Difference between revisions of "PIM frameworks"
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==Richard Boardman== | ==Richard Boardman== | ||
+ | Barreau's classification of PIM activities was a basis for [[Richard Boardman|Richard Boardman’s]] classification. Boardman argued that updating information content cannot be a part of PIM, as it deals with content of information items. He also argued that visualizing is done by computers (not users) and that visualization is present in all sub-activities. He describes four PIM sub-activities as: | ||
+ | * Acquisition: naming and/or (deciding of a) placement in information space. | ||
+ | * Organization: placing information items, renaming, moving and creating new folders. | ||
+ | • Maintenance: backing up and deleting information from information space. | ||
+ | • Retrieval: browsing, sorting and searching for information. | ||
==William Jones== | ==William Jones== |
Revision as of 17:30, 1 August 2010
Deborah Barreau
To understand how PIM is performed, Deborah Barreau tried to dismember it and so divided it in 5 sub- activities:[1]
- Acquisition: deciding which information will be included in information space, defining, la- belling and grouping information.
- Organization and Storage: classifying, naming, grouping and placing information for later retrieval.
- Maintenance: updating out-of-date information, backing up information, moving or deleting information from information space.
- Retrieval: process of finding information for reuse and • Output: visualizing the information space based on users’ needs and objectives.
Richard Boardman
Barreau's classification of PIM activities was a basis for Richard Boardman’s classification. Boardman argued that updating information content cannot be a part of PIM, as it deals with content of information items. He also argued that visualizing is done by computers (not users) and that visualization is present in all sub-activities. He describes four PIM sub-activities as:
- Acquisition: naming and/or (deciding of a) placement in information space.
- Organization: placing information items, renaming, moving and creating new folders.
• Maintenance: backing up and deleting information from information space. • Retrieval: browsing, sorting and searching for information.
William Jones
Matjaž Kljun
a framework of keeping activities only
Notes
- ↑ Deborah Barreau, Context as a factor in personal information management systems, Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 5/46, 1995