How public-appsdesignlab and informationarchitecture Community Groups of the W3C Meet: Reading J.N. Robbins'"Learning Web Design..." (O'Reilly, 2018

Dear Noreen,
public-appsdesignlab &
public-informationarchitecture


Such convergences of events:

*) The episteme and epistemological rupture, *) the field of discursive
events, *) discursive formations and positivities, *) epistemological
extrapolation and genetic extrapolation

"On the Archaeology of the Sciences: Response to the Epistenology Circle in
"Michel Foucault: Essential Works of Foucault 1954-1984 Vol. 2 Aesthetics,
Method, and Epistemology"" ed. J. Faubion (Penguin Books, 2000) p.297-333
(I have not found it yet in the PDF Library.)

But simply, again using Foucault'words, the reading on such convergences of
events is about "...addressing
itself to the general space of knowledge, to its configurations, and to
the mode of being of the things that appear in it, defines systems of
simultaneity, as well as the series of mutations necessary and sufficient
to circumscribe the threshold of a new positivity". (See "The Order of
Things" p.xxv)

Therefore there may be ones in our day  like "Les Meninas" and "Don
Quixote" for the classical period of "representation" signing the 17th
century Europe (See "The Order of Things" pp. 3-19 and pp. 51-55) . Yet we
may encounter critical situations of everyday lifes asking for solutions,
problems asking for conceptual solutions... (See Deleuze and Guattari in
"What is Philosophy? ch 1. "Concepts") I mentioned above): are technologies
not about concept with their implemetations?



Somewhere the Internet Web, which is only part of a global human society,
there are supposedly an event, or set of collected events, working for such
inventions/discoveries/innovations --of the Internet Web and a global human
society...


R,

Pada Senin, 28 Maret 2022, Noreen Whysel <nwhysel@gmail.com> menulis:

> Thank you, Gunter. This is a fascinating list of convergences between IA,
> Design, Architecture and philosophy.
>
> Noreen
>
> On Mar 27, 2022, at 10:21 PM, Guntur Wiseno Putra <gsenopu@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> Dear publicappsdesignlab &
> public-informationarchitecture
>
>
>
>
> "Architecture": art and science of building (Oxford English Dictionary
> (Green-Yellow Edition)): The Website is architectural: designing the Web
> which is architectural:
>
> These are how public-appsdesignlab and informationarchitecture Community
> Groups of the W3C meet according to J.N. Robbins'"Learning Web Design..."
> (O'Reilly, 2018)
>
> "IT TAKES A VILLAGE
> (WEBSITE CREATION ROLES)
> When I look at a site, I see the multitude of decisions and areas of
> expertise
> that went into building it...".
> p.4
>
> More about the Web there is a linkage between Information Architecture and
> Design:
>
> "...  the various disciplines that contribute
> to the creation of a site, including roles related to content, design, and
> code....
>
> *) Content Wrangling
> Anyone who uses the title “web designer” needs to be aware that everything
> we do supports the process of getting the content, message, or
> functionality
> to our users.
>
> ... two content-related specialists in modern web development: the
> Information Architect (IA) and the Content Strategist.
>
> 1) Information architecture
> An Information Architect (also called an Information Designer) organizes
> the content logically and for ease of findability. They may be responsible
> for search functionality, site diagrams, and how the content and data are
> organized on the server. Information architecture is inevitably entwined
> with
> UX and UI design (defined shortly) as well as content management. If you
> like organizing or are gaga for taxonomies, information architecture may be
> the job for you. The definitive text for this field as it relates to the
> web is
> Information Architecture: For the Web and Beyond, by Louis Rosenfeld and
> Peter Morville (O’Reilly).
>
> 2) Content strategy
> A Content Strategist makes sure that every bit of text on a site, from
> long explanatory
> text down to the labels on buttons, supports the brand identity and mar-
> keting goals of the organization. Content strategy may also extend to data
> modeling and content management on a large and ongoing scale, such as
> planning for content reuse and update schedules. Their responsibilities may
> also include how the organization’s voice is represented on social media. A
> good place to learn more is the book Content Strategy for the Web, 2nd
> Edition,
> by Kristina Halvorson and Melissa Rich (New Riders).
> ...
>
> **) All Manner of Design
> Ah, design! It sounds fairly straightforward, but even this simple
> requirement
> has been divided into a number of specializations when it comes to creating
> sites.
>
> - User Experience, Interaction, and User Interface design
> ... (User research and testing reports, Wireframe diagrams, Site diagram,
> Storyboards and user flow charts) ...
> - Visual (graphic) design
>
>
> ***) Code Slinging
> - Frontend development (Authoring/markup (HTML), Styling (CSS), JavaScript
> and DOM scripting)
> - Backend development
>
> ****) Other Roles
> - Product manager
> - Project manager
> - SEO (Search Engine Optimization) specialist
> - Multimedia producers
>
> ..."
>
> p.4-13 (J.N.Robbins, "Learning Web Design"...)
>
> It reminds me on T. Berners-Lee's "Design Issues: Architectural and
> Philosophical Points"
>
> "Architectural and philosophical points
> These statements of architectural principle explain the thinking behind
> the specifications. These are personal notes by Tim Berners-Lee: they are
> not endorsed by W3C. They are aimed at the technical community, to explain
> reasons, provide a framework to provide consistency for for future
> developments, and avoid repetition of discussions once resolved".
>
> https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Preface.html
>
> https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/
>
> and on "Caught in a Web (Awake)" · Dream Theater (1994)
>
> There are at least --as I could not catch the words clearly
>
> "Caught in a web, looked from the (world!?). Hanging out by threads ..."
>
> https://youtu.be/j_hg6NFab-k
>
> A musical composition is also architectural: "architecture" is about
> "framing":
>
> "The situation of music seems no different and perhaps em-
> bodies the frame even more powerfully. Yet it is said that
> sound has no frame. But compounds of sensation, sonorous
> blocs, equally possess sections or framing fonns each of
> which must join together to secure a certain closing-off...".
>
> (G. Deleuze & F. Guattari, "What is Philosophy" p. 189-91)
>
> https://www.pdfdrive.com/what-is-philosophy-e184603896.html
>
>
>
>
>
> Regard,
> Guntur Wiseno Putra
>
>

Received on Tuesday, 29 March 2022 06:55:46 UTC