electronic museum

Entries categorized as ‘conference’

Why 3 won’t replace 2

February 23, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I was at the Hague during the latter part of last week, doing a keynote at CATCH // Museum 2.0. The organisers had seen me talking at “Kom je ook?” and asked me to go over again.

This talk – “Why the Social Web is here to stay (and what to do about it)” is an expansion on the one I did in December last year at Online Information. That one focused a bit more on the enterprise, wheras this one was specifically pitched at cultural heritage.

The message is much the same: connecting with others is deeply important to people. The social web connects people. Therefore, the social web is deeply important…

Anyway. Here are the slides

Categories: conference · content · museum
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Introducing OneTag

March 24, 2008 · 15 Comments

You might have noticed I’ve been a bit quiet on the blog front for the last couple of weeks. This is because I’m having a drive to send some ideas partying and have therefore been knee-deep coding my latest project most evenings.

OneTag logoI’ve put together an idea for people who run conferences or events. It’s called OneTag (www.onetag.org). It’s very simple conceptually, although as I’m discovering, a complete *dog* to code… – the idea is that it aggregates all the “buzz” about a particular (live) event and then provides the means to view this in different ways. Find out more at http://www.onetag.org/ot/about.asp.

Usual “it’s a beta” disclaimers apply…

I’ve agreed with David Bearman and Jennifer Trant that I’ll be trialling the system during the Museums and the Web 2008 conference in Montreal.

I need your help…

First off, if you’re going to the conference and intend to blog, twitter or upload any photos then the global tag follows the same pattern as previous years and is therefore mw2008. If you’re blogging then just add this as a tag or category; if you’re twittering then please use the hashtag #mw2008 as part of your tweet.

Second, if you’re the owner of a blog or other social networking site, will be blogging about the conference and have feed addresses you can supply me with, then let me know in the comments or via email and I’ll add these to the OneTag aggregator.

Finally, if you’d like to get access to the mw2008 OneTag feeds and views to help me test them then do feel free to get in touch – again, via email if you know it or using the comments to this post. Alternatively, tweet me direct at http://twitter.com/dmje.

I’m at the stage where as many critical eyes as possible is going to help muchly..

Thanks in advance!

Categories: blogging · conference · content · mashup · museum
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Scarcity vs scale

January 14, 2008 · 11 Comments

“Musical” blokeI’ve been finishing off the openness paper this week (taking me a long time to get my ideas together at the mo..) and doing some thinking around how you manage to still make money in this brave new world of free, open, readily available everything. Actually, let’s not call it making money but creating value, either in a financial or social sense.

Ian Rogers (Yahoo), who had posted before about the music industry tendancy to ostrich the very obvious problems of their industry (today highlighted by the EMI news of 2,000 redundancies) has written a looooooong but very insightful post about where it all goes from here.

The article is really worth taking the time to read in its entirity, but the bit which really caught my eye and got me thinking in terms of the whole commercial – value – assets – openness debate was the opening phrase, and title of the presentation:

“Losers wish for scarcity. Winners leverage scale”

Think about the importance of what is being said here for a minute: In the traditional world of marketing, selling, commerce, the value of something is largely determined by scarcity. This is still the way of the [physical] world in many ways today. We buy diamonds because they are rare; we phone a plumber because he has unique skills and knows how to fix the boiler better than we do; we go to museums to see things which we can’t see anywhere else.

The problem that the music industry has – and the cultural sector – is that once you move these endeavours online the entire equation changes shape, radically.

Whereas Amazon or other retailers with “real” product sit on top of the pile by increasing value both by leveraging scale (number of visitors buying books increasing incrementally as traffic increases) and scarcity (they are the ones who ship the books, which are themselves a product, and hence valuable by their scarcity..), the ones who have to think harder are those who have content as their product. That’s EMI, iTunes, The Guardian…and museums. Why? Because as soon as you put something on the web, it can (and is) duplicated, copied, downloaded, mashed and borrowed…

To date, the general response to opening museum content up – and yes, *gasp*, maybe making it free has been, understandably, “er. what? our images [other stuff] – free? certainly not”.

Let’s unpick this a little bit more. Instead of free, substitute “more free” – think about museums actively encouraging people to “borrow” images with “embed this in your blog/myspace page” links next to any assets displayed on page. This is effectively what web browsers (and certainly Google Images) do anyway, with a simple right click / copy-paste. Extend it and you’ve got an API model – “use this content on your website”. We as a sector know very very well that this happens already – I’ve talked before about the 9% referral figure we used to get on the Science Museum website from MySpace: all from embedded images. The point here is that people are doing this already whether we like it or not.

