Saturday 9 January 2010

Brief Project Description


The aims of this project are to help enable collaboration at the University of York by making people and their work more easily discoverable and more richly linked. Currently at York the people directory is very basic (shown below) revealing nothing of a person's work, interests, colleagues or personality.



This project looks to create richer connection between people using...




Above is a wireframe showing a simplification of the sorts of elements we expect to be able to present, including tags, people, links and related articles.

The Caveats

Of course, it would be easy to believe that creating an Amazon-esque recommendation list (below) is easy. Creating these sorts of tools can be deceptively difficult with the development always on the brink of a breakthrough and never quite able to fully deliver.


Having experience of these pitfalls this project will initially aim to implement the simplest technological solution available. We will begin by looking at the known, later extending towards the reasoned and guessed connections. We will begin with explicit connections and later explore semantic relationships.

Rather than beginning with the technology we will simply ask people which social media tools they use with which to pre-populate our knowledge of people. This will take the form of survey. In addition to asking people for their social media usage the tool should allow people to explicitly make connections. 


So that this tool doesn't become a technological folly, presenting beautifully visualised connections between people but never actually being used, the presentation of this data and these connections needs to be embedded in an everyday online environment. By that, I mean that this tool should not be a destination in its own right but should be stumbled across naturally whilst looking someone up or engaging in discussion.







1 comment:

  1. "the presentation of this data and these connections needs to be embedded in an everyday online environment. this tool should not be a destination in its own right but should be stumbled across"

    Couldn't agree more! This is so rarely appreciated as important.

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