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Creating an Equitable Information Society: Time for Action Information Architecture
The Information Architecture The world isn’t run by weapons anymore…It is run by small bits of data…0’s and 1’s…. It’s not the one who has got the most bullets but one who controls the information… What we SEE…What we HEAR…What we THINK….. IT”S ALL ABOUT INFORMATION.
Information  More and more work depends upon effective use of Information Novel ways of accessing information are seen in offices, home, society, etc. More specialized, complex, more perplexing … Thus, design and efficient communication are more challenging than ever, requiring great deal of time, practice and knowledge
Notion of Design Separation of thinking and doing Separation of manual and intellectual work Separation of conceptual part of work from the labor process Design-build process is more specialized Can be clearly seen in building-architects and builders
Communication in ICT Human Society formed with oral speech Oral speech is through specialized adaptation of mind and body Written culture 6000 years old Brain power has played a significant role Creating, communicating, storing and retrieving information is the challenge, which is as old as civilization itself Only the means by which we do have changed
Technology Threats Written – threat to human memory Telephone – threat to writing Television – threat to reading Email – threat to postal system Web – threat to universities, libraries, teachers, and cities
The Communication Printing Press Telegraph Both of them were great technological achievements as well as a revolutionary communicating devices Both of them have the same social impact in society as the Internet has today Basis for wireless web
Telephone- New Life Line 1877 First permanent outdoor telephone wire stung 1878 manual phone exchange 1879 Telephone numbers allotted 1880 Long distance service established 1900 First coin telephone 1927 NY to London RF link 1946 Mobile telephone using RF 1962 First satellite Communication 1983 Cellular network in USA 1989 Pacific link fiber optic 40000 simultaneous call 1996 Pocket phone
Wireless – Radio (People’s University) One to many communication: news, entertainment to home Opposed by most newspapers publishers Direct communication with the voters End of 1945, 95% homes had radios 13% of broadcast licenses by schools and universities Popular baby-sit
Television Telephonoscope imagined in 1879 Commercial application of CRT of 1897 Considered as threat to radio Joining sound and image, more natural Watching TV is a family get-together 5-10 years of life spent in watching TV
Computing ENIAC 1946 for security problems ERMA Transformed banking system 50’s PCs1975……Laptop…Tablet PC Multimedia Killer Application : E-Mail Becoming Computer literate is a Goal in school, college and for the entire society
Convergence Vannevar Bush (1890-1974) Make more accessible the bewildering store of knowledge, develop instruments to give access  to and command over the inherited knowledge of the ages “ As We May Think” 1945
Convergence ARPA : the first network; Technological and philosophical foundation for Internet Vast network of remote data stations and information banks communicating at Gbps Laser channels for communications A global Comm. Network will instantly link man-to-machine, machine-to-machine – by land, air, underwater and space.
W W W Asynchronous and real-time text, audio and video communication on web One-to-one and one-to-many communication Can be accessed through PC, Cell -phones, PDA’s and pagers Easy to publish information on broader range of subjects Searchable through millions of pages in seconds
Information Society These networks will  affect man’s way of thinking, means of education, relation ships and social environment, altering ways of living. The promise is that Inf. Society will promote peace, friendship, cooperation through improved interpersonal comm., empowerment through education, business, and social good; knowledge workers, stronger economies etc…
Info Ailments
Info Ailments Info Glut; Individuals are given with more information than they can use or need  Thereby attentiveness declines, errors and frustration increases, and efficiency decreases Info Thrash; poor quality information Info Stress; Coping with social and technological rapid changes The challenge; Design Socio-Techno System
 
“ We have not only lost lives, but also our livelihood. It may take months, perhaps years for us to recover. Our future is totally dark.” – Fishermen at Periayakalapet
… suitably blending the information derived from earth observation satellites with ground derived and weather related information, locale-specific community advisory services can be provided. Community based vulnerability and risk related information, provision of timely early warning and dissemination of severe weather related information can lead to reliable disaster management support at the village level.
Key Challenge: Towards a New Discipline Our ability to create information has outpaced our ability to search, organize and publish it Information management – at individual, organizational and societal level has turned out to be a key challenge
Theses of Information Architecture People need information. More importantly, people need the right information at the right time.
Information Design is about the clear and effective presentation of information Without human intervention, information devolves into chaos
What are some of the key benefits of an IT Architecture? It will help to insure interoperability inside and outside ITB and the Department.  It's a way to inform developers of Department directions.  It will help in making planning, development and purchase decisions.  It will be useful in aligning information technology providers for the Department.  It is a way to communicate direction (and changes) both inside and outside ITB.  It will reduce the maintenance and support requirements.  It will help in planning migration to new technologies.