This is a limited example, but the point is that some kind of disruption is required to make this new market work for us. In the music industry, companies like Amie Street are breaking valuable new ground by defining new business models for (music) content. In this example, music tracks start off cheap/free and get more expensive the more they are downloaded. It’s a brilliant and highly respected model.

For museums, one of the first barriers to overcome is understanding what value the long tail has – when no museums carry on-page advertising (correct me if you know of one), we’re hard pushed to ascribe value to a page view. We’re still as a sector struggling with the basic notions of how to measure success, let alone confident enough to suggest that the commercial models we have might be wrong, or at least flawed.

I’m not (at the moment!) suggesting that we should close all our picture library operations: what I am saying is that the historical tendancy to be closed, guarded and scarce simply doesn’t work. It’s not just that users “abuse” this already (and we’d be spending a LOT of futile time trying to prevent the MySpace 9% from embedding our images), it’s that there is something really rather important going on here. Museums – we’ve said it before – are completely at home in the long tail.

Somewhere along the line we’ll understand the importance of embracing rather than denying the proliferation of copying, pasting, borrowing. To get there we need to be better at understanding what value is, and that’s hard.

[* image: curious 1950's bloke outside Bath Habitat with a wicked foot-cranked guitar-playing machine and violin. Bet he hasn't considered music rights.]

Categories: conference · content · copyright · ecommerce · innovation · museum · ugc · web2.0
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Semanticism. Semanticness. Semanticitivity.

December 10, 2007 · 3 Comments

Ever found yourself struggling to answer the question “but what is the Semantic Web? Can’t you give me an example…”?

When I was talking at a UKSG seminar recently, one of the deligates asked one of the presenters exactly this – how the Semantic Web might work in practice. The response was slightly woolly – arguably like pretty much everything to do with the entire notion of “semanticness” ;-)

Now, thanks to the video below from True Knowledge (thanks Simon!) it all makes a little more sense.

Categories: collections · conference · museum · search
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Social graph, attention data, openid and stuff like that

November 8, 2007 · Leave a Comment

OpenID talkI’m at a one-day conference on OpenID and education, organised by Eduserv. I’m live blogging over on our new Eduserv PSG blog, and that’s hard enough to do in one place, let alone two so I have no intention of doing the same here :-)

Just a quickie: during coffee break I had an interesting chat with Paul Walk who is a big advocate of OpenID – and has been using it for some time. We started a conversation about the notions of identity, attention data, the social graph, single sign-on, etc. It strikes me that the community is fairly bad at defining how these differ and where they cross-over.

I’m a bit of a novice when it comes to OpenID, but in some ways (he blags) that puts me in a good position: I’m a naive consumer of the service rather than a geeked out pro.

As I had understood it, OpenID seemed to be to be always sold as a single sign-on technology, much like Microsoft Passport (sorry, Microsoft “Live ID”..). The question I have is how far it goes beyond “just a sign-in” technology and moves into being an identity holder. Paul tells me that is exactly what it is, and that’s a relief – not least of all because identity is much more interesting than sign-on.

The second question I have is about where the line is drawn around identity. Is the fact that I’m married, for instance (a relationship on my “Social Graph”) a question of identity? Would this information be stored in my Identity profile? Would the name (or name of “node”) of my wife? Looking at it from one angle, I could argue that yes – this is very obviously identity information. From another, it isn’t..

Thirdly, where does attention data sit in this scenario? Over on AttentionTrust, they have a diagram which says “how we browse, what we say, what we read = me” which very much implies that Attention Data = identity. Paul (and others I got talking to) seemed to think otherwise. I’m not entirely sure why, but hopefully we can get some more talking in later on.

I’ve always had a soft spot for approaches such as FOAF, and that’s the final question: how do you map these relationships, and where do they “live” in the OpenID world? Where does OpenSocial sit?

Help.

Categories: conference · innovation · museum · social networks · web2.0
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Commoditisation of IT. And ducks.

October 8, 2007 · 2 Comments

I said on a previous post that I’d write more about Simon Wardley’s excellent presentation at the Future of Web Apps conference. He’s now put the presentation on Slideshare but warns (and he’s right) that it’s not an easy one to digest without the audio. Apparently FOWA are going to be publishing the sound for free sometime but there’s no sign of it right now.

Simon’s presentation focused on a number of things which also feature large in my personal tag cloud. Not ducks (although I like them, too) but:

Ducks. Simon likes them.1. Commoditisation of IT – how the movement from new thing to utility service creates tensions as products move from competitive advantage to the cost of doing business

2. Innovation – how the shift from Today’s Hot Stuff to Tomorrow’s Boredom (or, as Tom Standage puts it, the move towards invisible technology) drives, and is driven by, commoditisation

3. How the “new world” of the API and computing in the cloud becomes a utility service: how in this day and age we should be looking at the cloud for IT services and not building and re-building each time we put an application on the web. It’s a view which I’m pushing as hard as I can whenever I can, and it’s lovely to see such an erudite set of slides on a subject area which isn’t the easiest to explain.

