Thursday, September 01, 2005
by Nik Kalyani
Thursday, September 01, 2005 4:12:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)

Lately, I have become very interested in the whole tagging/folksonomy phenomenon that seems to be a defining element of Web 2.0. In particular, I am drawn to tag clusters. While tag clouds are great for exploring the relative importance of tags in a simple manner, they don't give you any clues about the relationships among tags. Tag clusters do just that. Rashmi Sinha explains clusters here very well, so I don't have to do it.

So far, I have not seen a very good navigation interface for tag clusters. Flickr tries in vain to provide "clustery goodness," but to be quite honest, their interface is quite lame. While bread-crumb navigation works well within a site, it is bad for navigating clusters because it prevents the user from doing what comes naturally -- exploring. Instead, it forces a single-step hierarchy navigation (which works well for websites) while the user's brain is probably accelerating with the brakes on wanting to see more clusters and the relationships between them.

I think clustering calls out for a Web 2.0 version of a hyperbolic interface. Hyperbolic interfaces lend themselves very well to providing a visual representation of graphs which is basically what tag clusters are (assuming you have a starting tag). You can see this in implementations such as Thinkmap's VisualThesaurus. Unfortunately, VisualThesaurus, like Inxight, went the Java route. This makes it a complete pain to use in any kind of quick and meaningful manner. An ideal solution would be a hyperbolic U.I. that is easily implemented using either Flash or XmlHttp (Ajax). This would be more usable since most people's browsers already support it.

I Googled and came up with only one Flash instance of a pseudo-hyperbolic U.I. that I liked. It was on a marketing company's site -- Renegade Marketing. I emailed them twice about getting the Flash source, free or for a fee. Both my polite inquiries were ignored. (Tangent: Makes me wonder why companies claim to be in the marketing business when they don't even have the ability to do something as simple as acknowledge an email enquiry.). 

Does anyone know of a good, Flash-based, hyperbolic U.I.? I am creating an application that aggregates tag-based information from a variety of sites and then allows exploration of tag clusters and would like to use such a U.I. I will post more details of the application soon.

 

by Nik Kalyani
Thursday, September 01, 2005 3:50:05 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)

If you have made a financial contribution to the Red Cross or other official charitable organizations for the victims of Katrina, forward the payment receipt to donate@speerio.net and let us know your username on Speerio.net. We will add an amount equal to your donation as a credit on the Speerio Online Store. The credit is good for current or future purchases.

People in New Orleans have lost everything and will need a lot of help in getting their lives back together. Prayers and thoughts are needed, but money is also necessary. So please give generously. If the thought of giving Hope to those whose lives are shattered is not enough incentive, I hope the thought of getting current and future Speerio products discounted by the amount of your donation will provide some motivation.

You can contribute to the Red Cross here: http://store.yahoo.com/redcross-donate/

I look forward to the opportunity to give up significant amounts of my future income in the hope of making a difference in somebody's life today. Please give if you haven't already done so. 

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 Saturday, August 20, 2005
by Nik Kalyani
Saturday, August 20, 2005 10:00:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)

Most foreigners I encounter know all about Tintin and Asterix, my two most favorite comics, but most Americans have no idea who they are. I am always puzzled by this.

Spielberg owns the movie rights to Tintin and is reportedly working on a trilogy.

Tintin

 

 

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by Nik Kalyani
Saturday, August 20, 2005 8:10:21 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)

This Optimus keyboard is pretty cool. Each key is an OLED display. This would be fantastic for usability. Imagine having the key icon change based on the shortcut depending on which application you are in.

I hope the production release is more ergonomic than pictured, but I am buying it anyway.

Optimus

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 Thursday, August 18, 2005
by Nik Kalyani
Thursday, August 18, 2005 11:33:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)

Set Godin made an excellent point about the difference between urgent and important in his blog post today. My takeaway was this gem:  You will succeed in the face of change when you make the difficult decisions first.

Quite insightful. Made me think of the Microsoft Solutions Framework which advocates completing the highest risk elements of a project first to increase the chance of success. Although I do not follow the process, it has become almost second-nature for me to start with the most difficult and challenging aspects of a task first. Then, come crunch-time, the going is a lot less difficult than it would otherwise have been and quality is not compromised.

 

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