Why IA
Problems
I am Frustrated Sense of frustration that business executives are experiencing in many organizations:   "The automated systems my people want and need take too long to put into operation, and the backlog of requests just keeps growing."   "We're spending millions on computers but nobody can show me how this system project supports corporate goals." 
What is needed ? Way of planning our information systems to avoid these kinds of problems.  The most promising approach: an Information Architecture to guide  systems planning effort
What is IA An architecture is a high level or general view of something that conveys an overall understanding of its various components and how those components inter-relate.  For example, examine the architecture of a house, we would see where the bedrooms were located relative to the kitchen-living-dining rooms. We tend to classify our homes based on the commonality of their architecture: bungalow, back-split, two-story, etc. 
What is an IA? An  information architecture  is a high level or general view of an organization's information-related components that conveys an overall understanding of each component and an understanding of how these components relate to each other
Internet and IA The Internet has changed how we live with information.  It has made ubiquitous the once rare entity: the shared information environment
IA: Human Factor Shaping information to be relevant and timely requires specialized human work. Doing so for a globally shared environment that is itself made of information is a relatively new kind of specialized human work.
IA This work is both, a science and an art.
IA: Structuring of Raw Information This work is an act of architecture: the structuring of raw information into shared information environments with useful, navigable form that resists entropy and reduces confusion.
IA: Designs Structures of Information This is a new kind of architecture that designs structures of information rather than of bricks, wood, plastic and stone
IA: Information Homes People live and work in these structures, just as they live and work in their homes, offices, factories and malls.  These places are not virtual: they are as real as our own minds.
Information Homes Many people spend most of their waking hours in these spaces.  As the numbers of physical workers decline and knowledge workers increase, more and more people will live, work, share, collaborate, learn and play in these environments for more and more of their lives.
Information Mass There is already too much information for us to comprehend easily.  Each day there will only be more of it, not less. Inexorably, information drowns in its own mass.  It needs to breathe, and the air it needs is relevance.
Towards IA Information has more than physical presence Meaning Imagery Aesthetics Value Emotion Shape
Towards IA Data is stored – Information is  experienced And experiences have human consequences We are shaping the experiences of millions How does content impact action Whither IA?
Footpaths Designers begin with a form… http://fury.com/berkeleypaths
Footpaths But people will make it their own…
Goals of Information Architecture One goal of information architecture is to shape information into an environment that allows users to create, manage and share its very substance in a framework that provides semantic relevance.
Another goal of information architecture is to shape the environment to enable users to better communicate, collaborate and experience one another
The latter goal is more fundamental than the former: information exists only in communities of meaning. Without other people, information no longer has context, and no longer informs. It becomes mere data, less than dust.
IA: Purpose The purpose of an information architecture is to ensure that everyone concerned, business people and systems staff alike, have a common understanding (or mental model) of the organization
Therefore, information architecture is about people first, and technology second .
People needs All people have a right to know where they are and where they are going and how to get what they need. People naturally seek places that provide these essential needs. Any environment that ignores this natural law will attract and retain fewer people.
Interface Design The interface is a window to information. Even the best interface is only as good as the shape of the information behind it.  The converse is also true: even the most comprehensively shaped information is only as useful as its interface.  For this reason, interface design and information architecture are mutually dependent.
Immediate Access The Internet has changed our paradigm for more than just technology. We now expect all information environments to be as accessible, as immediate, and as total.
IA  Just because information architecture happens mostly on the Internet today, it doesn't mean that will be the case tomorrow.
Tools Information architecture accomplishes its task with whatever tools necessary
IA Flavor These tools are being fashioned by many people, including information scientists, artists, librarians, designers, anthropologists, architects, writers, engineers, programmers & philosophers.  They all bring different perspectives, and they all add flavor to the stew. They are all necessary.
Tools These tools come in many forms and methods, including: Controlled vocabularies Mental modeling Brainstorming Ethnography Thesauri Human-computer interaction, and others. Some tools are very old, and some are very new. Most are still waiting to be invented.
IA: Practice Information architecture acknowledges that this practice is bigger than any single methodology, tool or perspective.
What Does An Information Architecture Contain? The  information architecture  contains information about a number of things of interest to the business. In its early stages of development, it contains information about:   the current or planned organization structure,   
What Does An Information Architecture Contain? the goals of the organization,   the business functions that must be carried on to achieve the goals, and   the major categories of things (subjects) the organization needs information about in order to perform the functions.
