“Creative Business”

The Financial Times have aggregated their weekly Tuesday supplement “Creative Business” at a sensible URL at last.

It can be found at http://www.ft.com/cb.

It’s usually pretty focussed around the marketing industry and media ownership but alongside all that good general “landscape” stuff is the odd snippet about digital/interactive/network stuff that is revealing, e.g. this report on how next-generation mobile operators are trying to figure out how to charge people for forwarding multimedia messages around the “edge” of the network, to avoid a napsteresque fileswapping-free-lunch festival on 3g phones.

» Financial Times: Creative Business

Visualisation and branding

My favourite piece of brand design at the moment happens to be for the BBC. Our new channel, BBC4 has channel branding by Lambie-Nairn that generates itself “live” using I assume some graphics algorithms that convert the announcers speech to form, colour and animation.

They are absolutely captivating.

BBC Four ident still

Saw Golan Levin‘s work at Voice02 which I’m sure must have been an influence for the designers at Lambie-Nairn. We hear so much from brand strategists and gurus that the nature of brand needs to be baked into everything a company produces, like DNA. Generating visual identity from dynamics encoded within an brand-algorithm seems to be the logical next step…

“The New Sins”

David Byrne’s “The New Sins” was shown by Dave Eggers at Voice02 and also poster-sized versions of the layouts were dotted around Circular Quay in Sydney Harbour over the new year.

This from Rick Poynor’s review of the tome in the current issue of “Eye” Magazine.

“Byrne has made astute use of graphic design, but that doesn’t stop him consigning designers, along with website managers and relief workers, to the upper levels of hell. ‘Their crime? Hubris. Their punishment? Equality. Everyone looks cool, fashionable and absolutely identical – well-dressed, handsome and completely boring. Everything is perfect and unbearable.”

» Eye Magazine: Rick Poynor reviews David Byrne’s “The New Sins”

Views of technological versus biological emergence.

Two snippets from a long and excellent interview on Salon with Meir “Manny” Lehman about his work into the evolution of software.

“As I like to say, software evolution is the fruit fly of artificial systems evolution,” Lehman says. “The things we learn here we can reapply to other studies: weapon systems evolution, growth of cities, that sort of thing.”

That Lehman conspicuously leaves out biological systems is just one reason why his profile has slipped over the last decade. At a time when lay authors and fellow researchers feel comfortable invoking the name of Charles Darwin when discussing software technology, Lehman holds back. “The gap between biological evolution and artificial systems evolution is just too enormous to expect to link the two,” he says.

and

“Whenever I talk, people start off with blank faces,” Lehman admits. “They say, ‘But you haven’t told us anything we didn’t already know.’ To that I say, there’s nothing to be ashamed of in coming up with the obvious, especially when nobody else is coming up with it.”

Heh heh heh.

» Salon.com : A unified theory of software evolution: By Sam Williams

Is it Teoma-time?

Further investigation needed. Definately.

“Teoma’s underlying technology is an extension of the HITS algorithm developed by researchers at IBM several years ago. In a nutshell, the search engine goes beyond traditional keyword and text analysis and seeks out “hubs” and “authorities” related to your query terms — a “social network” of related content that forms a “community” about the topic.

The cool thing about Teoma is that its community-seeking behavior is both query-specific, and happens in real time. “Whenever you type in a query, we’re actually looking for the communities after you type the query,” said Paul Gardi, Teoma’s Vice President of Search. “We’re using a method called dynamic rank, because there’s a lot of information you can learn about that page by its friends.”

Teoma’s approach differs from Google’s, which uses a similar, but more static ranking system. It’s also unlike the approach taken by Northern Light and other engines that classify web pages based on pre-defined categories.

“We’re going into the communities, finding the link structure of the community using text structure as well,” said Gardi.”

» SearchDay for April 2, 2002 | Teoma vs. Google, Round Two

“What is IA, Dipsy?”

At the ASIS IA Summit, Celia, Victor and myself talked a lot about the potential of bots. I’ve been trying to put stuff together on them and talking with Matt Webb about them for a while now.

Victor asked today what an IAbot would do. I replied that it would be amazingly easy to code as its response to every query would be “It depends…”. Celia asked her favourite bot, Dipsy, about Information Architecture…

ia?
dipsy: ia is Information Architecture
Information architecture?
dipsy: wish i knew, space
Information Architect?
dipsy: i don’t know, space
tell me about security
dipsy: security is really interesting. libpcap, raw sockets… yummy.
usability?
dipsy: bugger all, i dunno, space
explain karma users
dipsy: Positive: “into face sucks” … Negative: “punks and
weirdos”,”interface sucks”,”just complain” … Overall: -9
explain karma designers
dipsy: Negative: “worse then nathans”,”how am i supposed to get this
7mb presentation onto a machien with a FDD?” … Overall: -7
design?
dipsy: design is really crap
content?
dipsy: rumour has it content is easily pirated
the internet?
dipsy: rumour has it the internet is entirely iffy
the web?
dipsy: the web is bad and wrong, and should be culled
bots?
dipsy: somebody said bots was a list at
http://london.pm.org/mailman/listinfo/bots or for talking about bots,
including (but not limited to) infobots
explain karma bots
dipsy: Positive: “I like me” … Overall: 4
explain karma dipsy
dipsy: Positive: “knows the entire “”meaning of liff”””,”keeping our
‘secrets'”,”knows me like i know myself” … Negative: “Arcane quoting
rules”,”fick”,”shouldn’t have remembered that” … Overall: 273
bbc?
dipsy: bbc is, like, a funny place to work
matt jones?
dipsy: matt jones is a Good Bloke.
follow me
dipsy: sorry…
follow me
dipsy: what?
follow me
dipsy: i’m not following you…