It also turns out that Simon has written about the Internet Of Things, Spimes and a bunch of other stuff which really tickle my interest, but these might have to wait until a later post…

One of the major contrasts with Simons presentation, as I said previously was that he really can present in an amusing and interesting way, which was in sharp contrast to pretty much everyone else at the FOWA conference. His presentation style reminded me very much of Dick Hardt’s now famous Identity 2.0 talk which you should check out if you haven’t already.

Categories: api · conference · fowa · innovation · technology · web2.0

Museum directory v2.0

July 3, 2007 · 3 Comments

In my previous post about the “museum directory” I built at UK Museums on the Web mashup day, I mentioned a museum address CSV file from the 24hr Museum which I planned to put use at a later date.

The original source I had contained *really* dodgy data and only about 380 institutions – I’d done some seriously horrible hacking to get it out of various APIs – but the new feed is derived from the 24hr Museum “Direct Data Entry” (DDE) system. This contains around 3,800 entries and is therefore much more interesting as a dataset.

24hr Museum have asked that I don’t expose the KML file at this time, so what you see is the museum directory as it was in version one but with more, and more accurate, data. Version 2 is pretty much the same code and approach as the original – read about how I did it here.

The new data set still didn’t contain geo references, so I had to re-hack the original postcode script to query the Google AJAX API on a running basis and write the lat/long back to the database. That hurt a bit – nearly 4,000 queries takes a long time, especially when postcodes weren’t found. This slightly manual approach, together with some discrepancies in the CSV I had to deal with by hand led me to add the disclaimer on the page about accuracy – nothing to do with the original data…

Anyway, enough tech rubbish. Go play with version two and let me know any ideas or thoughts you have. I’m already thinking about the next version which is gonna be a whole lot more exciting, functionality-wise…

Categories: conference · experimental · innovation · location based · mashup · museum · mw2007 · programming · technology · web2.0

Mashed Museum / museum directory

June 27, 2007 · 3 Comments

Mashed museum - museum directory screenshotI’ve posted a page about how I built the museum directory mashup which I demonstrated during my talk at the UK Museums on the Web conference last week.

This started off as a KML file for displaying UK museums on Google Earth but the natural direction was to push it into a simple framework which queried a couple of web services for pictures and so on.

As you’ll see from my notes, this is not a complete museum listing and its accuracy is far from guaranteed BUT it hopefully demonstrates something vaguely interesting…The 24hr museum have just given me a complete CSV file of UK museums which I’ll munge in when I’ve got a spare second – I also hope to extend the app with some more API calls and other bits shortly.

Meanwhile I’ve got a frustrating and very weird problem which you may be able to help me with. If you look at the bottom of the mashup you’ll see there’s a link to the KML file – theory is you click on this and the museum listing gets superimposed onto your Google Earth app. Problem is I can’t get the link to work. The file is 100% absolutely, definitely there when I FTP in. I’ve renamed it, fiddled with the encoding, checked the syntax, uploaded other files into the same directory, changed the permissions…but I’m f*d if I can get the link to work. Anyone got any bright ideas…? It may save me some sleep…

Update: Yup, Frankie was right, it was indeed a MIME type problem. My hosting co. have now sorted this so the KML link should work. Huzzah. Thanks, Mr. Roberto.

Categories: conference · experimental · innovation · museum · technology · ukmw07 · web2.0

Web Adept

June 24, 2007 · 4 Comments

Web Adept‘, the UK Museums on the Web conference has been and gone, and I reckon it’s been another interesting year – I really enjoyed helping pull together Mashed Museum and the conference day itself was good too, no to mention the usual opportunities to get together with people you haven’t seen for a while and do some talking.

Overall, one of the things which struck me is that it feels each year as if the mood and pace lifts a little bit more, which is great. Once there was a time when delegates seemed to be endlessly worried about lack of resources and focussed on problems rather than solutions. This year, both at Web Adept but also at the SF MWeb conference, it all feels more upbeat. There is still frustration at the usual ‘museum treacle’ (I noticed Seb used this phrase a couple of times – it’s catching on!), but also a lot of energy. People are starting to do incredible things with not much cash and few staff, and that’s great news…

Here’s a few highlights of the day:

Seb Chan from the Powerhouse gave a keynote on social tagging. They’ve done it with their online collection and have huge quantities of quantitative and qualitative data about how successful it is. Some of the ideas he presented were really fascinating – he highlighted for example the tendency of museum sites to focus more on search (a very cataloguer/librarian/curatorial approach) than browse (the way we naturally – in the real world – work with quantities of content). The lessons from Seb are that social tagging *does* work next to ‘traditional’ taxonomic structures, but also that you really can make this stuff happen with a small team, lots of enthusiasm and some users to test with.

