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Thursday, 6 March 2003 |
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8:58:22 AM |
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Friday, 10 January 2003 |
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Some additional terms used in the study of technacy Some terms as listed in Google for the Technate person to adopt and use:
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Wednesday, 8 January 2003 |
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The Google Words Arising across the net are a range of words that are beginning to be used more frequently -- all connected to Google. There are Googling (20,000 uses), Googler (3,250 uses), and even Googled (12,500) [as in I have been Googled -- meaning that the GoogleBot has come onto my site.] What is more interesting to me, however, are words to do with studies of things Google. Such as Googlology and Googlosophy each used about six times only online so far. No one has really attempted an explanation of each; rather each has used the term in a rather intuitive fashion. So here goes a definition for each: GOOGLOLOGY GOOGLOSOPHY 1:20:47 AM |
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Saturday, 28 December 2002 |
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Microcontent Defined Organized means of publishing small texts online by individuals. Such publishing is accomplished using organized means of disseminating links or the text itself. Publishing may include one or a combination of: email, weblogs, ezines, automated instant messaging (robot initiation or responses), and/or eDocs. Sites that discuss Microcontent include:
Some ideas about Micrcontent that others have voiced: Microcontent is meme-sized pieces of the Internet. We've discovered in the last few years that navigating the web in meme-sized chunks is the natural idiom of the Internet. So it's time to create a tool that's designed for the job of viewing, managing, and publishing microcontent. This tool is the microcontent client. [Magazine] Today, microcontent is being used as a more general term indicating content that conveys one primary idea or concept, is accessible through a single definitive URL or permalink, and is appropriately written and formatted for presentation in email clients, web browsers, or on handheld devices as needed. A day's weather forcast, the arrival and departure times for an airplane flight, an abstract from a long publication, or a single instant message can all be examples of microcontent. [Magazine] ‘Microcontent’ is Jakob Nielsen’s word to describe the short bits of text which carry disproportionate weight on a website. Their specific role in relation to a site’s information architecture means that titles and headings, in particular, require special attention. [Website] 11:38:38 PM |
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Tuesday, 17 December 2002 |
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Rapid Text Construction Defined . . . This is a concept of electronic composing, devised by Dr Elwyn Jenkins, where a composer (a writer in the era of electronic text needs to be consider a composer rather than writer) using a computer and a suite of two or more computer programs devises a way to build text from larger chunks of language than letters and words. Essentially, a composer databases all her/his writing in text chunks. As a writer often uses previous concepts to build the next text, there is no need to re-write the concept, but rather borrow text chunks from previously written text. The problem solved by Dr Jenkins in working towards this goal was to locate a program that provided not only a way to database text chunks, but also a way to logically connect these chunks to speed-up the process of text chunk selection so that text chunk selection occurs quicker than re-writing a group of 200 to 400 words. This was solved by using the program PersonalBrain 2.1 where text chunks are stored as either .doc files or .rtf files and can be sorted by the meta-storage device called a 'thought', in PersonalBrain terminaology, or text searching through the files stored in a 'Brain', the storage concept of The Brain Technologies Inc. Rapid Text Construction can build a text at the rate of 25,000 words per day instead of the normal 6,000 to 7,000 words that an author can normally write using traditional word processing methods. Dr Jenkins now frequently practises writing in this manner completing the text "Build eTexts Faster and Better using Rapid Text Construction Techniques" in less than a day. [Download a copy using the link provided.] The book provides a wider background to the issues of Rapid Text Construction and provides a hands-on approach to actually practising this form of text production. You should also go to TEXT CHUNK INFORMATION. You may also register to download the PersonalBrain Navigation Brain for the TEXT CHUNK LIBRARY on this page. 10:59:29 PM |
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Friday, 6 December 2002 |
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Thursday, 15 August 2002 |
Deep LinkingThe practice of listing a URL in an online document, either overtly as in this link http://www.searchenginewatch.com/searchday/02/sd0709-deeplink.html or covertly as in this link to refer a reader to another location on the Internet which may be useful to the reader in this context. It is labelled as deep linking as the reader is not linked to the home page of the referred site, but is linked to a deeper page within the other site. This is fundamental to the way people have accepted electronic language operates. However, there are court cases in some countries endeavouring to restrict deep linking. Deep linking is a key composing and decoding strategy of technate people. Without deep linking a main meaning system is crippled. Opposition to deep linking is perpetrated by people who have a conception of documents derived from the age of literacy where references to such a document cannot be made unless to the whole document. 3:49:05 AM |
