This document discusses future-friendly content and how to create it through domain modeling and content design. It begins with research to understand the subject domain and extract relevant concepts and relationships. A domain model is created to represent the information space. Content is then structured according to this model. Interfaces can be designed based on the content models, using content as design material. The process creates content that is scalable, cross-channel ready, and accessible to both humans and machines.
Price simulator functionality addresses all variables influencing main stream revenues and helps answering many questions when creating pricing scenarios.
Maps are more than just diagrams of the route from A to B – to draw one is to bring together the whole view of our surrounding world so that we can gain a better understanding of it. Even a single, simple example has the ability to delight, unsettle and reveal truths. In politically-charged environments an objective visual map can reinforce, influence or challenge held perceptions and beliefs, making them a vital tool in designing pliable, people-focused content systems that are fit for purpose. Their proactive and reactive qualities force ourselves and others to see things as they really are; to contemplate the relationship between them and how they vary together.
Presented at UX Scotland 2014 in Edinburgh on 19th June 2014.
Templates, trainings, threats: I’ve tried everything to get content from clients and colleagues sooner—and mobile hasn’t made things easier. Instead of planning pages, now we’re asking stakeholders to prioritize and manage a million bits of modular content.
So how do we keep our subject-matter experts from feeling overwhelmed, prevent carousel-obsessed executives from endless homepage arguments, and get the content we need to make design and development decisions?
The answer is in using content strategy as a means to orchestrate, not dictate.
Content Strategy: The Method Behind the (CMS) MadnessCarrie Hane
As a developer, you know how to build structured content, understand relational databases, and make all the pieces come to life. But do you know where it comes from, what it's meant to do, and how authors will interact with it? In this session, we'll go from ideation to launching a site that is useful and usable. Learn what content strategy brings to the process and the questions developers need to ask for a CMS to fully support its content. Leave knowing you can build a system that allows non-technical people to effectively manage content.
To win at digital, content must be easy to find, shareable, and available across all channels and devices across the internet. Behind all good content is the right content management system. As a developer, you know how to build structured content, understand relational databases, and make all the pieces come to life. But do you know where the content comes from? What is it meant to do? How do authors need to interact with it? In this session, we'll put all the pieces together from inception of an idea to launching a website that is useful and usable. Learn what content strategy brings to the process and what questions developers need to ask for the CMS to fully support the content. Leave knowing you can build a system that allows non-technical people to effectively manage content.
Why do they call it Linked Data when they want to say...?Oscar Corcho
The four Linked Data publishing principles established in 2006 seem to be quite clear and well understood by people inside and outside the core Linked Data and Semantic Web community. However, not only when discussing with outsiders about the goodness of Linked Data but also when reviewing papers for the COLD workshop series, I find myself, in many occasions, going back again to the principles in order to see whether some approach for Web data publication and consumption is actually Linked Data or not. In this talk we will review some of the current approaches that we have for publishing data on the Web, and we will reflect on why it is sometimes so difficult to get into an agreement on what we understand by Linked Data. Furthermore, we will take the opportunity to describe yet another approach that we have been working on recently at the Center for Open Middleware, a joint technology center between Banco Santander and Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, in order to facilitate Linked Data consumption.
Price simulator functionality addresses all variables influencing main stream revenues and helps answering many questions when creating pricing scenarios.
Maps are more than just diagrams of the route from A to B – to draw one is to bring together the whole view of our surrounding world so that we can gain a better understanding of it. Even a single, simple example has the ability to delight, unsettle and reveal truths. In politically-charged environments an objective visual map can reinforce, influence or challenge held perceptions and beliefs, making them a vital tool in designing pliable, people-focused content systems that are fit for purpose. Their proactive and reactive qualities force ourselves and others to see things as they really are; to contemplate the relationship between them and how they vary together.
Presented at UX Scotland 2014 in Edinburgh on 19th June 2014.
Templates, trainings, threats: I’ve tried everything to get content from clients and colleagues sooner—and mobile hasn’t made things easier. Instead of planning pages, now we’re asking stakeholders to prioritize and manage a million bits of modular content.
