Results 231 to 240 of about 2,539,971 (262)

Information Architecture

2016
Due to the large number of information circulating on the Internet we must find ways of filtering, replicating and managing the flow of information. Castells (2006, p.8) states that the “Internet is a medium that allows for the first time, the communication of many to many, at any chosen time, on a global scale.” Therefore Information Architecture (IA)
Cláudio Roberto Magalhães Pessoa   +3 more
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Information Architecture

Interactions, 2003
Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web <br> Christina Wodtke <br> New Riders, Indianapolis, 2003 <br> ISBN 0-7357-1250-6 $29.99
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Information architecture

Proceedings of the twelfth ACM conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia - HYPERTEXT '01, 2001
Hypertext has always been about allowing us to connect information in creative and useful ways. Anything can be linked to anything. This is the promise and problem of hypertext. It is possible to link things well but far easier to link things badly. The result is spaghetti writing to go with our spaghetti code, masses of senseless trails and tunnels ...
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Information Architecture

1997
Abstract Throughout this book, I’ve hammered away at traditional approaches to information management—the techno-utopian view that all human needs can be “engineered,” structured to fit into a computer, designed via an architectural blueprint.
Thomas H Davenport, Laurence Prusak
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Information Architecture

2014
This chapter analyzes the definition, origins, and evolution of Information Architecture (IA), discusses IA principles, the need to understand IA, the problems that can be solved by IA, and IA in practice. It also discusses the characteristic patterns of IA to comprehensively understand IA from five aspects, such as core concepts, research objects ...
Xiaoying Zhou, Xiumei Zhang
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Information architecture

Work Study, 1999
Most organisations, in spite of the attention and investment focused on ERP software, have a number of discrete computer systems that operate independently of one another. In addition to the problems of unmanageability, this results in an inability to fully exploit the information resources available.
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