1 / 10

PHLAT

PHLAT. Living In a Phat Phlatland -Ed Cutrell-. What is PhlatLand Anyway?. Regime Change for Document Storage Topple the Tyranny of the Hierarchical File System! Content & Metadata-driven user storage

coyne
Download Presentation

PHLAT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PHLAT Living In a Phat Phlatland-Ed Cutrell-

  2. What is PhlatLand Anyway? • Regime Change for Document Storage • Topple the Tyranny of the Hierarchical File System! • Content & Metadata-driven user storage • In PhlatLand, you don’t really care where your stuff lives—you just want to be able to get back to it quickly and easily. • Filter, search, & browse by metadata • Full text search

  3. What’s Wrong With Windows (folders)? • Folders and filenames are just tags with some oppressive properties • C:\My Documents\2002\Talks\CHI2002\Scrolling.ppt • C:\My Documents\Studies\Old Studies\Scrolling\MS4Data & Analyses\MS4Figures.doc • Outlook:\inbox\retired projects\scrolling\RE: Model diffs • D:\Public\Studies\Scrolling\chi2002\ScrollingCHI02[ec].doc • Kill the folder metaphor • Encourages one-object : one-place cognitive model • Instead of “folders” you have “tags” for a more purely semantic organization • Tags CAN be organized hierarchically (but they don’t HAVE to be!)

  4. Tags—What Are They Good For? • Why do people file documents, email, etc.? • Help to find again later • Organize tasks • Keep workspace clean • Organize stuff for other people (knowledge management) • Other reasons (OWA, file sharing) • Other ideas?

  5. Why Keep Hierarchies? • Good organizational structure for knowledge • Lots of knowledge is already so structured • Lots of people are highly trained in using them and tools for navigating them • Maps onto real-world notions of space • Objects live in specific places which can be mapped into other places, etc.

  6. So What’s Wrong With Hierarchies? • Humans do not deal well with sharp category boundaries for knowledge—semantic webs • Lots of garden-pathing, traversing up and down hierarchies to find things. • Cyber space doesn’t need to follow the same rules as space—an object doesn’t really need to “live” anywhere.

  7. Four Main UI Challenges • Organize • Add metadata to stuff • Automatic (user date, relevance, author, etc.) • User-authored tags • How do you create & organize these? Apply them? How do you support & expose hierarchy? • Find • Search/Browse/Identify your stuff • Manage • Must be able to change tags & metadata as cognitive maps & needs change • Spring cleaning, project forks, sharing • How do we add full text (content) search to this?

  8. Three Key Places for Tagging UI • Save • Users are thinking about that object and how it fits in their ontology • Explore • Users need to visualize their ontology and identify the tags to quickly get to their stuff • Best place for tag organization/ management • Open • Basically the same as Explore, but is tuned for a specific task

  9. Related Projects • Grand Central • Focusing on communication now, but encounters many of the same challenges • Szafir (Social Computing Group) • Using WinFS to drive CFD & Explorer • Focused on Explorer & Open experience • Longhorn • UI for everything is still quite tentative, largely metadata driven. WinFS will only include a subset of files on a machine

  10. External Outlook Crawl • 133 Outlook Users (non-MS) • Huge variety in depth & breadth of folder hierarchies • Total branches (folders) • Med=14, Max=810

More Related