So how do we keep our subject-matter experts from feeling overwhelmed, prevent carousel-obsessed executives from endless homepage arguments, and get the content we need to make design and development decisions?
The answer is in using content strategy as a means to orchestrate, not dictate.
Content Strategy: The Method Behind the (CMS) MadnessCarrie Hane
As a developer, you know how to build structured content, understand relational databases, and make all the pieces come to life. But do you know where it comes from, what it's meant to do, and how authors will interact with it? In this session, we'll go from ideation to launching a site that is useful and usable. Learn what content strategy brings to the process and the questions developers need to ask for a CMS to fully support its content. Leave knowing you can build a system that allows non-technical people to effectively manage content.
To win at digital, content must be easy to find, shareable, and available across all channels and devices across the internet. Behind all good content is the right content management system. As a developer, you know how to build structured content, understand relational databases, and make all the pieces come to life. But do you know where the content comes from? What is it meant to do? How do authors need to interact with it? In this session, we'll put all the pieces together from inception of an idea to launching a website that is useful and usable. Learn what content strategy brings to the process and what questions developers need to ask for the CMS to fully support the content. Leave knowing you can build a system that allows non-technical people to effectively manage content.
Why do they call it Linked Data when they want to say...?Oscar Corcho
The four Linked Data publishing principles established in 2006 seem to be quite clear and well understood by people inside and outside the core Linked Data and Semantic Web community. However, not only when discussing with outsiders about the goodness of Linked Data but also when reviewing papers for the COLD workshop series, I find myself, in many occasions, going back again to the principles in order to see whether some approach for Web data publication and consumption is actually Linked Data or not. In this talk we will review some of the current approaches that we have for publishing data on the Web, and we will reflect on why it is sometimes so difficult to get into an agreement on what we understand by Linked Data. Furthermore, we will take the opportunity to describe yet another approach that we have been working on recently at the Center for Open Middleware, a joint technology center between Banco Santander and Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, in order to facilitate Linked Data consumption.
Since its debut in 2010, Apache Spark has become one of the most popular Big Data technologies in the Apache open source ecosystem. In addition to enabling processing of large data sets through its distributed computing architecture, Spark provides out-of-the-box support for machine learning, streaming and graph processing in a single framework. Spark has been supported by companies like Microsoft, Google, Amazon and IBM and in financial services, companies like Blackrock (http://bit.ly/1Q1DVJH ) and Bloomberg (http://bit.ly/29LXbPv ) have started to integrate Apache Spark into their tool chain and the interest is growing. Unlike other big-data technologies which require intensive programming using Java etc., Spark enables data scientists to work with a big-data technology using higher level languages like Python and R making it accessible to conduct experiments and for rapid prototyping.
In this talk, we will introduce Apache Spark and discuss the key features that differentiate Apache Spark from other technologies. We will provide examples on how Apache Spark can help scale analytics and discuss how the machine learning API could be used to solve large-scale machine learning problems using Spark’s distributed computing framework. We will also illustrate enterprise use cases for scaling analytics with Apache Spark.
PhD defense : Multi-points of view semantic enrichment of folksonomiesFreddy Limpens
This thesis, set at the crossroads of Social Web and Semantic Web, is an attempt to bridge Social tagging-based systems with structured representations such as thesauri or ontologies (in the informatics sense). Folksonomies resulting from the use of social tagging systems suffer from a lack of precision that hinders their potentials to retrieve or exchange information. This thesis proposes supporting the use of folksonomies with formal languages and ontologies from the Semantic Web. Automatic processing of tags allows bootstraping the process by using a combination of a custom method analyzing tags' labels and adapted methods analyzing the structure of folksonomies. The contributions of users are described thanks to our model SRTag, which allows supporting diverging points of view, and captured thanks to our user friendly interface allowing the users to structure tags while searching the folksonomy. Conflicts between individual points of view are detected, solved, and then exploited to help a referent user maintain a global and coherent structuring of the folksonomy, which is in return used to garanty the coherence while enriching individual contributions with the others' contributions. The result of our method allows enhancing the navigation within tag-based knowledge systems, but can also serve as a basis for building thesauri fed by a truly bottom up process.
