Daily Archives: September 8, 2003

axes of info storage

In class this morning, one of our professors was talking about geographical information retrieval. Information is stored in association with a given place and thus by searching for that place, one can find information. [Note that while the professor was talking about documents, and professional ones at that, i immediately translated everything to think about social information, as that’s my bent.]

There are two ways to think about information. One is simply through the lens of the material; the second is through the lens of the experience of that material. Most material is associated with an event. Even along the lines of document creation, there is the location of which the material is created and experienced in addition to the location in which it might reference.

This made think that much information is actually expereienced along three axes: place, time, person. For any given set of information, it may be experienced in multiple places, times or across multiple people.

Information impacts place; it is not just situated there. It impacts the history, the vibe and perhaps scars the space itself (marks on the wall).

Information is often felt to be ephemeral in time, as we cannot return to a given time to experience it.

Information fundamentally impacts the people who experience it. They store that experience, that information and incorporate it into their identity. Also, they are likely to recall versions of that information/experience later, regardless of its accuracy.

When we talk about information retrieval, we’re talking about reconstructing the history, removing a set of information from the time/place/people who experienced it into a current situation. Time fundamentally changes. But what does it mean to have data stored with place and people instead of in a collected repository removed from those contextual bits? Should what be retrieved simply be the factual elements of information, or the more experiential? Can we have impact retrieval?

Social Networking: Is there Really a Business Model?

For those interested in hearing talks in the Bay Area, here’s another one perhaps of interest:

Social Networking: Is there Really a Business Model? (sponsored by the MIT/Stanford Venture Lab). Reid Hoffman (Linked In) will be speaking and the panel includes Jonathan Abrams (Friendster), Andrew Ankar, Ross Mayfield (Socialtext) and Cynthia Typaldos with Tony Perkins as moderator.

Should be fun!