Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Wiki Dots

I call them the Wiki Dots. I think they would improve the way we interact with information, enriching the content available for everyone.

Context: We often get cool ideas when we read, but -as we lack the means- we sometimes just write them down on book pages that later get lost. Thoughts always lead to more thoughts, and that leads to more content. Wouldn't it be great to let the world (the Internet) read what a line of text made you think on a link placed next to it?

Idea: It would work like this: when you come up with an idea while reading on a digital device (hopefully everything will be a digital device in the future), you write it down next to the original text and it gets added as a dot next to the text that inspired you. This dot would be updated in the original version of the article/book that's available to everyone, so that everyone gets the chance to see your thought the first time they read the book. It would be great if people would be able to post not only thoughts but links to sites and photos next to what they read.

Benefits: Every single page of many articles/books would end up having tons of dots surrounding the original text, making them much richer and letting people share their ideas for others to see and build more content upon them. If this gets massified, we would be interacting with much richer material, creating some sort of wiki of every single text available everywhere.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Intelligence and information: a true relationship. (Ravenclaw entry #5)

The other day, I was discussing the relation between information and intelligence with one of my closest friends. I will present his thoughts on the topic as impartially as I can. Then, I'll add mine and try to draw a conclusion in the attempt to settle the matter, at least for the time being.

My friend stated that the intelligence is the ability someone has to solve a determined problem. Then, he added that when you get more information, your chances of solving any given problem get higher. Therefore, the more information you have, the more intelligent you are. I'll take the liberty to summarize his thoughts on a simple equation:

Information + 1 = Intelligence + 1
Information +1 -1 = Intelligence
Information is Intelligence.

As the equation above shows, if you think having more information makes you smarter, then you think information is intelligence. While I agree that having more information definitively helps you find a solution to an issue, I know for a fact that having more information doesn't make you cleverer.

Here is where my friend and I part ways, for I know that information and intelligence, even though always used together, are very different concepts: The information is raw, unprocessed data; the intelligence is the ability to use this data in many ways and for various purposes. This is very similar to what my friend said, but it does not mean the same thing. The resolution of problems, what you do with intelligence, is not intelligence, but a mere consequence of it. The intelligence is the means, the problem solving is the end.

Or at least that's what I think. What do you, reader, think?

EDIT: After talking a while (a couple hours?) with my friend Chris Wright, we finally agreed on a single definition of intelligence: "The intelligence is the ability to transform data into knowledge, to use it and retain it as knowledge. The faster you transform the data, the longer you retain it as knowledge and the better you use it for something, the smarter you are."

Cheers on our first agreement, Chris!

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Cruzados.pe

Habiendo trabajado bien el para el primer curso, Kenneth Fukusaki, Jose Luis Martínez y yo volvímos a juntarnos para Nuevos Medios y Tecnologías 2, más conocido como Flash 2. Para el final de este segundo curso, presentamos la web Cruzados.pe

Cruzados.pe es, ante todo, un buscador gratuito de perros online por categorías como raza, edad y distrito. Es una página web que surge a modo de respuesta ante la dificultad de encontrar con quién cruzar a un perro, brindando a sus usuarios una herramienta práctica y sencilla para lograrlo. Mediante una amigable interfaz, lleva a sus usuarios a recorrer la base de datos canina y a interactuar entre sí, conociendo diferentes alternativas para cruzar a sus mascotas.

Aventura Culinaria (flash)

Este es el trabajo que, junto con Jose Luis Martínez y Kenneth Fukusaki, creamos como proyecto final para el curso de Nuevos Medios y Tecnologías 1 en la UPC. El propósito de esta aplicación en Adobe Flash es el de servir de guía interactiva para encontrar los mejores lugares para comer según lo recomienda Gastón Acurio en su programa Aventura Culinaria. Decidimos crearlo cuando nos dimos cuenta de que la mayoría de los que ven su programa no recuerdan los lugares (y sus direcciones) que recomienda, ya que menciona muchísimos. Pensábamos venderle la idea, pero, por demorones, nos ganó y sacó su guía con el BBVA.