Large-scale Reasoning with a Complex Cultural Heritage Ontology (CIDOC CRM) ...Vladimir Alexiev, PhD, PMP
Vladimir Alexiev, Dimitar Manov, Jana Parvanova and Svetoslav Petrov. In proceedings of workshop Practical Experiences with CIDOC CRM and its Extensions (CRMEX 2013) at TPDL 2013, 26 Sep 2013, Valetta, Malta
Plenary talk given at the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2009 (28 -30 July 2009, University of Essex) by Michael Smethurst, BBC and Matthew Wood, BBC.
See http://iwmw.ukoln.ac.uk/iwmw2009/talks/smethurst/ and
http://lanyrd.com/2009/iwmw09/srftg/
Smart Social Summit 2017 | Tomorrow's Customer Experience is Happening Today:...Spredfast
We’ve heard Seth Godin’s famous assertion, “Content marketing is the only marketing left.” But “content marketing” now means a world of interactivity, immersive experiences, user-generated content, technological innovation and more. How are you balancing your consumers' needs with your need to stand out? Join these content marketing experts as they share their secrets and content marketing strategies for successful content marketing today and tomorrow.
Why Semantics Matter? Adding the semantic edge to your content,right from au...Ontotext
We’ll address a few of the basic industry pain points and show how semantics can come to the rescue, including:
How semantics can add value across the various phases of digital product development lifecycle.
Contextual authoring and content curation through automated editorial workflow solutions.
Enhanced content discoverability through relevant recommendations.
Coming together of bulletproof content delivery platform and dynamic semantic publishing technology
Experience is more than how someone interacts with a single screen or in a single website or product. It is the feeling they get when encountering something. Something like your brand, your organization, your employees. Now more than ever, people have many encounters with a single entity across properties and channels–sometimes in the span of minutes. Organizations who ignore the context of their audience and fail to make the experience seamless do so at the peril of their own survival.
Let’s explore how to weave a web of rich connections between your content, systems, and the humans involved in every experience. Using the framework laid out in her book Designing Connected Content, Carrie will show how systems thinking combined with design thinking unifies the people producing digital products and channels to fulfill the promise of a true omnichannel experience.
You, or perhaps you and your team, know that content is critical to establish and reinforce your brand culture and to help differentiate your product or service, but it takes time to produce. How do you know what content to produce, how to atomize it across channels, what channels to select, and on and on...But, perhaps most importantly, how do you know if it's working?
Taxonomies help organize, categorize, and relate content. But before that, you need a model for that content. This session looks at content models from a new angle and how to use taxonomy to bring content to life. A model of the types of content and their relationships reveals the many ways content types can be classified to improve findability. When taxonomies are woven into the fabric of your content, internal search becomes easier to facet and sort, and curation is dynamic and ongoing. It’s a perfect match of content strategy and information architecture. Content models and taxonomies really are BFFs.
How to Put Content First in the Design ProcessCarrie Hane
Content is the whole point of the digital products you create. But many teams struggle with how to get content up front. How can you make the shift to a content-first design process? The answer is to use content as design material.
"Design is the method of putting form and content together." -- Paul Rand
We’ll explore how to shift how the way you and your design team approach projects. Hint: It doesn’t start with words, it starts with context and structure. When everyone knows what they are creating and why, projects run more smoothly, stay on time and budget, and are never late because of content. As a bonus, stakeholders get involved when their input is valuable and long before you show them what the product will look like.
Designing Connected Content With Craft CMSCarrie Hane
Content is the whole point of the digital products you create. It needs to be omni-channel, ready for AI and machine learning, and easily maintained. But many teams struggle with how to get content up front, maintain it once it’s published, and make sure it’s ready for the future. As a Craft developer, you already have the tools to support a connected content framework. Structured content creates relationships, connects to other systems, and allows for personalised customer experiences.
