Fading Waypoints

August 9, 2006

Survey results are up!

Filed under: General, IA Summit, Workshop, Tagging — draggin @ 5:24 am

Well that took forever. This turned out to be a very small sample, and of a highly informed and biased group. Furthermore, because of some new policies at SFU, the survey tool SurveyMonkey no longer complies with the universities regulations regarding the Patriot Act, and these results can NOT be included in our final thesis. Darn! Nevertheless, it was good practice for myself in survey design, and analysis, as well as building up a small network of future particpants within the information architechture community. Hopefully this may be helpful for future survey designers out there. OR it could jsut sckew those results all to heck as well.

It seems there were other attempts at user analysis performed at the IA summit this year. Check out Gene Smiths photos of peoples elaborate name tags. great stuff!

And now with out further ado, the much anticipated results of our tagging study. As gene explains, sort of a cultural probe. (ouch… did that hurt?)

The survey has garnered 23 respondents over all, most of them likely as a result of the email invitation that was sent out. As expected, our target demographic was in their mid thirties, using most of the common forms of digital communication available today,(predominantly email (100%), mobile phones (92%), and instant messengers (88%) 90% of the respondents considered themselves able to type, and 57% preferred the apple operating system.

Although only one respondent had not used the tagging functionality of any website, most of them did not find tagclouds very useful or informative, as shown by some quotes such as “not really, it gives me a high level view of the main things I seem to be paying attention to, but mostly it is a pretty picture” and “no, it’s awful. fairly useless except that they show you the top 3-4 tags.” 5 respondents did indicate that the tagcloud was useful to some degree such as “yes, i like seeing which tags i use the most. but i am a librarian.” I did not expect the tagclouds to be that significant part of the tagging experience, and the responses support that. As tags are used in various ways, the tagcloud is only meant to serve as a zeitgeist or gestalt view of the collection of tags. It does not represent the collection so much as the taggers interventions in organizing the collection. Other positive comments regarding tagclouds were, “fun”, “pretty”, “neat”, “handy”, and “cool”. The remaining results will be more useful to me as ethnographic artifacts in my continued exploration of this topic.



How old are you?
Average age: mid thirties
Total Respondents: 24
(skipped this question):0


What country is the passport you carry from?
Predominantly: Canada, USA
Total Respondents: 24
(skipped this question): 0


Check any you have used in the past week.
Mobile Phone: 22
PDA: 5
MP3 player: 12
Email: 24
Instant Messages (Chat): 21
RSS Agreggator (Bloglines): 18
Newspaper: 18
Video Game: 8

Total Respondents:24
(skipped this question):0



Do you type?
yes: 22
no: 2

Total Respondents:24
(skipped this question):0



What computer Operating System so you prefer?
Mac:12
Windows:8
Linux:1
Other:0



Do you use a grocery list?
yes:7
no:6
sometimes:10

Total Respondents:23
(skipped this question):1



Do you collect anything?
yes:14
no:7
not sure:2

Total Respondents:23
(skipped this question):1



When searching online do you use the advanced search features?
yes:11
no:2
sometimes:10

Total Respondents:23
(skipped this question):1



Do you use the tagging functionality of any websites?
yes:19
no:1
sometimes:3
what are you talking about?:0

Total Respondents:23
(skipped this question):1



Do you use the color labelling features provided by Mac OS?
yes:3
no:4
I used to:4
I plan to:1

Total Respondents:12
(skipped this question):12



How many words per minute (best guess is fine)
Average: around 60
Total Respondents:21
(skipped this question):3


How many fingers?
This question confused people
Total Respondents:21
(skipped this question):3


For what resources do you find tagging most useful?
Web URL’s (links):20
Photos:19
Music:3
Email:5
Other (please specify):5

Total Respondents:22
(skipped this question):2



Do you ever revise/update tags that you previously entered?
yes:7
no:5
sometimes:10
why would I?:0

Total Respondents:22
(skipped this question):2



*Describe your tagging ’strategy’ (one word if possible)
Open-Ended Response, remember,performative yet utilitarian, quick and dirty, minimal, personal, broad, easy, uncertain, archival, Pith, improvisational, look for and use tags - currently I am a tagee, not a tagger, semi-consistent, small sets, Eclectic, Flickr-style, quick & dirty. wait. that was 3 words. crap! stop typing!, remembery, carefree, clean, personal, recognizable, clear, findable,

