Outreach 3 and Web 2.0

Resources and communication

Temple A - Front-1976

Posted by watsonlibrary on September 6, 2007




Temple A - Front-1976

Originally uploaded by brooklyn_museum.

this is the post

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Google Library adds more libraries

Posted by watsonlibrary on June 8, 2007

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Bonhams podcasts

Posted by watsonlibrary on May 31, 2007

Bonhams has been producing podcasts (some with video) in conjunction with selected auction sales since 2006.  

 They promise to “reveal the secrets behind unique collections of paintings, motor cars, books, porcelain, contemporary art, ceramics, jewellery and more” (which I will have to take their word for now since I don’t have any headphones handy).

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museum blog, exhib-specific

Posted by watsonlibrary on May 25, 2007

The Getty is hosting blogs focused on specific exhibitions.  See http://www.getty.edu/blog/oudry/default/

 about their current show on “Oudry’s Painted Menageries.” Very engaging; a relaxed note by one of the curatorial staff leads to interesting discussion with readers.

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Three cheers for ILL

Posted by watsonlibrary on March 19, 2007

Reblogged from Gypsy Librarian (among other blogs):

The Chronicle of Higher Education featured an article written by Susanna Ashton, entitled “What Goes Around,” on the use of Interlibrary Loan. ILL is a service that most faculty pretty much take for granted; they don’t even think about the costs, which the libraries usually absorb on their behalf. Personally, I know I am glad when the nice ladies that work ILL here find me a particular article I may want to read now and then. Anyhow, this should probably be mandatory reading for certain professors.

Ross

Posted in ILL, Watson Library | 1 Comment »

Walters’ director has a blog

Posted by watsonlibrary on March 12, 2007

Gary Vikan, Director of the Walters Art Gallery in Baltimore, is blogging.  The link to “Director’s Blog” is right below “Mission” on the museum’s homepage.  He is not mincing words, either.  I’m only surprised at the low numbers of comments on the four entries he’s made so far — the most, 10, are on a post about museum entrance fees.

 Check it here: http://thewalters.org/blog/default.aspx

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Wikipedia: if not the last, the latest

Posted by Ross Day on February 25, 2007

Reblogged from Weblogg-ed:

(Via Smart Mobs) So here is a research study (and I mean research, full of all sorts of funny looking formulas and symbols and stuff) about Wikipedia that comes to the conclusion that the more edits there are to a particular article the more accurate it is. Not surprising, to me at least, but since smart people are publishing quantitative results, it might add to the discussion.

Since its inception six years ago, the online encyclopedia Wikipedia has accumulated 6.40 million articles and 250 million edits, contributed in a predominantly undirected and haphazard fashion by 5.77 million unvetted volunteers. Despite the apparent lack of order, the 50 million edits by 4.8 million contributors to the 1.5 million articles in the English-language Wikipedia follow strong certain overall regularities. We show that the accretion of edits to an article is described by a simple stochastic mechanism, resulting in a heavy tail of highly visible articles with a large number of edits. We also demonstrate a crucial correlation between article quality and number of edits, which validates Wikipedia as a successful collaborative effort.

The conversations I had this week about Wikipedia with the schools I was working with in Atlanta were pretty heated at times. But it’s interesting how it quickly turns into a larger discussion about students as editors in general, and that Wikipedia ain’t the only problem we have in terms of what to trust and what not to trust. And that quickly turns into another discussion about how the network (if you have one) filters out much of the good stuff, just as it did in this instance. You may not trust the source, but if you trust the person or people who sent you the source, the source inherently becomes more trustworthy.

Or something like that…

The comments section is worth skimming as well.

*** BTW, WordPress has reconfigured its splash page, making loging in a little less intuitive. Just look to the far right-hand column, under the header Meta ».

Ross

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flickr! in libraries

Posted by Ross Day on February 23, 2007

Some interesting chatter in one of the flickr! groups, Libraries and Librarians, about permissions to take photographs in libraries, including library events. The responses are somewhat boilerplate, but it’s an interesting ’snapshot’ of the intersection of these two concepts … and germane to our experimentation.

The group is also compiling a list of libraries with flickr! accounts. We are (ahem, that is the Watson Library is) listed twice (aren’t we enterprising?).

Ross

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Look out, Outlook!

Posted by Ross Day on February 23, 2007

Reblogged from the New York Times:

A Google Package Challenges Microsoft
By MIGUEL HELFT

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 21 — Google is taking aim at one of Microsoft’s most lucrative franchises.

On Thursday, Google, the Internet search giant, will unveil a package of communications and productivity software aimed at businesses, which overwhelmingly rely on Microsoft products for those functions.

The package, called Google Apps, combines two sets of previously available software bundles. One included programs for e-mail, instant messaging, calendars and Web page creation; the other, called Docs and Spreadsheets, included programs to read and edit documents created with Microsoft Word and Excel, the mainstays of Microsoft Office, an $11 billion annual franchise.

Unlike Microsoft’s products, which reside on PCs and corporate networks, Google’s will be delivered as services accessible over the Internet, with Google storing the data. That will allow businesses to offload some of the cost of managing computers and productivity software.

For corporate technology staffs, “we think that will be a very refreshing change,” said Dave Girouard, Google’s vice president and general manager for enterprise.

The e-mail and messaging package, which is based on products like Gmail, Google’s e-mail service, has been available in a free trial since August and is supported by advertising. It has been used by thousands of businesses, educational institutions and other organizations, Google said.

Google will continue to provide the extended bundle of software free to businesses and educational institutions. But it will also offer businesses additional e-mail storage and customer support for an annual fee of $50 a user.

By comparison, businesses pay on average about $225 a person annually for Office and Exchange, the Microsoft server software typically used for corporate e-mail systems, in addition to the costs of in-house management, customer support and hardware, according to the market research firm Gartner …

Sounds a little like what’s happening de facto here.
Read the rest of the article here.

Ross

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“Who will organize all of this data?”

Posted by watsonlibrary on February 16, 2007

392612125_ef125f8a51_m.jpgI wouldn’t want this to degenerate (?) into a My Favorite YouTube blog, but taking my cue from Robyn’s ‘ridiculous’ Web 2.0-related video, here’s my nominee for the ’sublime’: Web 2.0 … The Machine is Us/ing Us, a brilliant gloss on everything 2.0 and the implications for how we see the world. It’s the brainchild of Digital Ethnography @ Kansas State University, headed by Prof. Mike Wesch, “a working group of Kansas State University students and faculty dedicated to exploring and extending the possibilities of digital ethnography.” And, yes, they have a blog.

It’s proven to be quite a ‘viral’ phenomenon. It was making the rounds of the biblioblogosphere last week; my apologies to any who might have seen this before — except to say it gets better with repeated viewing. For those who want a transcript of the text (and it does go by in quite a hurry), it’s been published here.

And you will want your headphones for the techno background music.

Ross

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