interaction designed systems around predefined goals and procedures, but that does not reflect how people naturally behave in complex situations.
3) The document advocates designing for the messy complexity of how human desires, needs, emotions and contexts shape behaviors, rather than assuming tasks and goals are the primary drivers of user experiences.
A basic explanation for communities of practice, and some ideas for designing digital environments to help them thrive. Based on portions of presentations I have given over the last 4-5 years.
The document discusses how context is important in understanding interactions but often overlooked. It provides examples of how websites like Ace Hardware and Google assumed oversimplified models of users' contexts that led to confusing experiences when users' real lives are more complex. Specifically, when the author searched for a store on Ace Hardware's site it did not account for the fact he had moved, showing the wrong location. It also discusses how companies like Facebook and Google made mistakes by assuming the label "friend" had a simple meaning when relationships in real life are nuanced. The document argues that digital interactions should account for the complexity of users' real-world contexts.
UX and Business Analysts - Stop the MadnessAndrew Hinton
The document discusses problems with how software is typically designed and calls for a more user-centered approach. It argues that most software focuses too much on features rather than the user experience. In contrast, the app iA Writer is highlighted as an example of software designed to be enjoyable to use for its target users. The document calls for involving users more directly in the design process through techniques like personas and scenarios to help ensure software meets user needs and motivations.
Julia Morgan was an established architect in the early 1900s who designed buildings in various styles to suit client needs. In 1913, she was commissioned to design a conference center near Monterey, California. Unlike typical institutional buildings of the time, Morgan designed the center as multiple lodges among the natural landscape to encourage communal gathering and reflection. Her organic, flexible design accommodated human behavior and experience rather than engineering it. The document argues information architects should similarly design networked places that consider user behavior and context over rigid structures.
Presented at EBAI (the Information Architecture Congress of Brazil); an updated Linkosophy with some other presentations mixed in. Portions address conversations that were happening at the conference.
Uploaded as PDF with notes and slides. Best viewed full screen (or download PDF).
The first portion of content presented as part of the IAInstitute's pre-conference workshop at the 2009 IA Summit in Memphis, TN. "Beyond Findability: Re-framing IA Strategy and Practice for Turbulent Times" http://iasummit.org/2009/program/pre-con/beyond-findability/
There were no "notes" for this one, so it doesn't have the long-format pdf, just the slides.
Salesforce Integration for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions A...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on integration of Salesforce with Bonterra Impact Management.
Interested in deploying an integration with Salesforce for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
Skybuffer SAM4U tool for SAP license adoptionTatiana Kojar
Manage and optimize your license adoption and consumption with SAM4U, an SAP free customer software asset management tool.
SAM4U, an SAP complimentary software asset management tool for customers, delivers a detailed and well-structured overview of license inventory and usage with a user-friendly interface. We offer a hosted, cost-effective, and performance-optimized SAM4U setup in the Skybuffer Cloud environment. You retain ownership of the system and data, while we manage the ABAP 7.58 infrastructure, ensuring fixed Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and exceptional services through the SAP Fiori interface.
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/building-and-scaling-ai-applications-with-the-nx-ai-manager-a-presentation-from-network-optix/
Robin van Emden, Senior Director of Data Science at Network Optix, presents the “Building and Scaling AI Applications with the Nx AI Manager,” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
In this presentation, van Emden covers the basics of scaling edge AI solutions using the Nx tool kit. He emphasizes the process of developing AI models and deploying them globally. He also showcases the conversion of AI models and the creation of effective edge AI pipelines, with a focus on pre-processing, model conversion, selecting the appropriate inference engine for the target hardware and post-processing.
van Emden shows how Nx can simplify the developer’s life and facilitate a rapid transition from concept to production-ready applications.He provides valuable insights into developing scalable and efficient edge AI solutions, with a strong focus on practical implementation.
