thinking differently about books

In the past few years, I’ve noticed I had been considering books a burden of promises.

Though books by themselves don’t make any promises, I have been using them as a sort of lifeline to the future: that I’ll read that book, and some magic will happen, like I’ll know some important bit of information that will make all the difference. Or I realize some secret path. Or I’ll be able to offer some new way for my family to interact, or for my neighborhood to become more vibrant, or my experience of nature to be more intimate, or my understanding of history or human society will become profound and I’ll be able to …

Book sellers, authors, and book lovers encourage the mystery and promise of a book, but I’m now finding the majority of the books in my possession feel like items in a to-do list that are always in the low priority group.

After realizing I was doing this, I started to watch for other ways to relate to books. I often encounter situations for which there are not handy words – or even that there might not be words for. I’ve read enough Heidegger to have tainted my thoughts as to how new language might emerge. Recently I read an article that mentioned the use of a certain theoretical framework, and they called out that framework as something that allowed conversation on a topic.

Once employed, the framework provided by the book “gives us a grammar to…” talk about topic X. I like that.

So, now I find I’m starting to think of books a bit more like a toolset, or vocabulary framework, to employ when thinking about or discussing a problem.

Do I need that tool on the shelf there? If not, should it move aside to make space for tools I do need?

The shift from “unfulfilled promise” to “framework tool” is a great relief.

Local UX events

A reminder that news about user experience events in the Ann Arbor area are regularly posted to UXnet Ann Arbor page. If you want to see a different city, click the “Locales” link at the top, then on the locales page, choose a city close to you.

If you are itching to go to a local developer + UX conference this spring, try Kalamazoo X conference – just a few weeks away.

IA Summit – Detroit Re-cap Session

For those of us information architect types who are missing the 10th Information Architecture Summit in Memphis (March 20-22), there will be a local recap of the IA Summit at Wayne State on Thursday, March 26th at 11am. There is a write up of the event on the Wayne State ASIS&T student chapter website: http://wsuasist.blogspot.com/2009/03/information-architecture-summit-09.html

Panelists will include Peter Morville, Keith Instone, Chris Farnum, and Heidi Blanton.

SI Alumni gathering in A2 on March 12th

Hey – for those who are SI Alumni –

Please join fellow School of Information area alumni as we celebrate this year’s graduating students and welcome them into the alumni community! Let’s show them there really IS life after SI!!

Mix-and-mingle with fellow alumni and meet the soon-to-be graduating students. We’ll be gathering on Thursday, March 12, 7:00-8:30 p.m. in the private room on the second floor of the Cottage Inn on William Street.

variable interface complexity

variable interface complexity
or, maybe it should be “variable interface clutter”? I don’t know, but I like the idea of turning it up or down – at this site for the Beastie Boys album, Paul’s Boutique

http://paulsboutique.beastieboys.com/

(thanks Charlie)

Published
Categorized as UI

Candidates tax plans

http://i72.photobucket.com/albums/i191/hissyspit/taxplans.gif

Nice visualization. Be interesting to have a Regan era tax plan up there for comparison.

Trusting Computer Generated Advice

Was getting directions to go to a thing.
Went to Google Maps.
was goin’ from Ann Arbor, MI to 2600 S Telegraph Rd # 100, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48302
It gave me this:

View Larger Map

Now, if I was doing w/o the benefit of this sufficiently complex magic mapping tool, I would have taken 23 to 14 to 275 to 696 to Telegraph. Sounds simple, compared to what they suggested.

Turns out the path they sent me on was probably a bit faster, wasn’t very complex, and had nice scenery.

I had the distinct impression that this was the route a person local to my destination would have suggested. It even had us coming up to the driveway to the building from behind the building, so we didn’t see the business sign – just trusted the directions given.

I was impressed by this. And I wasn’t alone. A couple other people had a similar experience – taking the same route suggested by The Goog. My favorite comment came from Les Orchard who said “I feel like I just gained experience points.”

It was freaky. A revealing of what would have otherwise been “localized knowledge”. I like benefiting from that. But it does make me feel drawn in, and this triggered some defenses. Do I trust somewhat wacky directions in the future? When I get this information from a human who lives where I’m headed, I trust. When it comes from a data crunching machine, what then? Trust?

All these roads we drive on are connected (other than some closed, corporate road correlate to the “dark web”), so it makes sense using that assumption that one should be able to just find the shortest path based on knowing the localized rules. So, I guess trust of certain advice coming from computers is bound to increase as it improves. Slippery road, trusting computer advice. Thar be dragons. (…but dragons give good experience points, hmmm…)