Like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel. Never ending nor
beginning, on an ever-spinning reel. Like a tunnel that you follow to a tunnel of its own,
down a hollow to a cavern where the sun has never shown.
This is often what it feels like,
when you're searching on the Net. The Web it entangles as it dangles just ahead, something
was it what you wanted or was it just within your head?
In 1969, Dusty Springfield sang these words in the song "The Windmills
of Your Mind" in the movie A Thomas Crown Affair. Alan and Marilyn Bergman, who wrote
the lyrics, had no way of knowing how prophetic their words would become. They were able
to describe very accurately how many computer users feel when attempting to find
information on the Internet.
Many people just turn on their computers to write a letter to a friend, print
it out, and then put it in an envelope with a 32- (or is it 35?) cent stamp and drop it in
the mailbox on the corner. Thousands of dollars in high-tech equipment and software for
what? A typewriter that can, for the most part, check your spelling. Add to this hours and
hours of frustration from trying to find features that they know should be just a click or
two away. Is it any wonder that so many people just surrender to the confusion and turn
their computers off?
Wouldn't it be great if someone
could come up with a simple system that everyone could use to catalogue Web sites-and even
the information inside the sites? How about a system that everyone from grade-school
children to advanced college Ph.D.s could understand? Something that would use concepts
and would not be subject to variations in spelling or even differences in languages.
Something that, even if you didn't know exactly what you were looking for, could at least
point you toward the proper starting place. Something that would not depend upon a natural
language or Boolean phrases and yet could be used by all search engines. A system that
would allow parents to view Nudes on a Picnic from the Louvre and still exclude their
children from viewing nudes on a picnic from Playboy or Penthouse.
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It would also need to be something that would be of benefit to those who make
a living from the Internet. These people already know that if no one can find them, they
don't/won't/can't make any money, so an easy system would be very important to them. In
short, an easy system would make everyone happy and make everyone want to use it.
What would such a system cost? Now that's the problem-cost. How about free?
Yes, free! Clearly, no one that could come up with such a system would really let it go
for free. They would have to be crazy, mad even.
Surprisingly, a system like this already exists. In fact, it exists in almost
every town and every city in the entire world, and you are already familiar with it. It is
the Dewey Decimal Classification System. In this system, everything would be classified by
number. For example, the 500 through 599 series would be the Natural Sciences and
Mathematics and the 600s would contain the applied sciences, engineering, medical
sciences, and so on. The 700s would be the arts, music, and related subjects.
But, you say, there are too many sites, too many pages, no one to do the
work. Wrong! Every site has a Webmaster and every page has an author. Thousands of trained
people, trained librarians, can help those who need it to correctly classify their sites
or pages. For those who might be collectors of eclectic stuff, their sites could have
multiple classifications so everyone could find all their neat stuff. Alternatively, those
who want their privacy do not have to classify their pages at all.
The Dewey Decimal System is
clearly a viable classification system for the Web. Like Dusty Springfield sang in the
song, "As the images unwind, Like the circles that you find, In the windmills of your
mind."
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