 
Benefits Of An Information Architecture?  Better management communication.  The architecture contains: Business terms (not technical jargon) All terms having common definitions that were arrived at through consensus from all parts of the organization. When systems do get built, the systems staff will have a solid enterprise-wide foundation on which to base their efforts
Benefits Of An Information Architecture?  Different parts of the business will start to communicate more effectively with other parts of the business. Basis for sequencing systems development projects in sensible ways.
Benefits Of An Information Architecture Basis for sequencing systems development projects in ways that make sense.  We know which pieces create and maintain data needed for other pieces.  We have a basis for building the data creation/maintenance pieces first.  When business priorities dictate a different sequence, we can determine the full implications of such an approach in advance. 
Benefits Of An Information Architecture have the information we need for more clearly defining the scope of our systems projects. Know in advance which business processes and which data components will be included in each project. We can have confidence that there will be no major hidden surprises as we go through the development process
Benefits Of An Information Architecture We have a basis for identifying all of the stakeholders in any development effort.  We will know in advance who ought to be involved in requirements definition and testing. We can plan for their participation and develop a higher quality more robust system as a result. 
Benefits Of An Information Architecture we have the opportunity to identify common systems that can be used by a variety of people throughout the organization. Frequently there are business processes that are performed in several organization units, with each being done in a slightly different way.  If a common system is developed to support this activity, the organization benefits in two ways:  There is improved consistency across the organization There is reduced cost since only one system is built and maintained rather than several. 
Conclusions IA is a rapidly emerging field concerned with the art and science of applying many approaches to the design of IS Several disciplines have to merge to architect the right systems Inf. Architect to develop Information structures usable at multiple levels of interaction among humans, machine and environment
Conclusions Information architecture is first an act, then a practice, then a discipline.  Sharing the practice grows the discipline, and makes it stronger.  A 21 st  Century Profession; Information Architect
Questions?
THANK YOU

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Introduction to IA

  • 1. Creating an Equitable Information Society: Time for Action Information Architecture
  • 2. The Information Architecture The world isn’t run by weapons anymore…It is run by small bits of data…0’s and 1’s…. It’s not the one who has got the most bullets but one who controls the information… What we SEE…What we HEAR…What we THINK….. IT”S ALL ABOUT INFORMATION.
  • 3. Information More and more work depends upon effective use of Information Novel ways of accessing information are seen in offices, home, society, etc. More specialized, complex, more perplexing … Thus, design and efficient communication are more challenging than ever, requiring great deal of time, practice and knowledge
  • 4. Notion of Design Separation of thinking and doing Separation of manual and intellectual work Separation of conceptual part of work from the labor process Design-build process is more specialized Can be clearly seen in building-architects and builders
  • 5. Communication in ICT Human Society formed with oral speech Oral speech is through specialized adaptation of mind and body Written culture 6000 years old Brain power has played a significant role Creating, communicating, storing and retrieving information is the challenge, which is as old as civilization itself Only the means by which we do have changed
  • 6. Technology Threats Written – threat to human memory Telephone – threat to writing Television – threat to reading Email – threat to postal system Web – threat to universities, libraries, teachers, and cities
  • 7. The Communication Printing Press Telegraph Both of them were great technological achievements as well as a revolutionary communicating devices Both of them have the same social impact in society as the Internet has today Basis for wireless web
  • 8. Telephone- New Life Line 1877 First permanent outdoor telephone wire stung 1878 manual phone exchange 1879 Telephone numbers allotted 1880 Long distance service established 1900 First coin telephone 1927 NY to London RF link 1946 Mobile telephone using RF 1962 First satellite Communication 1983 Cellular network in USA 1989 Pacific link fiber optic 40000 simultaneous call 1996 Pocket phone
  • 9. Wireless – Radio (People’s University) One to many communication: news, entertainment to home Opposed by most newspapers publishers Direct communication with the voters End of 1945, 95% homes had radios 13% of broadcast licenses by schools and universities Popular baby-sit
  • 10. Television Telephonoscope imagined in 1879 Commercial application of CRT of 1897 Considered as threat to radio Joining sound and image, more natural Watching TV is a family get-together 5-10 years of life spent in watching TV
  • 11. Computing ENIAC 1946 for security problems ERMA Transformed banking system 50’s PCs1975……Laptop…Tablet PC Multimedia Killer Application : E-Mail Becoming Computer literate is a Goal in school, college and for the entire society
  • 12. Convergence Vannevar Bush (1890-1974) Make more accessible the bewildering store of knowledge, develop instruments to give access to and command over the inherited knowledge of the ages “ As We May Think” 1945
  • 13. Convergence ARPA : the first network; Technological and philosophical foundation for Internet Vast network of remote data stations and information banks communicating at Gbps Laser channels for communications A global Comm. Network will instantly link man-to-machine, machine-to-machine – by land, air, underwater and space.