We’ll answer your most pressing questions about incorporating content strategy into your work, including:
- How can you contribute to the planning phase of web projects?
- How to get real content to work with during implementation?
- What does a CMS developer need to ask for?
- How do you educate clients on the benefits of doing and the consequences of not putting content first?
- How to build your team’s confidence and trust the design and content you get?
- What makes your CMS and content future-proof and maintainable?
Are you designing boxes to be filled up with content or are you creating usable designs for the content? Content is the whole point of the digital products you create. But many teams struggle with how to get content up front. Whatever your role, you need to worry about content – or work with someone who does. When we start with context and give structure to the content, we can create multiple windows into a world. Flip the process. Design structure first. Work in layers to make interface designs that help people make better sense of the information they need. This webinar will provide an introduction to a content-first design process that starts with content, not pixels. Come explore the intersection of information architecture, content strategy, design, and development to create a useful, usable, delightful user experience.
Connected Content: The Future of InformationCarrie Hane
The last decade has seen an explosion of channels and devices. And the pace of change is only accelerating. How do you prepare for the next disruption? Are you ready for the new frontier where we interact with our voice rather than clicking, tapping, and reading? It’s time for an end-to-end process for building a structured content framework. One that lets you plan and design interfaces and content delivery systems that meet the needs of today and are ready for the opportunities of tomorrow. Discover a design method that starts with content, not pixels, by showing the interplay of content strategy, content design, and content management.
Creating a User-Centered-Online-Communications-ProcessCarrie Hane
When you design your content from the inside-out, you focus on the core tasks your audience needs to accomplish. Before you start writing a word, you need to identify what the content is supposed to accomplish, what the readers’ needs are, where people are coming from, and what they will do after reading the information. Here's a process for creating content that starts with asking questions and ends with measuring how well it works.
Content-First Websites: From Theory to RealityCarrie Hane
What does "content first" really mean? How can we go beyond the words and incorporate back-end content strategy into our development? How does it change the web design and development process? How does it make websites better?
Planning appropriate structure, technology, and processes to support content reuse leads to adaptable and reusable content that is future-friendly and device agnostic. Wherever you are in your governance cycle, there is a way to get started. During this session, we’ll walk through a process to put content first in a collaborative environment and find the best way to deliver valuable websites, no matter where you’re starting.
The amount of content that exists today is staggering, and growing exponentially. The need to organize and structure it has never been greater. But with silos strong within organizations and stronger across them, how do we align people to set priorities? A website is too downstream and political to solve IA and content problems. But a subject domain model is one way to gain a clearer picture of the universe outside of any interface.
A domain model is a representation of the concepts within a subject area, while a content model represents the content and their structure and relationships.
Talk given at World IA Day DC in February 2017
Ghosts of Content Strategy: Past, Present, and FutureCarrie Hane
More and more organizations and leaders are realizing that content is the whole point of their websites. They want someone to be in charge of that content but aren’t really sure how to make that happen. Are you caught in the middle of this quandary? This presentation provides thoughts on:
• The state of content strategy - how we got here and where it’s going
• The emerging distinction between front-end and back-end content strategy
• How to make it happen where you are and move the discipline forward
Building Your Own Content Strategy RoadmapCarrie Hane
Your website is filled with content––but does it have a purpose? Does it help your association meet its strategic goals, increase member value, or help members grow in their own professions? Once you have a content strategy, you’ll be able to understand and articulate why content should exist. You’ll be able to use this to assess the content you already have, and make sure your staff and members create smart, actionable content in the future. Further, you will understand how to leverage today’s and tomorrow’s technologies, so your association’s content can be found and used anywhere, on any device. Join top association content strategists to learn how to put together a content strategy that works for your organization. Learn how you can incorporate content strategy tactics and processes into what you do now.
Businesses want return on their web investment. To do that, user experience professionals need to step out from behind the screen, take a seat at the table, balance user and business needs, and create a positive environment for change. Armed with an approach I sometimes call “strategic nagging,” this is the story of how I became a change agent using IA and content strategy to transform the 160-year-old American Society of Civil Engineers for a digital-first world.
