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WikiLeaks
Fundamental Forms of Information: Research Articles
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, vol. 57, no. 8 (June 2006) pp. 1033-1045.
See also
David Blair (information technologist)
Wittgenstein, Language and Information: "Back to the Rough Ground!"
Information Science and Knowledge Management
Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., Secaucus, NJ

Google books

What Is Documentation?
Scarecrow Press, Lanham, MD, 2006.
Trans. of Qu'est-ce que la documentation, EDIT, Paris, 1951.

Buckland

edit

Parina Hassanaly, et al., eds.

Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications; Vol. 137
Proceeding of the 2006 conference on Cooperative Systems Design: Seamless Integration of Artifacts and Conversations -- Enhanced Concepts of Infrastructure for Communication Pages: i-xii, 2006 ACM
Innovation: The Five Disciplines for Creating What Customers Want
Crown Business (August 8, 2006)
with William W. Wilmot
Amazon reviews [2]
  • (1978) Visibility of Displayed Information
The God Delusion
Bantam Books
  • Anyone is as equally qualified to abhor as adore God, even childishly. Why should Dawkins always behave himself, as if Hercules?
Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon
Penguin Group
twitter
Pirate Party (Sweden)
Commentary: Fifty Years of Citation Indexing
International Journal of Epidemiology, 35: 1127–1128. [3]

Reading the 1955 paper* once again reminds me of the inspiration that the concept had from my early interest in encyclopaedism. In 1970,** Manfred Kochen commented on its role in the worldwide encyclopaedic movement.13 Today the Internet has enabled the development of Wikipedia and other grand schemes that will make the H.G. Wells dream of a World Brain a reality.

— 13. Kochen M. WISE - world information synthesis and encyclopedia. J Document, 1972; 28:322–343.
My footnotes:
* Eugene Garfield. Citation indexes for science: a new dimension in documentation through association of ideas. Science, 1955; 122: 108–11. [4]
** "1970" may be mistaken for 1972.
The role of skepticism in human-information behavior: a cognitive-affective analysis
Library Student Journal, September 2006. [5]
Letter to a Christian Nation
The Semantic Turn: A New Foundation for Design
Taylor & Francis CRC, New York ISBN 0-415-32220-0.
  • "Humans do not see and act on the physical qualities of things, but on what they mean to them"
  • "A systematic inquiry into how people attribute meanings to artifacts and interact with them accordingly"
  • Human-centeredness
    Design "brings forth what would not come naturally (...); proposes realizable artifacts to others (...) must support the lives of ideally large communitites (...) and must make sense to most, ideally to those that have a stake on them"
  • Meaning
    Attributing meaning to something follows from sensing it, and is a prelude to action. "One always acts according to the meaning of whatever one faces" (pp. 58). Meanings are always someone's construction and depend on context and culture. The same artifact may invoke different meanings in different times and places and for different stakeholders. Designers as a consequence need to get involved into second order understanding: understand each stakeholder understanding of artifacts in order to design artifacts successfully. Since meanings of others cannot be observed directly, designers need to carefully observe actions that imply certain meanings; involve themselves in dialog with stakeholders; and invite them to participate in the design process.
  • cf. Klaus Krippendorff's Dictionary of Cybernetics [6]
The End of Harry Potter?
  • an unauthorised companion to the famous series by J. K. Rowling. The work was published after the publication of the sixth volume in the Harry Potter series, but before publication of the seventh and final volume. It contains information, extracted from the books and from Rowling's many public statements, about the wizarding world and popular theories concerning how the plot will develop in the last book.
The Emotion Machine
Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-7432-7663-9. Draft
Outline
  1. "We are born with many mental resources."
  2. "We learn from interacting with others."
  3. "Emotions are different Ways to Think."
  4. "We learn to think about our recent thoughts."
  5. "We learn to think on multiple levels."
  6. "We accumulate huge stores of commonsense knowledge."
  7. "We switch among different Ways to Think."
  8. "We find multiple ways to represent things."
  9. "We build multiple models of ourselves."
The Music of Life
Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-929573-5
University of California, Los Angeles
Critical Theory and Information Studies: A Marcusean Infusion
Policy Futures in Education, 2006, Volume 4, Number 1, pp. 83-89. [7]
From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the Rise of Digital Utopianism
University of Chicago Press

Wilson

edit
Wilson, T.D. (2006).
Review of: Annual Review of Information Science and Technology. Volume 40. Information Today, Inc., Medford, NJ, 2006.
Information Research, xx(x), review no. R221 [Available at: http://informationr.net/ir/reviews/revs221.html]

References

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