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Thursday, 22 September 2011

Here kitty, kitty (or maybe not)

Posted on 12:58 by Unknown
I'm not a cat lover, except for Schrödinger's cat, a mind-bending paradox proposed by Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger in 1935:

Imagine a cat is placed in an opaque box with a container of radioactive material and a vial of deadly poison gas. Quantum mechanics states there is exactly a 50% chance that an atom in the radioactive lump will decay and release an electron. If this happens, the electron will strike the vial, causing the gas to leak out and kill the cat.

Now, because we can't know for certain if the gas has been released, the cat exists in an uncertain state: it is both alive and dead at the same time, which is of course, impossible. But it would theoretically be true, if we could build such an experiment.

Schrödinger was trying to show the absurdity of quantum mechanics, one of the strangest areas of physics. Quantum mechanics assigns probabilities of existence to subatomic particles, leading to strange worlds where a single particle can be in two places simultaneously, or in no place.

Quantum mechanics may represent the truth at a subatomic level, but, as Schrödinger's cat shows, it becomes absurd when applied to the visible world. Instinctively, we want to believe things exist in a certain state. Even the most ardent cat-hater would rather know the cat is alive than not know either way.

The lack of certainty is at the core of this paradox. I have previously shown that a document can exist in a quantum state. That is, the state of a document can be unknown, for example:
  • a user may have expanded or collapsed the sections of an online help file
  • if there is more than one version of a document, we cannot know which version the user is reading
  • if the documentation system supports it, a user may have annotated certain topics - we cannot know which ones or what the user has written on them
However, what should never be uncertain is whether the user is uncertain about the contents of the document. Whatever topic the user reading, we must be sure that the user completely understands it.

How do we create such certain documentation? The same way as with any other user-friendly product: by showing it to as many users as possible and seeing if they understand it. Documentation testing creates guides that are comprehensible rather than reprehensible.

A user cannot simultaneously understand and not understand a topic. A user either comprehends your document, or they do not.

To put it succinctly: there can be no Schrödinger's User Guide.
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Posted in quantum theory, science | No comments

Wednesday, 21 September 2011

Netflix My Net-Docs

Posted on 12:23 by Unknown
Meanwhile, in an alternate universe, the following message appeared on a website:

This site is only available for viewing next Thursday, from 2pm to 3pm. If you would like to view it after that, we can mail you a printed copy in 7 to 12 business days.

Actually, this isn't too far from reality. Do you know there are people who still:
  • drive to a bank to pay bills, when they could do it online?
  • mail printed photographs to their family, rather than email them?
  • manage documents as part of a group, with each group member keeping their own duplicate copy?
  • watch movies and TV programmes according a broadcaster's schedule?
The last point is particularly interesting. Why is it unacceptable to have a website (or any online content) that could only be viewed certain days and times, but it's acceptable to have other content that's only available certain days and times. Either scenario is ridiculous.

Through downloading, online reruns available on various broadcasting websites, and streaming services such as Netflix, gone are the days where you have to wait for a day. In addition, some of these services allow you to enter meta-data about your preferences, and to rate what you've seen, enabling the service to suggest content that might interest you. On certain sites, you can also add comments, which is pretty tricky to do using a television.

We're therefore seeing entertainment content catch up with the principles of informational content, namely:
  • available for viewing any time, anywhere
  • customizable
  • permanent
  • enabling two-way communication
I can imagine a not-too-distant future where our children and their children will look back and laugh as they cry: "You mean you guys actually drove to a store to watch a movie? And there was actually stuff that wasn't online?!"

The horror, the horror...
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Posted in cloud computing, entertainment | No comments
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