Stephen E. Arnold: HP PR – Another Example of How Broken Modern Search Is…

IO Impotency
Stephen E. Arnold
Stephen E. Arnold

A Sales Pitch for HP IDOL

Conceptual search allows users to search by concepts and ideas within information rather than basic keywords and phrases. Great idea, except that that the idea of conceptual search has been around since 1999. HP is touting it as a entirely brand new idea in the article, “Analytics For Human Information: Optimize Information Categorization With HP IDOL” posted on its own Web site. Rather than break directly into the “new” conceptual search, we are given the even better glittery term “categorization.” HP IDOL, using ExploreCloud-an SaaS solution for analytics and sights, offers an auto-categorization feature marked as a time saver and productive tool.

HP describes it as a magic tool:

“Powered by HP IDOL, ExploreCloud helps you uncover insights across all channels: web, mobile, social media, email, contact center, database, and storefront, so that you can organize and quantify content in a consistent, objective manner, resulting in data that is more accessible and consistent. And you can maintain existing legacy taxonomies and/or enrich them with contextual understanding. When you go beyond the limitations of what keywords can help you do, your whole world opens up. You can also discover the “unknown unknowns,” or topics you did not know to look for in the first place.”

The article stresses that regular keyword searching is far from abandoned, but its limitations are stressed. Keyword search’s weaknesses are addressed to the point of stating the obvious, and then it turns into a sales pitch for HP IDOL. Little is said about what exactly HP IDOL can do, other than organize data. HP, please tell us something we do not know.

Whitney Grace, January 12, 2014

Sponsored by ArnoldIT.com, developer of Augmentext

Howard Rheingold: Seven Principles of Information Filtering

IO Sense-Making
Howard Rheingold
Howard Rheingold

Filtering Seven Principles

Filtering is essential to the info-handling side of infotention, and JP Rangaswami is one of the few people I look to for deep and broad thinking about infotention issues (Harold Jarche and Robin Good are others who immediately come to mind). Consider adding his blog to your RSS aggregator: confused of calcutta: a blog about information.

Filtering: Seven Principles

In earlier posts towards the tail end of last year and early this year, I committed to writing a number of posts on filtering. The background is simple:

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Stephen E. Arnold: IBM Watson Dreams of Beating Google and Apple — Without a Clue

IO Impotency
Stephen E. Arnold
Stephen E. Arnold

More Watson Nuggets

Fast Company published “IBM’s Watson For Business: The $1 Billion Siri Slayer.” The write offers some nuggets of information that convert Watson from search system into the next Apple or Google. Frankly I find this notion somewhat amusing.

The story reports this interesting assertion, “IBM wants to transform Watson into a Siri for business.” Quite an analogy.

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Mini-Me: Target Data Breach Rises to Up to 110 Million — White House & NSA Irresponsibility Since 1994

Commerce, Corruption, Government, Idiocy, Ineptitude, IO Impotency
Who?  Mini-Me?
Who? Mini-Me?

Huh?

Target data breach total rises to up to 110 million

The massive data breach at Target over the holiday season is potentially much worse than the retailer first reported — as many as 110 million people may have had their identity and financial information compromised, the retailer says.

Idiot Video and More Text

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Stephen E. Arnold: Big Data 2013 Wrapup

IO Impotency
Stephen E. Arnold
Stephen E. Arnold

Big Data 2013 Wrapup

2013 was the year that big data became big business, says Alex Handy in his San Diego Times article, “Big Data 2013: Another Big Year.” Handy explains that big data made the transformation when enterprises deployed Hadoop in production environments and NoSQL people spread data around on servers. These two combined situations resulted in disseminating massive amounts of data and employing enterprise systems to manage the information.

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Robin Good: Beyond Google Evil Lie Individual Human Curators

Advanced Cyber/IO, Civil Society, Commerce, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Ethics, IO Impotency
Robin Good
Visit Robin Good @ Scoop.it

The future of search may not just be about Google and Bing. In the future of search, believe it or not, there are going to be a lot of people like you and me who will be providing much more helpful information guidance to specific requests than Google could ever do. I know this sounds probably unrealistic to you, but I think there are now many good indications that this likely going to happen much sooner than you expect. One of the key reasons why, human beings will start to reclaim this highly valuable search territory, is the fact that in the last few years we have slowly but deeply surrendered our ability to evaluate, decide and select what is “real” to Google's own algorithms, in ways that can only be detrimental to us.

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Stephen E. Arnold: Google & Open Source

Advanced Cyber/IO, Commerce, Software
Stephen E. Arnold
Stephen E. Arnold

Google Head of Open Source Opens Up

Google and open source have worked together since the search engine’s inception and it has contributed to its success. Tech Radar hosts an interview with Google’s head of open source Chris DiBona about how Google uses open source, how it has shaped the company, and how Google has changed the face of open source: “How Open Source Changed Google-And How Google Changed Open Source.”

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