Total Respondents:21
(skipped this question):3



For what purpose do you find tagging most useful?
Open-Ended Response

Organizing my material for myself and others.
re-finding as well as publishing
remembering what my photos were taken of
Finding things again for myself when using many different computers in many places.
for re-finding information at a later time, or for organizing artifacts in many different (simultaneous) groupings
refindability
finding my own stuff, sharing my collections of stuff with others, finding out what other people have in their similar collections
Another method of finding archival material.
I like to define content in my own terms, and to understand how other users conceptualize of content. I suppose in that respect it is helpful in searching someone else’s content - such as photos on Flickr.
marking people, places and things that recurr. For example, I might go camping with Mike. Then I go to the beach with Mike. I’m not going to group those photos as Mike — but with tagging, I can find them later.
identifying themes
Making personal collections so I can find things more easily again; creating my own organizational schemes; generating RSS so I can use content elsewhere, different ways of exploring the wide world’s collection of tagged content;

Later search
quickly categorizing stuff so I can find it later

Locating stuff later
In del.icio.us the tagging features lets me discover cool stuff saved by others

watching other people’s streams of consciousness. finding things that are interesting by watching interesting people.
organizing, connecting with like resources
To organize huge amounts of information in a way that’s meaningful to me.

Total Respondents:19
(skipped this question):5



Does the tagcloud assist you in understanding the organization of a system? If so please describe.
Open-Ended Response

Tagclouds are more like neat tricks than useful tools. It’s fun to see that common tags are bigger/bolder but that rarely provides significant information for me.
no
no, hate ‘em
yes, i like seeing which tags i use the most. but i am a librarian.
When using a system socially a tagcloud helps me to understand the bias of the system’s society.
only slightly
Yes, but probably not as much as I think.
No. Looks cool, but a frequency listing is more useful.
To some degree.
Not so much.
yes - my learning style is very visual so a quick tagcloud view tells me lots
Sometimes, I do not always give them a lot of attention (the cloud heights are very much relative.
No, it’s awful information design, and next to useless.
If it exists, it can help give a quick picture of the topics at hand. Not useful in much depth.
yes. seeing more ‘common’ tags is handy.

Not really. It just lets me see what all the other monkeys find interesting.
don’t use it

no, it’s awful. fairly useless except that they show you the top 3-4 tags.
not really, it gives me a high level view of the main things I seem to be paying attention to, but mostly it is a pretty picture

Total Respondents:19
(skipped this question):5



Would you be interested in being contacted for future involvement in our study?
yes:15
no thanks!:6

Total Respondents:21
(skipped this question):3



Comments? Questons? Feedback of any kind whatsoever?

Total Respondents:11
(skipped this question):13

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January 21, 2006

Tag games

Filed under: Workshop, Tagging, Draggin — draggin @ 11:49 pm

first post from performancing, which i hope will make my blogging tasks more managable.

We will be exploring collaborative tagging in our workshops, and have been looking for interesting examples to guide the design of them. Anton found STEVE earlier and going through some of their references i was happy to see The ESP Game mentioned.  Such a simple HHCI , yet so much data was gleaned.

We began designing our own workshops to be a much lower fidelity, (think post-its) but i think some game element, even a superficial one might drive user participation. In applying rules to the act of tagging, a game provides lots of opportunities to design relationships between users, the information, and the interface.  Imagine if you will, (massive?)multi-player Tic TAG Toe. (try this classic version for now, http://www.tictactoe.com/)

Tic Tac Toe is a Zero Sum Game,  and as i surf through the wikipedia links this could be a can o worms.

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January 20, 2006

Tagging in the Wild

Filed under: Workshop, Tagging — Anton @ 3:08 am

An interesting pattern keeps appearing in my googling for tagging workshops that may lead to some interesting discoveries - Animal Tagging.
Animal tagging shares at least one goal with information tagging - findability.

I don’t want to get too distracted by this right now, but I thought I would throw it out there.

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January 17, 2006

Steve

Filed under: IA Summit, Workshop, Tagging, Usablility — Anton @ 7:24 am

I am currently doing the Google rounds on existing (mob) tagging workshops in order to prepare for our workshop/paper and I came across steve - Social Terminology Enhancement through Vernacular Engagement.[link]

Steve is a project being developed by a group of museums that want the public to engage with their collections by allowing them to search for an item though a social filter. The way museum curator catalogues a collection is rarely the same as member of the public would search for it.

Curators rarely answer the question “What is this a picture of?”[link]

For example:

A curator may catalogue this image as Italy,futurism, painting, 1912, Balla. Giacomo
Whereas a person searching for it my use terms like dog, daschund, motion, blur

Steve is an attempt to democratize a collections catalogue, not by replacing the curators perspective, but by adding an additional layer of information provided by the public.

Bonus - Steve appears to be under a creative commons/share and share alike licence.

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