Thanks for sharing, Chris!

I found the article a bit frustrating. As a human interest story, it's very
touching that the sisters were able to reconnect despite family problems
that worked to keep them apart.

But from the technology side of things, blaming search algorithms seems odd
to me. I'm surprised that anyone would feel that technology owed them
particular results or specific capabilities—especially capabilities they
didn't even know they needed. That might actually be a useful insight into
our own users, though.

I'm also surprised the author didn't use anything other than search engines
and social media. I've had to track down a dozen or so people who were out
of touch for up to 20+ years, for a book project, and there are so many
resources out there! Even more if you are able to spend a few dollars per
person—which "book project people" did not warrant, but siblings would.

So, getting a bit more on-topic, how do we help people by not only
providing them with useful information, but also the tools and processes
that allow them to get the most from that information? It seems like
documentation works for very sophisticated users, but the rest have to
collectively and very unevenly accrete familiarity with tools over time;
learning/teaching processes seems even more daunting. I can't see a way to
accelerate that process, which is disheartening.

—Trey

Trey Jones
Software Engineer, Discovery
Wikimedia Foundation


On Mon, Jul 10, 2017 at 10:33 AM, Chris Koerner <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Thanks to Erica Litrenta for sharing this with me. I thought I'd share if
> forward.
>
> "It was because of the letter K that I found my youn­ger sister, but for
> 14 years, it was also the letter K that kept us apart."
>
> https://www.wired.com/story/search-algorithms-kept-me-from-
> my-sister-for-14-years
>
> Yours,
> Chris Koerner
> Community Liaison
> Wikimedia Foundation
>
> _______________________________________________
> discovery mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/discovery
>
>
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