Let’s talk about honing the empathic, organisational, and analytical skills we already have to diffuse disruption and work with people and processes, as well as information. Patience and persistence makes our message pervasive so we can motivate decision-makers, find allies, persuade detractors, and provide direction to practitioners.
When I became ASCE’s Web Director in January 2013, I thought I’d tinker with some content management issues, help rewrite some content, and provide governance guidance. Little did I know that I would use change management tactics disguised as web strategy, design, and development to get them to adopt an overarching digital strategy to better reach its members, grow revenue, and start to make stuff that really matters. We’re reaching a pivotal moment, and this is the story so far.
Web Content Strategy in a Multi-Channel WorldCarrie Hane
Content strategy is more important than ever as we publish to many outlets to serve many audiences. The key is to keep your message and voice consistent by planning for all the channels.
NOTE: This lacks examples since the talk was part of a panel in which another speaker gave examples of putting these ideas into practice.
User focused content strategy that is just rightCarrie Hane
Presentation from User Focus 2012 in Chevy Chase, MD. Think your organization or project is too small for content strategy? Don’t know where to start on the massive project you’ve just been handed? Want to incorporate it into you current organization/agency/team’s process? Regardless of the size of your team, organization, or project, you can do content strategy. We’ll break down content strategy into its parts and show how anyone can fit it into what they do, stealthily or blatantly, whichever way works for you. We’ll also show you ways to sell it to your boss and evaluate your strategy’s success.
Content First – Planning Drupal Content TypesCarrie Hane
Content types make Drupal flexible. This presentation talks about how to define content types and why it is important to plan the CMS build by thinking about content first.
# Internet Security: Safeguarding Your Digital World
In the contemporary digital age, the internet is a cornerstone of our daily lives. It connects us to vast amounts of information, provides platforms for communication, enables commerce, and offers endless entertainment. However, with these conveniences come significant security challenges. Internet security is essential to protect our digital identities, sensitive data, and overall online experience. This comprehensive guide explores the multifaceted world of internet security, providing insights into its importance, common threats, and effective strategies to safeguard your digital world.
## Understanding Internet Security
Internet security encompasses the measures and protocols used to protect information, devices, and networks from unauthorized access, attacks, and damage. It involves a wide range of practices designed to safeguard data confidentiality, integrity, and availability. Effective internet security is crucial for individuals, businesses, and governments alike, as cyber threats continue to evolve in complexity and scale.
### Key Components of Internet Security
1. **Confidentiality**: Ensuring that information is accessible only to those authorized to access it.
2. **Integrity**: Protecting information from being altered or tampered with by unauthorized parties.
3. **Availability**: Ensuring that authorized users have reliable access to information and resources when needed.
## Common Internet Security Threats
Cyber threats are numerous and constantly evolving. Understanding these threats is the first step in protecting against them. Some of the most common internet security threats include:
### Malware
Malware, or malicious software, is designed to harm, exploit, or otherwise compromise a device, network, or service. Common types of malware include:
- **Viruses**: Programs that attach themselves to legitimate software and replicate, spreading to other programs and files.
- **Worms**: Standalone malware that replicates itself to spread to other computers.
- **Trojan Horses**: Malicious software disguised as legitimate software.
- **Ransomware**: Malware that encrypts a user's files and demands a ransom for the decryption key.
- **Spyware**: Software that secretly monitors and collects user information.
### Phishing
Phishing is a social engineering attack that aims to steal sensitive information such as usernames, passwords, and credit card details. Attackers often masquerade as trusted entities in email or other communication channels, tricking victims into providing their information.
### Man-in-the-Middle (MitM) Attacks
MitM attacks occur when an attacker intercepts and potentially alters communication between two parties without their knowledge. This can lead to the unauthorized acquisition of sensitive information.
