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Glut: Mastering Information Through The Ages





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More details of book titled: Glut: Mastering Information Through The Ages

Glut: Mastering Information Through The Ages

Author: Alex Wright
Published: 2007-06-01
List price: $27.95
Our price: $18.45
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Customer comments on this selection.

vBulletin Good start doesn't carry through
I looked forward to this book with much anticipation and for the first half I was not disappointed. The descriptions of different approaches for managing information through the ages were both interesting and useful as a comparison point for current topics. However, once the book got into the 20th century I found that the coverage was both simplistic and also patchy. The examples and `history of information management, storage and representation in the computer age in particular were very web/hypertext specific and ignored many areas of progress and solutions from the corporate arena. I also found that there was a paucity of useful suggestions for what may be appropriate to address the problem with the book representing a viewpoint that the web will fix itself and everything which seems naïve.

vBulletin The history of information
br /Alex Wright is a journalist and an information architect who argues that networked information systems are derived from monasticism, mythology, print technologies and computers. All information systems are either nondemocratic and top-down (a hierarchy) or peer-to-peer and open (a network). br / br /"An organization chart is a kind of hierarchy in which employees are grouped into departments. Other types of hierarchies include government bureaucracies, biological taxonomies, or a system of menus in a software application.... A network, by contrast, emerges from the bottom up; individuals function as autonomous nodes, negotiating their own relationships.... Democracy is a kind of network, so is a flock of birds, or the World Wide Web." br / br /Wright argues that networks and hierarchies collide, spawn, and reinforce one another constantly. The Gutenberg printing press allowed for the wide dissemination of previously exclusive information. Today, publishing houses disseminate information hierarchically. br / br /"Internet users continue to congregate in small groups that often take shape outside traditional institutional containers. While this tendency toward self-organization might seem like an effect of the Internet's democratic architecture, such behavior also harkens back to our deepest-rooted social instincts.... On the scale of evolutionary history, institutions remain a short-lived hypothesis. For tens of thousands of years, human beings have interacted as social animals, following unwritten norms strengthened by kinship, reinforced by the limbic responses that strengthen our personal relationships, and transmitted through the spoken word. Today, we are seeing those instincts returning to the fore, as people adapt new technologies to invoke the ancient, emotional circuitry that carried us through the age before the dawn of symbols." br / br /Wright is a very clear writer, who covers a vast amount of ground in a very interesting manner. His "aim in writing this book is to resist the tug of mystical techno-futurism and approach the story of the information age by looking squarely backward. ... From the vantage point of the digital age, we can approach the history of the information age in a new light. To do so requires stepping outside of traditional disciplinary constructs, however, in search of a new storyline. ... I traverse a number of topics not usually brought together in one volume: evolutionary biology, cultural anthropology, mythology, monasticism, the history of printing, the scientific method, eighteenth-century taxonomies, Victorian librarianship, and the early history of computers, to name a few." br / br /For a generalist reader like myself, this is an absolutely fascinating book. Of course, Alex Wright cannot be an expert in every single field he discusses. He provides a superb bibliography which, even better, he maintains on his personal website, so that a reader can check not only his sources, but updates as new information becomes available. br / br /I wish other authors would maintain their bibliographies on line. This book is worth buying simply to reward Wright's initiative. br / br /Robert C. Ross 2008

vBulletin Fascinating
Alex Wright is an information architect and a self-styled generalist. He uses biology, neurology, culture, mythology, history, library science, and information science to trace information from the Ice Age to What is wrong with today's Internet and he does this in 252 pgs. (+notes, appendicies, and index)! br / br /The book never makes the reader feel pressured by it's condensed nature. Instead the pace allows for a tapestry of colorful characters and events. There is plenty of material for the average reader to have familiarity with and lots of interesting new facets of information to discover. br / br /The appendicies: John Wilkin's Universal Catagories, Thomas Jefferson's 1783 Catalog of Books, The Dewey Decimal System, and S.R. Ranganathan's Colon Classification, give some idea of the range and depth of the topics covered. An error on pg. 188 lists Appendix E for the current Universal Decimal Classification. This appendix does not exist. This still did not deter me from rating the book 5 Stars. This was the most interesting book that I read in 2007!

vBulletin Get Glut
I have a lot of books in my `to read' pile, but Glut went straight to the top. I knew it was going to be well researched and insightful, but I was surprised at how much fun I had reading it. I'm a big fan of arcane knowledge and quotable tidbits, and this book was full of both. Thanks to Alex for unearthing this knowledge that I now dispense liberally. br / br /Hard to think of a page-turner in the field of information management, but one exists, and Alex Wright wrote it. br / br /I'm not a big one for building a personal library. i usually read a book, then gift to a friend with the condition that they then pass it on. In this case, you may borrow my copy of Glut, but it needs to be returned to me. It's earned a spot on my bookshelf!

vBulletin excellent look at information
I am a graphic designer working on a thesis in information graphics. This book is easily the best book I have read in the course of my research. The style is quick and engaging. The information moves from a biologic look at how evolution may have driven the way we separate and categorize information - To historic looks at how information has been used. It is not specifically targeted at designers like Tufte's work, but I would recommend it for anyone interested in an overview of how information is used.

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