Search results
Your search (subject= information systems design) returned 6 hit(s):
- Using World Wide Web and WAIS technologies
- Description: The goal of the presentation is to describe three qualities (readability, browsability, and searchability) of useful information systems and outline how they can be manifested in World Wide Web servers using HTML, database applications, and the WAIS technologies.
- Date: 1995-04-01
- Source: Originally entitled "Using World Wide Web and WAIS Technologies to Create Electronic Information Systems." It is the written compliment to a presentation given at the 1995 USAIN Annual Conference held in Lexington, KY, April 26-29, 1995
- Subject(s): WAIS (Wide Area Information System); presentations; Lexington, KY; USAIN (United States Agriculture Information Network); information architecture;
- URL: http://infomotions.com/musings/usain-95-talk/index.shtml
- What is information architecture?
- Description: This is a combined book review of Information Architecture for the World Wide Web by Louis Rosenfeld and Peter Morville as well Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web by Christina Wodtke. In a sentence, these two books define and describe information architecture and explain how to put its principles into practice.
- Date: 2003-04-29
- Source: This text was never formally published.
- Subject(s): information architecture;
- URL: http://infomotions.com/musings/rosenfeld/index.shtml
- ASIS & T 2002 Information Architecture Summit: Refining the craft
- Description: This text documents my experiences at the ASIS&T 2002 Information Architecture Summit, March 15-17, 2002, Baltimore, MD.
- Date: 2002-03-19
- Source: Based on personal experience; this text was never formally published.
- Subject(s): travel log; Baltimore, MD; information architecture;
- URL: http://infomotions.com/musings/ia-2002/index.shtml
- Creating user-friendly electronic information systems
- Description: The future of any automated information systems, let them be World Wide Web servers or online public access catalogs (OPACs), will have to include "interactive assistance" features. This article reviews the definition of information systems, describes the concept of interactive assistance, describes how it relates to information systems, and points out a few prototypical examples.
- Date: 1997-07-10
- Source: This is a pre-edited edited copy for Eric Lease Morgan, "Creating User-Friendly Electronic Information Systems" Computers In Libraries. 17(8):31-33, September 1997.
- Subject(s): interactive assistance; information systems design; expert systems;
- URL: http://infomotions.com/musings/information-systems/index.shtml
- SIGIR '99
- Description: This text represents the notes I took at SIGIR '99, Berkeley, CA, August 16 - 19, 1999.
- Date: 1999-08-23
- Source: This text was never formally published
- Subject(s): travel log; Berkeley, CA; information retrieval; adaptive hypermedia;
- URL: http://infomotions.com/musings/sigir-99-notes/index.shtml
- Catalog Collectivism: XC and the Future of Library Search
- Description: Collections without services are useless, and services without collections are empty. The future of library search lies between these two statements. It is about making search smarter and putting search within the context of the user.
- Date: 2007-10-29
- Source: This presentation was given at the Charleston Conference, Charleston (South Carolina) November 2007.
- Subject(s): information systems design; presentations; next generation library catalogs; Charleston Conference;
- URL: http://infomotions.com/musings/future-of-search/index.shtml
Creator: Eric Lease Morgan <eric_morgan@infomotions.com>
Date created: 2000-06-20
Date updated: 2010-05-01
URL: http://infomotions.com/musings/