  • 14. W W W Asynchronous and real-time text, audio and video communication on web One-to-one and one-to-many communication Can be accessed through PC, Cell -phones, PDA’s and pagers Easy to publish information on broader range of subjects Searchable through millions of pages in seconds
  • 15. Information Society These networks will affect man’s way of thinking, means of education, relation ships and social environment, altering ways of living. The promise is that Inf. Society will promote peace, friendship, cooperation through improved interpersonal comm., empowerment through education, business, and social good; knowledge workers, stronger economies etc…
  • 17. Info Ailments Info Glut; Individuals are given with more information than they can use or need Thereby attentiveness declines, errors and frustration increases, and efficiency decreases Info Thrash; poor quality information Info Stress; Coping with social and technological rapid changes The challenge; Design Socio-Techno System
  • 18.  
  • 19. “ We have not only lost lives, but also our livelihood. It may take months, perhaps years for us to recover. Our future is totally dark.” – Fishermen at Periayakalapet
  • 20. … suitably blending the information derived from earth observation satellites with ground derived and weather related information, locale-specific community advisory services can be provided. Community based vulnerability and risk related information, provision of timely early warning and dissemination of severe weather related information can lead to reliable disaster management support at the village level.
  • 21. Key Challenge: Towards a New Discipline Our ability to create information has outpaced our ability to search, organize and publish it Information management – at individual, organizational and societal level has turned out to be a key challenge
  • 22. Theses of Information Architecture People need information. More importantly, people need the right information at the right time.
  • 23. Information Design is about the clear and effective presentation of information Without human intervention, information devolves into chaos
  • 24. What are some of the key benefits of an IT Architecture? It will help to insure interoperability inside and outside ITB and the Department. It's a way to inform developers of Department directions. It will help in making planning, development and purchase decisions. It will be useful in aligning information technology providers for the Department. It is a way to communicate direction (and changes) both inside and outside ITB. It will reduce the maintenance and support requirements. It will help in planning migration to new technologies.
  • 27. I am Frustrated Sense of frustration that business executives are experiencing in many organizations:  "The automated systems my people want and need take too long to put into operation, and the backlog of requests just keeps growing."  "We're spending millions on computers but nobody can show me how this system project supports corporate goals." 
  • 28. What is needed ? Way of planning our information systems to avoid these kinds of problems. The most promising approach: an Information Architecture to guide systems planning effort
  • 29. What is IA An architecture is a high level or general view of something that conveys an overall understanding of its various components and how those components inter-relate. For example, examine the architecture of a house, we would see where the bedrooms were located relative to the kitchen-living-dining rooms. We tend to classify our homes based on the commonality of their architecture: bungalow, back-split, two-story, etc. 
  • 30. What is an IA? An information architecture is a high level or general view of an organization's information-related components that conveys an overall understanding of each component and an understanding of how these components relate to each other
  • 31. Internet and IA The Internet has changed how we live with information. It has made ubiquitous the once rare entity: the shared information environment
  • 32. IA: Human Factor Shaping information to be relevant and timely requires specialized human work. Doing so for a globally shared environment that is itself made of information is a relatively new kind of specialized human work.
  • 33. IA This work is both, a science and an art.
  • 34. IA: Structuring of Raw Information This work is an act of architecture: the structuring of raw information into shared information environments with useful, navigable form that resists entropy and reduces confusion.
  • 35. IA: Designs Structures of Information This is a new kind of architecture that designs structures of information rather than of bricks, wood, plastic and stone
  • 36. IA: Information Homes People live and work in these structures, just as they live and work in their homes, offices, factories and malls. These places are not virtual: they are as real as our own minds.
  • 37. Information Homes Many people spend most of their waking hours in these spaces. As the numbers of physical workers decline and knowledge workers increase, more and more people will live, work, share, collaborate, learn and play in these environments for more and more of their lives.
  • 38. Information Mass There is already too much information for us to comprehend easily. Each day there will only be more of it, not less. Inexorably, information drowns in its own mass. It needs to breathe, and the air it needs is relevance.
