The digital revolution is enabling knowledge to slip the bonds of the physical which had, silently, shaped it. Now we get to see its 'natural' shape. What does it look like? How big are topics when they aren't determined by the economics of paper? Who gets to organize it? What are the new principles we're using to organize it? David Weinberger proposes that in the digital world, the most 'natural', efficient and responsive way to manage knowledge is to create huge, distributed piles of leaves, each tagged with as much metadata as possible - including treating the content as metadata - and postponing until the last minute the taxonomizing of the information. What will be the social effects as we move from trees to piles of leaves?
The New Shape of Knowledge: From Trees to Piles of Leaves
Wednesday 30 November 2005 10:00 - 11:30
Location: Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, 1 St Giles Oxford OX1 3JS (map)
Registration: Please email your name and affiliation to events@oii.ox.ac.uk or telephone +44 (0)1865 287210
Speaker
Dr David Weinberger, Fellow, Harvard Berkman Center
Abstract
Biographies
Dr David Weinberger, Fellow, Harvard Berkman Center
David Weinberger, Ph.D. www.evident.com is co-author of the bestseller, The Cluetrain Manifesto and the author of Small Pieces Loosely Joined; he writes the well-known blog Joho. He is a Fellow at the Harvard Berkman Center for Internet & Society. His work has appeared in Harvard Business Review, USA Today, Wired, Salon, The Guardian, Esther Dyson's Release 1.0 and many others. He is a commentator on National Public Radio and is a columnist for Worthwhile, KMWorld and Il Sole 24 ore (the leading financial daily newspaper in Italy). He is on the advisory boards of Technorati, ITConversations,SocialText, BlogBridge, the Information Architecture association and the Christopher Reeve Foundation. As a marketing consultant he has has worked with many companies, from startups to Fortune 500. He has a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Toronto. His book 'Everything Is Miscellaneous' about the social effect of the new digital ways of organizing knowledge will be published by Times Books in winter, 2007.
Webcasts
The New Shape of Knowledge: From Trees to Piles of Leaves
Recorded on: 30 November 2005 Duration: 01:30:59
David Weinberger proposes that the most efficient and responsive way to manage digital knowledge is to create huge, distributed piles of 'leaves', each tagged with as much metadata as possible, thereby postponing the taxonomizing of the information.
Last updated on: 18 June 2013