### Denial-of-Service (DoS) and Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) Attacks
Bridging the Digital Gap Brad Spiegel Macon, GA Initiative.pptxBrad Spiegel Macon GA
Brad Spiegel Macon GA’s journey exemplifies the profound impact that one individual can have on their community. Through his unwavering dedication to digital inclusion, he’s not only bridging the gap in Macon but also setting an example for others to follow.
1.Wireless Communication System_Wireless communication is a broad term that i...JeyaPerumal1
Wireless communication involves the transmission of information over a distance without the help of wires, cables or any other forms of electrical conductors.
Wireless communication is a broad term that incorporates all procedures and forms of connecting and communicating between two or more devices using a wireless signal through wireless communication technologies and devices.
Features of Wireless Communication
The evolution of wireless technology has brought many advancements with its effective features.
The transmitted distance can be anywhere between a few meters (for example, a television's remote control) and thousands of kilometers (for example, radio communication).
Wireless communication can be used for cellular telephony, wireless access to the internet, wireless home networking, and so on.
This 7-second Brain Wave Ritual Attracts Money To You.!nirahealhty
Discover the power of a simple 7-second brain wave ritual that can attract wealth and abundance into your life. By tapping into specific brain frequencies, this technique helps you manifest financial success effortlessly. Ready to transform your financial future? Try this powerful ritual and start attracting money today!
Multi-cluster Kubernetes Networking- Patterns, Projects and GuidelinesSanjeev Rampal
Talk presented at Kubernetes Community Day, New York, May 2024.
Technical summary of Multi-Cluster Kubernetes Networking architectures with focus on 4 key topics.
1) Key patterns for Multi-cluster architectures
2) Architectural comparison of several OSS/ CNCF projects to address these patterns
3) Evolution trends for the APIs of these projects
4) Some design recommendations & guidelines for adopting/ deploying these solutions.
APNIC Foundation, presented by Ellisha Heppner at the PNG DNS Forum 2024APNIC
Ellisha Heppner, Grant Management Lead, presented an update on APNIC Foundation to the PNG DNS Forum held from 6 to 10 May, 2024 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
5. MISSION BRIEFING
50
@CARRIEHD
1. Future-Friendly Content - What is it and why do you need it?
2. How it starts: Research
3. Understanding the subject domain
4. Bring it to life with content design
5. Using your models for interface design
8. IA SUMMIT 2015
8
Goal: Create a future-friendly presence for annual event
Need: Anticipate every future event, not just 2015
Audience: Information architects and content strategists (No pressure!)
Outcome: Met our goals by practicing the same information architecture and
content strategy methods we’re sharing today
0
@CARRIEHD
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RESOURCES WITHIN.
@CARRIEHD
12. RESEARCH
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13. DESIGN BEGINS WITH WORDS
13
Design starts from sharing a common language
Information spaces have contextual concepts, relationships, and rules
Our fundamental design is a model of connected concepts in a ‘subject domain’
The interfaces we then create are representations of that abstract space
0
@CARRIEHD
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GETTING HOLD OF THE WORDS
150
@CARRIEHD
is each event an instance of
the overall ‘conference’?
is the topic always
the same?
new location each year?
is this a type of
talk or a duration?
can a speaker also
give a workshop?
Is a keynote different
to a speaker?what are people giving
workshops called?
all sessions have
variable duration?
is this kind of topic like
the main event topic?
ticketing? availability?
workshops only?
difficulty? which
session types?
different venue for
each session!
is social just a
kind of session?
can volunteers also be
speakers? what about in
the future?
is a sponsor always
associated with a
session?
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CONCEPTS EXTRACTED
160
@CARRIEHD
Brand: The overall brand, distinct from specific events.
Event: The 2016 IA Summit is an event.
Location: Place the event is held. Different city each year.
Venue: Within the location, a specific venue (usually a hotel)
houses the event.
Hotel: The ‘official’ hotel for attendee accommodation. Usually
this is the same as the event venue, though not necessarily.
Person: An individual associated with one or more events.
Role: The specific role (such as a speaker, co-chair, or
volunteer) a person has within an event. A person may hold
one or more roles for the same event.
Topic: May refer to the subject theme of a specific session, or
an overall event.
