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My philosophy in creating Bluepages
I created Bluepages out of a desire to share and preserve local knowledge, and to establish what I consider a new (but not entirely original) field of research. By analogy with genealogy, I call this research platiology. Genealogy (which I have plenty of experience with) is not just the study of people, but the study of the connections and relationships between people, and of the impacts they have on others. In much the same way, I hope that platiology will emerge as not just the study of places, but the study of the connections and relationships between places, and of the impacts they have on society. Bluepages is meant to be a single, consistent place to collect this research, where anyone with the time and will to do so can be a platiologist.

In my experience, the quality of any collaborative work is in direct proportion to the scrutiny it receives, by which I mean that the work has a lot of eyeballs on it, coming from all kinds of different backgrounds, but all of them thinking critically about what they're reading and how to improve it. For that reason, I think the best thing you can do to help Bluepages succeed is to tell your friends, your colleagues, and anyone you think will be interested.

“Digital curation is, and should be, more than merely aggregating content or crowdsourcing the production of knowledge, both of which have been fetishized by the technologists promoting the digital age. In a world where the volume of information being produced is extraordinary, we must find new ways to make sense of that data, especially because this era of "big data" has not necessarily improved our ability to analyze and interpret information, although it holds many promises.” — Mark Tebeau