Michael Twidale talked about museums in Second Life. He gave a general – and I’m glad to say, still open minded overview of what museums are doing in there.

I’ve recently been back on Second Life with a new PC. The experience was better – at least it loads – but I’m still slightly bemused by the whole thing. I knocked about a bit, got to grips with flying, checked out a couple of places, but then got bored… The thing is that I’ve been pretty addicted to another 3D world for a while now – www.there.com. With this space there is a very obvious purpose – it’s easy to meet people, pleasant to chat (both text and voice), well designed and pretty engrossing from a social perspective. Second Life on the other hand is ugly and clunky, and in my experience I’ve found it a lonely, unsociable and fairly unsatisfying place to be. Yes, the building aspect is interesting and yes the moves they’ve made towards API’s tweaks the right knobs, BUT it’s a steep learning curve to build stuff when you’re not actually sure *why* you’re building it in the first place. I’m not totally anti SL, I just need convincing that it does something useful. I’d also really like to get to the bottom of their apparently impressive user figures. I would bet at least half if not way more of those are single-time ‘tried it, left, never came back’.

Anyway. Next up was me. I gave a very quick overview of what mashups are and why we should be interested in them, and then ran through the stuff we built.

Nick Poole from MDA did an interesting session on the various legal issues surrounding UGG – his message ‘worry less, do more’ was refreshing and very much in parallel to my own position on this stuff. Then Alex Whitfield from the BL asked some very interesting questions about sacred images online: specifically, how to be sensitive to cultural groups who have different responses to religious imagery and icons; but more generally asking questions about context. What if an image of a sacred cow is aggregated by Google next to some material which religious groups would find unacceptable? Take for example this search – is the page of aggregated results acceptable to all users (”serving sacred cow daily” next to images which some users would consider sacred) ? And am I being unsensitive to these groups by linking to it? This in itself is interesting, but when you extrapolate along Web 2.0 lines – your objects and images being taken out of their original context – it starts to ask some more questions. Very thought provoking.

The first afternoon sessions were on UGC, how to handle shared ownership, authority. I won’t cover them further here but hopefully the presentations will be online soon.

After that, Jon Pratty from the 24 hr Museum (new name – er, for the museum, not Jon – coming soon, apparently!) ran through the findings of the Semantic Web Museums Think Tank – then Paul Shabajee from HP talked about an application they developed which does some semantic stuff. I grabbed Paul’s card and will be heading over to HP at some point to see in a bit more detail what they’re up to. It’s a relief to see something that does Semantic stuff – it’s so often just a concept without any actual real word examples. But – and Paul confirmed this during the session – it still comes down to the age old rub: you only get more out if you put more in. From my experience, it’s hard enough getting curatorial staff, digitisers or anyone for that matter to fill in 15 DC fields with any reasonable accuracy or meaning. Yes, technology can be clever in helping create links and suggestions for semantic meaning, but at the end of the day it just isn’t going to happen in the real world if it’s too hard. Take RDF vs RSS (unfair comparison I know, but you get my point). The simple, easy to do technology wins. So the enduring question – is SW just too hard, and if so, will it ever get easier as computer processing gets more intelligent? If I knew, I’d build it and retire.

Brian Kelly rounded off the day with his talk on accessibility. His only problem was that everyone agreed with him (and Ross asked him to create a punch up…) and me, banging on (sorry everyone – you know I’ve got a bee in my bonnet about this) . Either way, it’s a spot-on talk which I will link to when Brian’s uploaded it.

All in all a really great couple of days. Ross is a star getting this together every year – thanks loads to him and to all the sponsors.

Categories: conference · experimental · innovation · museum · second life · technology · ugc · ukmw07 · web2.0

#2 Mashed Museum

June 22, 2007 · 1 Comment

Cheating a bit, as it’s no longer hack day. But who’d notice?

I’ve just given my presentation on what we all achieved yesterday. When I’m not writing this on my PDA, I’ll upload and link it.

Until then, here’s a list of what we did:
- a Yahoo Pipes ‘find museums near…’
- uk museums directory / on Google Earth
- a service using www.spinvox.com to allow users to leave voice comments about on-gallery objects using their mobile
- a concept for looking at collections data in aggregate
- use of the MIT Simile timeline to display polar expedition data
- a working concept for a ‘dirty dates’ API

I’ll write more about this when I’m not struggling with handwriting recognition on a 2″ square screen…

Categories: conference · museum · technology · ukmw07 · web2.0