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  • × author_ss:"Maislin, S."
  • × theme_ss:"Register"
  1. Maislin, S.: Cyborg indexing : half-human half-machine (2007) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Die qualitativen Vorteile des Indexierens durch den Menschen werden nicht durch automatisches Indexieren verdrängt, aber bei besonders großen Projekten ist das Indexieren durch den Menschen nicht durchführbar. Eine Kosten-Nutzen-Analyse ist notwendig, um den praktischen Nutzen automatischer Indexierung mit der Wahrscheinlichkeit von Fehlern und deren Konsequenzen abzuwägen, die in beiden Ansätzen entstehen können. Das Integrieren von nicht-automatischer und automatischer Indexierung, das hier "Cyborg Indexing" genannt wird, kann Häufigkeit und Auswirkung von Fehlern beider Ansätze minimieren.
    Source
    Information - Wissenschaft und Praxis. 58(2007) H.8, S.399-401
  2. Maislin, S.: Ripping out the pages (2000) 0.00
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    Abstract
    When the Web was invented, it was touted as a novel nonlinear medium for the written word. No longer would we be constrained by linear presentations! Hyperlinks would allow us to jump haphazardly from page to page, chapter to chapter, idea to idea! Texts would no longer need to run from beginning to end! This is misleading. A printed book is also multidimensional and potentially nonlinear. We can open it to any page, from any other page, for any reason. We can open several books at once. In fact, what makes a book special is its combination of linear structure (the order of the words) and nonlinear physicality (the bound papers). This linear/nonlinear duality is enhanced further by the index, which maps linearly sequenced pages in a nonlinear, informationally ordered structure (architecture). In truth, the online environment is crippled by an absence of linear structure. Imagine selecting a hard cover book, tearing off the covers, ripping pages into small pieces, and throwing them in a box. That box is like a computer file system, and the paper scraps are Web documents. Only one scrap can be retrieved from the box at a time, and it must be replaced before another can be accessed. Page numbers are meaningless. Global context is destroyed. And without page numbers or context, what happens to the index?
    Issue
    Beyond book indexing: how to get started in Web indexing, embedded indexing and other computer-based media. Ed. by D. Brenner u. M. Rowland.