T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1814.1 | | F18::ROBERT | | Sun Mar 22 1992 22:03 | 16 |
| 1: Imaging is here big time. If we do not have anything in this space
we are going to get our bells rung.
2: Interactive video with our computers, I think this is what it is
called. This is where you press your hand against the screen or use
a mouse and get more info on what you pressed, via video. Again, if
we do not have anything in this space, we have missed the boat
again.
3: Wireless transmission of data from our laptops, notebooks and
palmtops. This is coming quickly, this is being done in other
industries.
More to come:
Dave
|
1814.2 | 21st Century == Information | ALAMOS::ADAMS | Visualize Whirled Peas | Mon Mar 23 1992 01:00 | 37 |
| A corporate memory/database accessible by all employees. From what
I've seen, the most sophisticated "common-denominator" of information
dissemination is postscript files or VTX. To get at major portions of
corporate information, you need to be a guru at VTX, Notes, VMS
(user-level), and understand the concepts of file transferall or remote
login (i.e., TELNET, SET HOST).
Information which can leverage sales or help our professionals in the
field should be referenced in a common information structure, and be
accessible from all operating platforms we create or support (ULTRIX,
OSF/1, VMS, Macintosh, MS-DOS/Windows, OS/2, etc.). Users should be
able to create electronic "agents" capable of searching the net for
information or abstracts relevent to the commands given by the users.
For example, a user should, in natural language, be able to create an
agent and issue a command such as, "Give me a listing of information
sources and short descriptions on MASSIVELY PARALLEL PROCESSING USED IN
THE WEATHER FIELD", and have that agent create a precis on the info it
gathers.
Granted, this level of technology doesn't exist today, and isn't
present in the "standards" follow, but an easy method information
retrieval is becoming one of the most important tools of professionals
today (IMHO). Technical excellence in important, but with the wealth
of information out there, sales, projects, or strategies can be won or
lost.
As .1 stated, the methods in which information is presented is very
important. Multimedia, imaging, portable/laptop computing, and
flexible networking are very important. For example, I still haven't
seen the new Open Advantage commercials yet, but I have downloaded the
full-motion videos from the Macintosh archives and will veiw them
tomorrow on my Mac at work. These are the things that will insure we
stay competitive now and in the future.
--- Gavin
PS - I'm writing a DECUS paper which I'll enter when I'm done.
|
1814.3 | some ideas | ODIXIE::SILVERS | Dave, have POQET will travel | Mon Mar 23 1992 08:10 | 2 |
| Voice I/O, much better than it is today, and computers as 'furniture'
(e.g. built into the desktop, much more ergonomically acceptable).
|
1814.4 | | F18::ROBERT | | Mon Mar 23 1992 09:35 | 7 |
| Re. 2
Great idea. An information based system, ie.data-base where you can
find anything that you need to do your job, using common sense language
or should I say keywords that make sense.
Dave
|
1814.5 | | F18::ROBERT | | Mon Mar 23 1992 09:38 | 10 |
| RE all,
It's too bad that the people that have the power to make change in
Digital do not read some of the good notesfiles. And take some of the
real good ideas and get this company out of the rut it is in. I am
afraid that the people that have the power to make change are afraid of
taking risks anymore. It is a sad time at Digital.
Dave
|
1814.6 | | F18::ROBERT | | Mon Mar 23 1992 12:08 | 6 |
| I just read this morning in VTX VNS about something that Mitch Kapor
(sp) is working/looking at, it is called electronic data network. Where
people could connect into and get any/all information that they need to
access, in one place.
,
|
1814.7 | | VIA::VIA::COHEN | | Mon Mar 23 1992 12:59 | 9 |
|
Amazingly enough, there are several groups in this company working on
bringing enterprise wide information retrieval to the market place.
This includes both nlp and information agent technologies.
See the latest version of VTX for the first instance of such
technologies.
Bob Cohen
|
1814.8 | IVIS | CSCOA1::BAINE_K | | Mon Mar 23 1992 16:09 | 5 |
| Digital developed interactive video years ago - called IVIS.
It was and I believe still is, used for training.
KB
|
1814.9 | Hit KP<1>.KP<3>GOLD-L to continue... | ALAMOS::ADAMS | Visualize Whirled Peas | Mon Mar 23 1992 16:24 | 14 |
| Bob,
That's just it! *Where* in VTX do I go to get this information!? :)
--- Gavin
PS - Some of the most promising work does seem to be coming from the
EFF and other university/Internet projects. Some examples are ARCHIE
(common database for FTP access), MIME (Multimedia Interent Mail
Extension, i.e., nicely formatted and MM mail messaging), WAIS (Wide
Area Information Service), and Gopher (an explantion escapes me at the
moment).
PPS - Bob, do you have any contacts on the agenting services?
|
1814.10 | | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Dorn a Loon | Tue Mar 24 1992 06:47 | 13 |
| Re: .2
> For example, a user should, in natural language, be able to create an
> agent and issue a command such as, "Give me a listing of information
> sources and short descriptions on MASSIVELY PARALLEL PROCESSING USED IN
> THE WEATHER FIELD", and have that agent create a precis on the info it
> gathers.
