October 18, 2005

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Update: I have a review copy on my desk. This is a handsome and valuable book. Four-color interior, yet quite reasonable list price of $29.95. Lots of interesting references and ideas. Perhaps the most important thing about this book is that it brings the somewhat maligned craft of search engine optimization into its rightful place as a key element in information architecture and usability. I found a couple of tips that were immediately useful.

Peter Morville has a first-floor window office two short blocks from mine, on the way to my parking spot, so it was fun to knock on his window with a copy of his book. A form of ambient findability, with the book finding its way directly back to its author, like a homing pigeon!



For Immediate Release
For more information, a review copy, cover art, or an interview with the author, contact:
Kathryn Barrett (707) 827-7094 or kathrynb@oreilly.com

What We Find Changes Who We Become
O’Reilly Releases “Ambient Findability”

Sebastopol, CA–Intelligence is moving to the edges, flowing through wireless devices, empowered individuals, and distributed teams. Ideas are spreading like wildfire, and information is in the air, literally. And yet, with the profusion of instantly accessible information, we still experience disorientation. We still wander off the map. How do we make decisions in the information age? How do we know enough to ask the right questions? How do we find the best product, the right person, the data that makes a difference?

In “Ambient Findability” (O’Reilly, US $29.95), Peter Morville searches for the answers in the strange connections between social software, semantic webs, evolutionary psychology, and interaction design. And, he explains how the journey from push to pull is changing not only the rules of marketing and design, but also the nature of authority and the destination of our culture.

“Findability is at the center of a quiet revolution that’s changing who we trust, how we work, where we go, and what we want. And yet nobody’s talking about it because they don’t want to see the big picture,” says Morville. “This book is my attempt to connect the dots and provoke discussion about how the Internet and ubiquitous computing are transforming business, education, and culture.”

As president of Semantic Studios, an information architecture and findability consultancy, Morville has advised such clients as AT&T, IBM, Microsoft, Harvard, Internet2, Proctor & Gamble, Vanguard, Wells Fargo, and Yahoo. Morville is known as one of the fathers of information architecture, having coauthored the field’s bestselling book, “Information Architecture on the World Wide Web” (O’Reilly). His new book is an unusual journey into the emerging reality that lets us find anyone or anything from anywhere at anytime. Both roadmap and manifesto, “Ambient Findability” explains the economic and cultural impact of search and wayfinding technologies, using intriguing examples and full color illustrations throughout.

“At the crossroads of ubiquitous computing and the Internet, we’ve begun to create new interfaces for exporting digital networked information while simultaneously importing vast amounts of data about the physical world into these networks,” explains Morville. “GPS, RFID, sensors, wearables, implants, ingestibles, and other emerging technologies are enabling an Internet of objects we can barely imagine. We’re headed towards ambient findability, a world in which we can find anyone or anything from anywhere at anytime. “However, there are no revolutionary search technologies on the horizon,” he adds. “As the search space grows exponentially, so will the findability challenge. Amazon, eBay, and Google all understand the profit potential of mining the millions of niches the Web makes possible. Those businesses that successfully lower search costs and drive their customers further down the tip of the Long Tail will reap tremendous rewards. In other words, findability will be key to competitive advantage in the coming years.”

Thought-provoking and insightful, “Ambient Findability” will be of interest to any “user experience professionals” who design, build, and manage web sites and interactive products. But the book will also hold appeal for anyone interested in the future of architecture, business, communication, education, design, literacy, marketing, and other areas of work touched by the information age.

“I also hope the book will have an impact on what Brian Eno calls the ‘Big Here and the Long Now.’ I hope it will change how people thing about the world we are creating,” says Morville. “These technologies will have profound social impact. They’re already changing when we work, where we go, who we trust, and how we make decisions. I hope the book helps people anticipate the many possible futures that exist today, so we can more consciously and collectively shape the future we want.”

The concept of “usability” has attracted attention in recent years, but Morville contends that findability will only grow more important as ubiquitous computing and the Internet converge. “I like to say that ‘findability precedes usability, in the alphabet and on the web.’ You can’t use what you can’t find,” says Morville. “The shift from push to pull has huge implications for advertising and marketing. But that’s just the half of it. At the bleeding edge of this revolution we see the scales tipping away from mass media towards the media of the masses. But blogs and Wikipedia are just the beginning. This revolution will transform business, politics, and education.”

“Ambient Findability” is an amazing boundary spanner with insights that may forever change how you think, where you go, what you find, and who you become.

