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From Now On
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Vol 9|No 7|March|2000 |
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Abundance is potentially an opportunity, but it may also prove a liability. It may slow the acquisition of useful, pertinent information. Abundance can hinder the search for understanding. If speed matters and if one seeks distilled information served up with dispatch, then the printed book may be the best source to consult. Books - especially nonfiction books - are usually designed to end the wandering while speeding readers to insight. Web sites can do the same, but the culture of the Web tends toward more expansive, divergent types of collections and experiences. A book is usually organized with many main statements supported by illustrations, explanations and examples as illustrated by the cluster diagram below. Once the reader figures out the structure, it is a simple matter of dipping to the level of detail necessary to answer the question at hand. In the diagram below, for example, one could concentrate primarily on yellow boxes, skipping over the examples, explanations and illustrations.
Credits: The photographs were shot by Jamie McKenzie. Icons from Jay Boersma at (http://www.ECNet.Net/users/gas52r0/Jay/home.html)Copyright Policy: Materials published in From Now On may be duplicated in hard copy format if unchanged in format and content for educational, nonprofit school district and university use only and may also be sent from person to person by e-mail. This copyright statement must be included. All other uses, transmissions and duplications are prohibited unless permission is granted expressly. Showing these pages remotely through frames is not permitted. |