This pretty much exists already within Digital. It's called TIMA and was
developed in Valbonne. The last I heard, it's still around and still being
improved.
Gavin
|
1814.11 | Use what we sell? | IW::WARING | Simplicity sells | Tue Mar 24 1992 07:55 | 11 |
| Meanwhile, back on our internal systems, we're still yet to become victim to
the delights of DECquery and information systems that add the numbers up
correctly. In the interim, we have a myriad of "customised" solutions that
don't allow managers to get at data they need outside of standard reports.
By the way, there's an excellent software product i've got here that i'd
recommend. Called Monarch from Personics, this PC product is designed to go
through the standard 500-page reports people get and sift the data out into
various spreadsheet, DBF or Ascii files. You just draw a template over the
report, and press go!
- Ian W.
|
1814.12 | Shooting the wrong problem | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Dorn a Loon | Tue Mar 24 1992 07:58 | 9 |
| >By the way, there's an excellent software product i've got here that i'd
>recommend. Called Monarch from Personics, this PC product is designed to go
>through the standard 500-page reports people get and sift the data out into
>various spreadsheet, DBF or Ascii files. You just draw a template over the
>report, and press go!
That tells me more about the usefulness of that report than anything else...
Gavin
|
1814.13 | If there's a PC package to do it, there's a common need! | IW::WARING | Simplicity sells | Tue Mar 24 1992 08:07 | 5 |
| ... but it's standard and that's what people get today. It's more a reflection
of the quality of information systems around us and the political inertia to
get the data we need in a usable form. And I still can't get the actuals to
match the sum of the segments within 20%...
- Ian W.
|
1814.14 | VTX | VIA::SMEGOL::COHEN | | Tue Mar 24 1992 16:09 | 20 |
|
re: 9
Well then, what YOU need is VTX/CBR (VTX 5.1). Information retrieval
on a enterprise wide basis.
Talk to CASEE::EISENBERG (Alf) or CASEE::HAMNQVIST (Per) for details
The AD notes file around information agent technology is at
ABBOTT::OFFICE_FILTER.
The project leader for the INFORMATION AGENT project is
Neal Finnegan (VIA::FINNEGAN)
The notes files for the CBRS services toolkit is at VIA::CBR.
It utilizes a common sense query form among other things.
I'm sure I've missed other similar efforts.
Bob Cohen
|
1814.15 | Next century business needs? | CTOAVX::BRAVERMAN | Perception=Reality | Wed Mar 25 1992 08:06 | 22 |
| This is just an adder.
Where will the explosion of data gathering take place? What industries
will need to get better control of their information flow? What role will
Federal, State and local regulations have on the information business?
How can Digital gain opportunities in supplying the services to
industries that are still in the "INFORMATION DISCONTINUITY AGE"?
Systems Integration services is an area that can generate new business
for DEC?
LIST:
Networks
Document management
Paperless operations(Imaging, etc...)
Operations, work-flow, quality assurance and productivity enhancements
More......expanded areas are valid
|
1814.16 | some pessimism | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Mar 25 1992 13:43 | 53 |
| re Note 1814.14 by VIA::SMEGOL::COHEN:
> I'm sure I've missed other similar efforts.
You have -- and this sort of makes the original point:
Abbott::Content-Retrieval -- general text/information
retrieval, document libraries,
and information services.
Abbott::CSCW (Computer-Supported Cooperative Work) --
groupware and supporting
technologies.
Quite frankly, I despair of any of the more recent
developments in information technology becoming widespread
within Digital in this decade. Many of them require
hardware/software systems and connectivity (i.e., network
bandwidth) that just won't be available to many DECcies given
current deployment patterns. Some will not be all that
usable until refined to the V2 or even V3 level -- if they
should survive that long!
Additionally, many of the newer information technologies
will be unable to reach the "information at your fingertips"
vision without the support of the corporate culture and
infrastructure. Do we have a culture that encourages making
information available to anyone who seeks it, without first
asking the permission of the right "gatekeeper" person? In
some areas, yes; in many, no.
Will we even be able to decide upon and implement a single
information infrastructure, rather than multiple? We now
have, for example, Notes (as an information paradigm) used
more by one sub-culture and VTX (as an information paradigm)
used by another. (Even my own 8-person team suffers from
a form of this!)
Similar polarizations will be possible in the future -- they
may even be exacerbated as one segment of Digital computation
goes towards laptops and occasional connectivity vs. very
powerful workstations and high-bandwidth connectivity for the
other. The tools that those two communities use will be
different, and could form the basis for another information
barrier (psychological if not physical).
Also, more and more of the information we need to get at is
outside the corporation, accessible only through external
networks. The recent history of gateways to external
networks is not encouraging -- the window has been closing of
late, not opening.
Bob
|
1814.17 | Look at the way people would like to work, then... | IW::WARING | Simplicity sells | Thu Mar 26 1992 03:41 | 3 |
| There's been a superb memo from KO aimed at TNSG on this theme, dated 19th
March. I've asked for permission to post, so stay tuned.
- Ian W
|