  • 39. Towards IA Information has more than physical presence Meaning Imagery Aesthetics Value Emotion Shape
  • 40. Towards IA Data is stored – Information is experienced And experiences have human consequences We are shaping the experiences of millions How does content impact action Whither IA?
  • 41. Footpaths Designers begin with a form… http://fury.com/berkeleypaths
  • 42. Footpaths But people will make it their own…
  • 43. Goals of Information Architecture One goal of information architecture is to shape information into an environment that allows users to create, manage and share its very substance in a framework that provides semantic relevance.
  • 44. Another goal of information architecture is to shape the environment to enable users to better communicate, collaborate and experience one another
  • 45. The latter goal is more fundamental than the former: information exists only in communities of meaning. Without other people, information no longer has context, and no longer informs. It becomes mere data, less than dust.
  • 46. IA: Purpose The purpose of an information architecture is to ensure that everyone concerned, business people and systems staff alike, have a common understanding (or mental model) of the organization
  • 47. Therefore, information architecture is about people first, and technology second .
  • 48. People needs All people have a right to know where they are and where they are going and how to get what they need. People naturally seek places that provide these essential needs. Any environment that ignores this natural law will attract and retain fewer people.
  • 49. Interface Design The interface is a window to information. Even the best interface is only as good as the shape of the information behind it. The converse is also true: even the most comprehensively shaped information is only as useful as its interface. For this reason, interface design and information architecture are mutually dependent.
  • 50. Immediate Access The Internet has changed our paradigm for more than just technology. We now expect all information environments to be as accessible, as immediate, and as total.
  • 51. IA Just because information architecture happens mostly on the Internet today, it doesn't mean that will be the case tomorrow.
  • 52. Tools Information architecture accomplishes its task with whatever tools necessary
  • 53. IA Flavor These tools are being fashioned by many people, including information scientists, artists, librarians, designers, anthropologists, architects, writers, engineers, programmers & philosophers. They all bring different perspectives, and they all add flavor to the stew. They are all necessary.
  • 54. Tools These tools come in many forms and methods, including: Controlled vocabularies Mental modeling Brainstorming Ethnography Thesauri Human-computer interaction, and others. Some tools are very old, and some are very new. Most are still waiting to be invented.
  • 55. IA: Practice Information architecture acknowledges that this practice is bigger than any single methodology, tool or perspective.
  • 56. What Does An Information Architecture Contain? The information architecture contains information about a number of things of interest to the business. In its early stages of development, it contains information about:  the current or planned organization structure,   
  • 57. What Does An Information Architecture Contain? the goals of the organization,  the business functions that must be carried on to achieve the goals, and  the major categories of things (subjects) the organization needs information about in order to perform the functions.
  • 58.  
  • 59. Benefits Of An Information Architecture?  Better management communication. The architecture contains: Business terms (not technical jargon) All terms having common definitions that were arrived at through consensus from all parts of the organization. When systems do get built, the systems staff will have a solid enterprise-wide foundation on which to base their efforts
  • 60. Benefits Of An Information Architecture?  Different parts of the business will start to communicate more effectively with other parts of the business. Basis for sequencing systems development projects in sensible ways.
  • 61. Benefits Of An Information Architecture Basis for sequencing systems development projects in ways that make sense. We know which pieces create and maintain data needed for other pieces. We have a basis for building the data creation/maintenance pieces first. When business priorities dictate a different sequence, we can determine the full implications of such an approach in advance. 
  • 62. Benefits Of An Information Architecture have the information we need for more clearly defining the scope of our systems projects. Know in advance which business processes and which data components will be included in each project. We can have confidence that there will be no major hidden surprises as we go through the development process
  • 63. Benefits Of An Information Architecture We have a basis for identifying all of the stakeholders in any development effort. We will know in advance who ought to be involved in requirements definition and testing. We can plan for their participation and develop a higher quality more robust system as a result. 
  • 64. Benefits Of An Information Architecture we have the opportunity to identify common systems that can be used by a variety of people throughout the organization. Frequently there are business processes that are performed in several organization units, with each being done in a slightly different way. If a common system is developed to support this activity, the organization benefits in two ways: There is improved consistency across the organization There is reduced cost since only one system is built and maintained rather than several. 
  • 65. Conclusions IA is a rapidly emerging field concerned with the art and science of applying many approaches to the design of IS Several disciplines have to merge to architect the right systems Inf. Architect to develop Information structures usable at multiple levels of interaction among humans, machine and environment
  • 66. Conclusions Information architecture is first an act, then a practice, then a discipline. Sharing the practice grows the discipline, and makes it stronger. A 21 st Century Profession; Information Architect