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Title: Information Anxiety 2 by Richard Saul Wurman, David Sume, Loring Leifer ISBN: 0-7897-2410-3 Publisher: Que Pub. Date: 14 December, 2000 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $29.99 |
Average Customer Rating: 3.82 (17 reviews)
Rating: 5
Summary: One for the reference shelf
Comment: Found it difficult to put this down. Parts of the book are a bit slow and somewhat off topic, but most is spot on and Wurman offers some wonderful insight and obsevations that left me wondering why I had never thought of viewing things in a similar context.
For anyone designing web media/printed communications the advice and insight Wurman offers is well worth the price of admission. This is one I'll have the shelf with Tufte.
Rating: 5
Summary: Every business owner should read this book
Comment: Ten years ago RSW said that data was the source of "Information Anxiety"; he went on to explain ways for people to put data into meaningful displays. His premise is that the display of data helps you convey a message. Take a look at the millions of advertisements that still don't understand his simple suggestions.
I cringe when I see the updates or designs people do to magazines or newspapers that put more pictures, less data and even less "information." Doesn't anybody read books like IA2 to understand what the brain does and how it sorts data to come to choices? In the beginning Wired followed his rules and they blew away the competition, then they got smart and followed the formula of the oldline magazines, then nearly bankrupt they got sold. RSW set up the guidelines for magazines of the future.
This is a great book and if a business owner really wanted their advertising and their collateral material to produce results they would use the tools in the book to check and see if they have broken the rules of cutting through the noise.
Buy this book, follow the rules, win more business.
Rating: 1
Summary: A Quick-and-Dirty Mishmash of Platitudes
Comment: I am taking the unusual step of rating this book "1 star" to express my extremely high level of dissatisfaction at its quality and usefullness. There is no question that Richard Saul Wurman is a highly gifted individual, and his ACCESS books are fabulous. But this poorly-edited, disorganized book fails to capture or convey any of the insights that went into that or other successful Wurman projects.
My guess is that this project was conceived as a quickie update to the original Information Anxiety to take advantage of Internet mania, and as such much of the work was delegated to others, but without sufficient review and editing. (There are too many editing mistakes to list here, but suffice it to say that probably few books have a misspelling in the Table Of Contents as this one does -- "Informatgion" instead of "Information".)
RSW tells us that it's important to always start off with what the question is. Problem is, he doesn't follow his own advice in that book. He careens uncontrollably from gushy predictions about the future, to cataclysmic warnings of information deluge, to superficial suggestions on software and web design, to facile pop management advice, The only thread connecting all these disjointed pieces is that he strictly limits himself to talking about how important something or other is, without ever giving specific advice about how to approach it.
I am personally interested in the field of localization and globalization. So naturally I was curious as to what insight RSW brought to this area. What I found was a single, lonely page on the topic, with a few lines of simplistic patter, and a strange, unexplained diagram of various fountain pens with country names associated with each.
I am also interested in the combination of text and graphics to present information and in fact bought this book thinking it might have some insights in that regards. So I was quite happy to see in the Table of Contents a section Design in the Digital Age, summarized as "In this Digital Age we need to focus on the connections among all design elements: medium, words, pictures, and sound." Alas, true to form, all the section in question does is repeat that we need to focus on this, with no clue as how we might actually do that, nor a single example in sight. To get an idea of the poor editing quality of this book, consider the following paragraph from this section:
"Where words meet pictures meet sound creates understanding. Are you a value-based organization? A service-based organization? A quality-based organization? Are you all three? We test communication by conveying a message and having the recipient understand it, be interested in it, and remember it. Any other measure is unimportant and invalid." Does anyone else wonder how the stuff about organizations fits in here? It's just random cut-and-paste content that accidentally found its way here, never to receive the benefit of the editor's pen. Signs of rampant cut-and-pasting abound throughout the book.
Although not really the fault of the author(s), the book is also seriously dated, having come out while there was still some degree of dot-com mania going on (although the peak was passed). So you can read this book on sort of an archaeological level, to recall all the bizarre things people were saying back in those heady days. Internet refrigerators, anyone?
I probably don't need to summarize; let me simply say you are best off spending your time and money on virtually any book on this topic besides this one.
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Title: Understanding by Richard Saul Wurman ISBN: 0967453607 Publisher: T E D Conferences, Incorporated Pub. Date: December, 1999 List Price(USD): $25.00 |
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Title: Evaluative Inquiry for Learning in Organizations by Hallie Preskill, Rosalie T. Torres ISBN: 0761904549 Publisher: Sage Publications Pub. Date: 20 October, 1998 List Price(USD): $46.95 |
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Title: Writing for the Technical Professions (2nd Edition) by Kristin R. Woolever ISBN: 0321084160 Publisher: Pearson Longman Pub. Date: 01 August, 2001 List Price(USD): $79.00 |
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Title: Information Design by Robert Jacobson ISBN: 0262600358 Publisher: MIT Press Pub. Date: 28 August, 2000 List Price(USD): $22.95 |
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Title: Digital Diagrams: How to Design and Present Statistical Information Effectively by Trevor Bounford, Alastair Campbell ISBN: 0823015726 Publisher: Watson-Guptill Pubns Pub. Date: 01 September, 2000 List Price(USD): $29.95 |
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