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X-WR-CALNAME:Information Architecture 3.0
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20071016
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20071017
SUMMARY:Information Architecture 3.0
LOCATION:New York, New York, USA
DESCRIPTION:As we venture beyond Web 2.0 and the undisciplined, unbalanced 
 quest for sexy Ajaxian interaction at the expense of usability, findability
 , and accessibility, how do we reconcile the timeless principles of design 
 and organization with new transmedia models of interaction, co-creation, ta
 gging, and user participation?\n\nIn this advanced seminar, Peter Morvill
 e draws upon stories, examples, case studies, and discussions to explore th
 e future present of information architecture and user experience.\n\nTopi
 cs include:\n\n* Integrating product development, information architectur
 e, and interaction design to create good experiences and sustainable value 
 (real Web 2.0 case studies that take the discussion beyond de.licio.us and 
 Flickr platitudes).\n\n* Designing next-generation enterprise search syst
 ems that combine best practices in taxonomies and tagging with search analy
 tics, guided navigation, thesauri, clustering algorithms, and rich result i
 nterfaces.\n\n* Evaluating the multi-channel challenges and real-world op
 portunities presented by ambient findability and the emerging Internet of o
 bjects.\n\nAbout Peter Morville\nPeter Morville is widely recognized as 
 a founding father of information architecture. He co-authored (with Louis R
 osenfeld) the best-selling book, Information Architecture for the World Wid
 e Web, and has consulted with such organizations as Harvard, IBM, the Inter
 national Monetary Fund, Microsoft, the National Cancer Institute, and Yahoo
 !. Peter is president of Semantic Studios, co-founder and past president of
  the Information Architecture Institute, and a faculty member at the Univer
 sity of Michigan. His work has been featured in many publications including
  Business Week, The Economist, Fortune, The Washington Post, and The Wall S
 treet Journal. Peter's latest book, Ambient Findability, was published in 2
 005. He blogs at findability.org.
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