Monday, October 22, 2012

Directed Sense-making and 6things


The Printing Press made us all Read.  Reading is nothing but directed thinking. Reading saves time. Literally thousands of years of thinking.

The Brilliant Mathematician Ramanujan was an autodidact. Without any formal education, he would think and write, what he discovered, in his notebooks. But, a great number of his discoveries, were in fact rediscoveries. Reading would have saved him many years of thinking and he would have started from, what others already discovered.

We surf the web for information, to research Information. However, whatever we made sense, people don't usually start with that. They start afresh every time they try to research information. This need not be the case.

6things enable to do "directed sense-making".  This directed sense-making would help save hours of researching in the internet.

How does 6things accomplish this? Bees collect honey and they tell other bees, the source of the honey and offer them sample of the honey. 

Billions of people are connected to the internet. They search, research, analyze and make sense of information. 

6things connects you to that intelligence.

Monday, October 8, 2012

6things - Search Insights, not webpages




Delicious built a tool, seeking to build a library of bookmarks. Its 5 million user base, doesn't prove very much. However, Wikipedia sought to create a library of books and its insane success informs us that, the model is quite potent.

There are about 181 million blogs, whereas there are over 2 billion users sharing content in Facebook. This informs us, that sharing content trumps creating new content.

Why did Wikipedia succeed, while the Delicious Model didn't.? The short answer is focus. While Wikipedia creates an environment for progressively creating content or parts of content, there is no such innate discipline in Delicious, I can create content, as and when I want and thus, after a while, I as the user, doesn't see the payoff, just like bogs. If there is not enough traffic, you eventually give up blogging.

However, wikipedia is everyone's blog library, where some folks decide what topic is worthy and start writing the initial sketch and others review and refine the content, if the topic interests them.

Delicious would have been successful, if I knew that, somebody else is interested in the topic that I bookmarked and others added more bookmarks to the same topic. There needs to be a common thread to begin with and folksonomy isn't enough for me to keep up my interest.

Pinterest, however is successful, due to its resemblance to Flickr rather than to Delicious. There is still a need to build a wikipedia of bookmarks without the need for an army of volunteers and generate the wikipedia of bookmarks, for each topic, while helping users search more efficiently.

One might ask, why do you need yet another search engine. Search engines help search noun and not verbs. Stay tuned for 6things, as it rebuilds its toolset.

…and then you can search for insights, not merely web pages.