Session: A specific occurrence within an event, such as a
workshop or social.
Session format: The type of session, such as 45m talk, social, or
workshop.
Track: A thematic grouping of sessions
Sponsor: Company who sponsors an event or specific session
19. CONCEPTS
19
Concepts hold specific meaning within a subject domain
We define them at a generalised level to which specific examples can be applied
Concepts have their own descriptive properties
0
@CARRIEHD
20. RELATIONSHIPS
20
Relationship values explain how concepts connect in reality
They help to define the structure of the working model outside of an interface
Explaining in an interface ‘how’ ideas connect supports learning through linking
0
@CARRIEHD
21. THE DOMAIN MODEL
21
The domain model is our working model of how the concepts and relationships
within a specific subject domain fit together
It is not intended as a sitemap, nor should it be limited by our content inventory
It aims to describe the subject complexity and we can decide later which parts of
the model we want to expose in our interface
Domain models model truth, not websites
0
@CARRIEHD
22. afpkbv=qebjb=m^RhpW=alj^fk=jlabi
MODELING THE INFORMATION SPACE
220
@CARRIEHD
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27. @CARRIEHD / @MIKEATHERTON
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29. CROSS-CHANNEL READY
29
Meaning and relationships stored in a database, represented in an interface
Build many different interfaces to represent the same content and structure
Ready for visual redesigns or new devices yet to come.
0
@CARRIEHD
30. Rl_lqJRb^a^_ib
CREATE CONTENT FOR CONSUMPTION BY HUMANS,
SEARCH BOTS, AND ALGORITHMS
ALLOW CONTENT TO BE PUBLISHED ON EXTERNAL
PLATFORMS WHILE RETAINING INTEGRITY
ALLOW YOUR CONTENT TO BE AVAILABLE AS AN API FOR
THIRD-PARTY USE.
@CARRIEHD
31. SCALABLE FOR THE FUTURE
31
Create a structure to support a lot of content
Accommodate current and future content inventory
Build connections and create a knowledge network across subjects
0
@CARRIEHD / @MIKEATHERTON
33. PLAN FOR IMPLEMENTATION
33
Working as a team
Understanding content management
The Future-Friendly CMS
Understanding Content Type
Planning for Display
0
@CARRIEHD
34. MISSION NEARLY COMPLETE
340
@CARRIEHD
1. Future-Friendly Content - What is it and why do you need it?
2. How it starts: Research
3. Understanding the subject domain
4. Bring it to life with content design
5. Using your models for interface design
40. CONTENT AS DESIGN MATERIAL - DYNAMIC DISPLAY - SPEAKERS
400
@CARRIEHD / @MIKEATHERTON
41. CONTENT AS DESIGN MATERIAL - DYNAMIC DISPLAY - TEAM
410
@CARRIEHD / @MIKEATHERTON
42. CONTENT AS DESIGN MATERIAL - TEMPLATES
420
@CARRIEHD / @MIKEATHERTON
Username
Twitter ID
Bio
Main Event
Session date, start time -
end time
Session Name
RolePicture
43. @CARRIEHD
t b = p e l r i a = ^ it^v p = _ b = i l l h f k d = q l = j ^ h b =
^ = ` i b ^ k = p v p q b j = t f q e = ^ k = f k q b R c^ ` b =
R b ^ a v = q l = _ b = r p b a = _ v = ^ = p v p q b j = t e f ` e =
e ^ p k D q = v b q = _ b b k = f k s b k q b a K =
TIM BERNERS-LEE, 2008
51. MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
510
@CARRIEHD
1. What is Future-Friendly Content? Why do you want to have it?
2. How it starts: Research
3. Understanding the subject domain model
4. Bring it to life with content design
5. Using your models for interface design
52. @CARRIEHD
a l = t e ^q = v l r = a l = _ b p qI =
^ k a = i f k h = q l = q e b = R b p qK
— JEFF JARVIS
53. CONTACT ME
] ` ^ R R f b e a =
q^ k w b k ` l k p r iq f k d K ` l j