OpenID AuthZEN Interop Read Out - AuthorizationDavid Brossard
During Identiverse 2024 and EIC 2024, members of the OpenID AuthZEN WG got together and demoed their authorization endpoints conforming to the AuthZEN API
Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing.pdfssuserfac0301
Read Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing to gain insights on AI adoption in the manufacturing industry, such as:
1. How quickly AI is being implemented in manufacturing.
2. Which barriers stand in the way of AI adoption.
3. How data quality and governance form the backbone of AI.
4. Organizational processes and structures that may inhibit effective AI adoption.
6. Ideas and approaches to help build your organization's AI strategy.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 6DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 6. In this session, we will cover Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI webinar offers an in-depth exploration of leveraging cutting-edge technologies for test automation within the UiPath platform. Attendees will delve into the integration of generative AI, a test automation solution, with Open AI advanced natural language processing capabilities.
Throughout the session, participants will discover how this synergy empowers testers to automate repetitive tasks, enhance testing accuracy, and expedite the software testing life cycle. Topics covered include the seamless integration process, practical use cases, and the benefits of harnessing AI-driven automation for UiPath testing initiatives. By attending this webinar, testers, and automation professionals can gain valuable insights into harnessing the power of AI to optimize their test automation workflows within the UiPath ecosystem, ultimately driving efficiency and quality in software development processes.
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into integrating generative AI.
2. Understanding how this integration enhances test automation within the UiPath platform
3. Practical demonstrations
4. Exploration of real-world use cases illustrating the benefits of AI-driven test automation for UiPath
Topics covered:
What is generative AI
Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath integration with generative AI
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Your One-Stop Shop for Python Success: Top 10 US Python Development Providersakankshawande
Simplify your search for a reliable Python development partner! This list presents the top 10 trusted US providers offering comprehensive Python development services, ensuring your project's success from conception to completion.
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
Digital Marketing Trends in 2024 | Guide for Staying AheadWask
https://www.wask.co/ebooks/digital-marketing-trends-in-2024
Feeling lost in the digital marketing whirlwind of 2024? Technology is changing, consumer habits are evolving, and staying ahead of the curve feels like a never-ending pursuit. This e-book is your compass. Dive into actionable insights to handle the complexities of modern marketing. From hyper-personalization to the power of user-generated content, learn how to build long-term relationships with your audience and unlock the secrets to success in the ever-shifting digital landscape.
Project Management Semester Long Project - Acuityjpupo2018
Acuity is an innovative learning app designed to transform the way you engage with knowledge. Powered by AI technology, Acuity takes complex topics and distills them into concise, interactive summaries that are easy to read & understand. Whether you're exploring the depths of quantum mechanics or seeking insight into historical events, Acuity provides the key information you need without the burden of lengthy texts.
Webinar: Designing a schema for a Data WarehouseFederico Razzoli
Are you new to data warehouses (DWH)? Do you need to check whether your data warehouse follows the best practices for a good design? In both cases, this webinar is for you.
A data warehouse is a central relational database that contains all measurements about a business or an organisation. This data comes from a variety of heterogeneous data sources, which includes databases of any type that back the applications used by the company, data files exported by some applications, or APIs provided by internal or external services.
But designing a data warehouse correctly is a hard task, which requires gathering information about the business processes that need to be analysed in the first place. These processes must be translated into so-called star schemas, which means, denormalised databases where each table represents a dimension or facts.
We will discuss these topics:
- How to gather information about a business;
- Understanding dictionaries and how to identify business entities;
- Dimensions and facts;
- Setting a table granularity;
- Types of facts;
- Types of dimensions;
- Snowflakes and how to avoid them;
- Expanding existing dimensions and facts.
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdf
Linkosophy
1. LINKOSOPHY
1
Andrew Hinton / April 2008 / www.inkblurt.com
EXPLANATIONS FOR SLIDESHARE:
1. This was presented at the IA Summit in 2008 on April 14 in Miami.
2. About 30% is based on previous presentations (by request of summit planners) but the rest is
new.
3. I uploaded this as a pdf showing both the notes and the slides; I have no idea how well
SlideShare will convert the pdf.
4. In order to read it properly, youʼll need to view it ʻfull screenʼ since the slides are nearly useless
without the notes.
5. The “>>” marks are prompts for builds that the PDF obviously doesnʼt show; please ignore the
time prompts as well.
6. Feel free to quote it or use slides from it, as long as you credit “Andrew Hinton at inkblurt.com”
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Thanks for sticking around today. The title, Linkosophy, is a homely word ... and itʼs admittedly a
little tongue-in-cheek, but ho