Early praise for “Ambient Findability”:

“A lively, enjoyable and informative tour of a topic that’s only going to become more important.”
–David Weinberger, Author, “Small Pieces Loosely Joined” and “The Cluetrain Manifesto”

“I envy the young scholar who finds this inventive book, by whatever strange means are necessary. The future isn’t just unwritten–it’s unsearched.”
–Bruce Sterling, Writer, Futurist, and Co-Founder, The Electronic Frontier Foundation

Further reviews of the book can be found at:
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/ambient/reviews.html

Additional Resources:

Chapter 1, “Lost and Found,” is available online at:
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/ambient/chapter/index.html

For more information about the book, including table of contents, index, author bio, and samples, see:
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/ambient/index.html

For a cover graphic in JPEG format, go to:
ftp://ftp.ora.com/pub/graphics/book_covers/hi-res/0596007655.jpg

Ambient Findability
Peter Morville
ISBN: 0-596-00765-5, 188 pages, $29.95 US, $41.95 CA order@oreilly.com
1-800-998-9938
1-707-827-7000
http://www.oreilly.com
1005 Gravenstein Highway North
Sebastopol, CA 95472

About O’Reilly
O’Reilly Media, Inc. is the premier information source for leading-edge computer technologies. The company’s books, conferences, and web sites bring to light the knowledge of technology innovators. O’Reilly books, known for the animals on their covers, occupy a treasured place on the shelves of the developers building the next generation of software.
O’Reilly conferences and summits bring alpha geeks and forward-thinking business leaders together to shape the revolutionary ideas that spark new industries. From the Internet to XML, open source, .NET, Java, and web services, O’Reilly puts technologies on the map. For more information:
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O’Reilly is a registered trademark of O’Reilly Media, Inc. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.

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Publishers Marketplace: Recent Deals:

Los Alamos theoretical physicist Stephen M. Younger’s THE ULTIMATE THREAT, on how we ought to think of increasingly widespread threats, while he dispels misinformation about WMDs and suggests how to construct the best practical world consistent with our human nature, to Dan Halpern and Emily Takoudes at Ecco, in a pre-empt, by Christy Fletcher and Donald Lamm at Fletcher & Parry

This sounds like an important book.

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Forbes Celebrity 100

12. Dan Brown

22. J. K. Rowling

68. James Patterson

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The Forbes Celebrity 100

According to the Forbes Celebrity 100, Dan Brown is something of a stealth celebrity. He ranks 6th (!) in terms of pay, but only 27th in terms of web mentions, 39th in terms of press mentions, and 61st in terms of tv mentions.

We’re doing our best to remedy that!

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Origin of Fake Books Sought in Ukraine (WaPo):

KIEV — At open-air markets in Kiev this summer, devotees of Dan Brown, the best-selling author of “The Da Vinci Code,” came upon what looked like an unexpected treat, a sensational new novel exploring a deep Vatican secret.

Its title, “The First Merovingian,” referring to a Dark Ages European dynasty that according to myth descended from Jesus, hinted of a classic Brown story line. The book was written in response to a request that Pope John Paul II had made just before his death, a blurb on the jacket said. On the back of the attractively bound 511-page volume was a photo of Brown.

But when readers opened the hardcover book, they were sorely disappointed. A crude cut-and-paste job, it contained lengthy excerpts from histories of Christianity and the Inquisition interspersed with selections from a 14th-century anthology of short stories.

“This wasn’t an ‘honest’ pirate edition,” said Nikolai Naumenko, editor in chief at Brown’s Russian publisher, AST, which also publishes such American authors as John Grisham and Michael Connolly. “I cannot even describe it as a book. It’s trash.”

You can’t judge a book by its cover?

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ASME Top 40 Magazine Covers

via BoingBoing.

Some great images, but a lot of dreck too.

My favorite:

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Guardian Unlimited Books | News | Solzhenitsyn papers destroyed as old retreat goes up in flames:

A fire has destroyed the country cottage where Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the former Soviet dissident, wrote some of his most famous works and stored part of his family’s archive.

The dacha near the village of Rodzhestvo, outside Moscow, was acquired by Solzhenitsyn in 1965. The dissident retreated there after his expulsion from the Soviet Union Of Writers and wrote the seminal account of his time in the Soviet prison camps system, The Gulag Archipelago. Solzhenitsyn won the Nobel prize for literature in 1970 and returned to post-Soviet Russia in 1994 after 20 years’ exile.

sad. I would have liked to see the place where Solzhenitysn wrote THE GULAG ARCHIPELAGO.

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Publishers Marketplace: Recent Deals:

Los Alamos theoretical physicist Stephen M. Younger’s THE ULTIMATE THREAT, on how we ought to think of increasingly widespread threats, while he dispels misinformation about WMDs and suggests how to construct the best practical world consistent with our human nature, to Dan Halpern and Emily Takoudes at Ecco, in a pre-empt, by Christy Fletcher and Donald Lamm at Fletcher & Parry

This sounds like an important book.


Posted by wfzimmerman to Proliferated at 10/18/2005 07:47:22 AM

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Forbes Celebrity 100

12. Dan Brown

22. J. K. Rowling

68. James Patterson


Posted by wfzimmerman to What’s New for Book-Lovers at 10/18/2005 07:26:09 AM

Tags: , , ,

The Forbes Celebrity 100

According to the Forbes Celebrity 100, Dan Brown is something of a stealth celebrity. He ranks 6th (!) in terms of pay, but only 27th in terms of web mentions, 39th in terms of press mentions, and 61st in terms of tv mentions.

We’re doing our best to remedy that!


Posted by wfzimmerman to The Solomon Key and Beyond: Dan Brown News at 10/18/2005 07:24:09 AM

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