I talk about some of the cognitive challenges of the information age, and why visual language is an important tool for dealing with them.
Did you like this? If so, please consider buying me a coffee! Tags: language, the whirl, video, visual language, Ways of meaning, whirl, wom, work literacy, workliteracyThe whirl
By Dave Gray
6:00 pmFri, Apr 11, 2008
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Upcoming events
- IDEA 2008 — Oct 7, 2008 9:00am - Oct 8, 2008 5:00pm
I'll be speaking at the IDEA conference in Chicago. The IDEA Conference is a yearly conference about Information: Design, Experience and Access that is sponsored by the Information Architecture Institute. More.
- VizThink Europe 08 — Oct 12, 2008 9:00am - Oct 14, 2008 5:00pm
I'll be facilitating at the European VizThink conference in Berlin. VizThink is an international community of visual thinkers, made up of researchers, educators, practitioners, tool creators, service providers, consultants, and many others. More.
- Sarasota Design Summit — Oct 27, 2008 9:00am - Oct 28, 2008 5:00pm
More than 350 designers, entrepreneurs, thought leaders, and business and technology professionals, exploring how design and design thinking are transforming technology and innovation. I've had a hand in proposing some of the speakers for this one, and can promise that some very interesting people will be there. More.
- CANUX 08 — Nov 16, 2008 9:00am - Nov 18, 2008 5:00pm
I'll be speaking/facilitating at CANUX 2008 in Banff, Alberta. CANUX is a small gathering, limited to 70 participants, with a focus on practical skills for user experience professionals—web designers, software developers, information architects, interaction designers, interface designers, communications, and anyone else who's passionate about making things work well for people. More.
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Recent comments
- AndriusKulikauskas on What is language?
- Dave Gray on The whirl
- johnm on The whirl
- bobcorrick on Some rules for effective business communication
- ugottom on What is language?
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6 comments
These are great…please keep them coming!
Dave - I see a bit of Lee LeFever’s style in this video. Looking over your various video sketches i think they are really neat, but IMO a bit too long. They do represent a structure for a more polished presentation - are you planning to build one or is this style the way you prefer to get your points across?
Somewhere I read that you believe that presentations are for conveying information - my old speech coach Bert Decker (Decker Communications) said they are all about “persuasion”. His quip ” If you don’t want to use your presentation to persuade people to take an action and all you want to do is impart information - Send them a memo!!
Best regards
Dave
Hey Dave,
In the video, you mention that “You have to read a book in a linear form”. That’s only partially true. Sometimes it’s dependent on the book type…self-help, business and text books for example often get read in seemingly random orders (or at least in an order that may only make sense to the reader). In addition, there are a great series of books known as “choose your own adventure” books. These allow the reader to select from a non-linear story, or at least not a single one mandated by the author. These books became the basis of the early role playing games and branching dialogue engines in computer games. Many of the non-linear story techniques still exist in today’s most recent and popular video games like Mass Effect.
To be fair, the stories still end up being linear. They become linear as you, the reader, experience them. Jim Gee does a great job in his book “Why Video Games are Good for Your Soul” of talking about how the process of a non-linear (in his case, game) story combines the various possible non-linear experiences to create a completely unique linear story each time the game is played. So in a sense, the language, as experienced in your head, is still linear even though the options along the path to get there were non-linear.
So while linear (and non-linear) books can be experienced in a non-linear fashion, in the end, the experience of the reader is necessarily linear. How’s that for circular logic.
–tom
Good points Tom. I probably should have said “You have to read text in a linear way.” The point I was trying to make is that written text, since it’s derived from speech, creates meaning through structure in time, that is, sequence.
Dave,
I enjoyed the “Whirl”, my work associate can not get the “Whirl” to play on his computer, doe he need a download?
Thanks
johnm
Hi Johnm,
As far as I know, no special software is needed. You might have him try it in a different browser.
Dave
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