site geography lee sinclair 10th september 2004. objectives introduce the idea of site geography...

8
Site Geography Lee Sinclair 10th September 2004

Upload: buddy-waters

Post on 20-Jan-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Site Geography Lee Sinclair 10th September 2004. Objectives Introduce the idea of site geography Discuss possibilities Open the floor for discussion

Site Geography

Lee Sinclair10th September 2004

Page 2: Site Geography Lee Sinclair 10th September 2004. Objectives Introduce the idea of site geography Discuss possibilities Open the floor for discussion

Objectives

• Introduce the idea of site geography

• Discuss possibilities• Open the floor for discussion

Page 3: Site Geography Lee Sinclair 10th September 2004. Objectives Introduce the idea of site geography Discuss possibilities Open the floor for discussion

Outline

• What is site geography?• How would it work?• Why is it useful?

– Chunking - Countries, states, cities and suburbs

– Traffic - Highways, Main roads and streets and dusty tracks

– Activity

Page 4: Site Geography Lee Sinclair 10th September 2004. Objectives Introduce the idea of site geography Discuss possibilities Open the floor for discussion

What is Site Geography?

• A concept of mapping information elements (such as pages) with the context of a cadastral plane

• Places (towns) on the map represent information elements

• Proximity to other fragments represent the relationship information has to each other

Page 5: Site Geography Lee Sinclair 10th September 2004. Objectives Introduce the idea of site geography Discuss possibilities Open the floor for discussion

How Would it Work?

Information fragment alignment

Mar

ket O

rien

tati

on

Council Lifestyle

Council

Individual

LargeCorporate

SMECorporate

OtherCouncils

Groups

CommunityBrisbaneBusiness

eTenders

Sport and Recreation Strategy

Water Strategy

Find a Council Job

Permits and Licences

What’s OnSeniorsDA Submissions

Migrants and refugees

Cemeteries

Development applicationsConveyance Searches

About Council

•Each box (town) represents an information element;•The proximity of towns communicates a relationship, ie towns towards the edge of boxes are related to nearby regions, whereas towns in the center of the box are not related to other areas;•Each axis is a continuum, the bottom axis a continuum from one classification of information to another. While the Y axis is a continuum of market segments;•The choice of axis continuums is the most difficult.•Within small sites, information elements can be assigned co-ordinates by hand. Within a large site automated tools could be used to calculate the relationship between information elements.

Page 6: Site Geography Lee Sinclair 10th September 2004. Objectives Introduce the idea of site geography Discuss possibilities Open the floor for discussion

Chunking

Information fragment alignment

Mar

ket O

rien

tati

on

Council

Individual

Page h

Page f

Page b

Find a Council Job

Apprenticeships and traineeships

Page d

Page dPage e

Page a

Page c

Page jPage i

About Council

Based on tasksand user storiese.g.applying for a job

•Information elements can be grouped visually;•When new pages are added, their relationship with other pages can be quickly established, moreover how information elements should be linked;

Page 7: Site Geography Lee Sinclair 10th September 2004. Objectives Introduce the idea of site geography Discuss possibilities Open the floor for discussion

Information fragment alignment

Mar

ket O

rien

tati

on

Council

Individual

Page h

Page f

Page b

Find a Council Job

Apprenticeships and traineeships

Page dPage dPage e

Page a

Page c

Page jPage i

About Council

Traffic - Highways, Major roads and dusty tracks

HighwayMajor roadMain streetStreetDusty trackBike track

•Metrics can be fed into the system, that can establish pathways through a website by traffic;•Quickly pathways to a town can be determined (eg by clicking on a town), showing direct and indirect paths;•Lengthy paths can be established and analysed, particularly lengthy highways.

Page 8: Site Geography Lee Sinclair 10th September 2004. Objectives Introduce the idea of site geography Discuss possibilities Open the floor for discussion

Activity

Information fragment alignment

Mar

ket O

rien

tati

on

Council

Individual

Page h

Page f

Page b

Find a Council Job

Apprenticeships and traineeships

Page dPage dPage e

Page a

Page c

Page jPage i

About Council

•Another application of metrics is website activity;•Activity and other information can be displayed using a third dimension (colour);•In the diagram left, highly active areas are shaded light grey, while les active areas are dark grey;•Areas shaded blank (ie. no traffic) would identify areas that have had little or no traffic.•Using time based information, the activity could be played like a movie and similar to a weather map showing hot and cold areas over a day, week, month, quarter or year. In this way identifying cycles in behaviour, or recent areas of interest;