1 / 33

Content Creation and Management: What’s Next for Government Libraries and Information

Content Creation and Management: What’s Next for Government Libraries and Information. Stephen Abram, Vice President, Innovation, SirsiDynix IFLA, Seoul South Korea - August 21, 2006. This is not discovery or finding. It’s just search. This is knowledge or even information.

ryanadan
Download Presentation

Content Creation and Management: What’s Next for Government Libraries and Information

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Content Creation and Management:What’s Next for Government Libraries and Information Stephen Abram, Vice President, Innovation, SirsiDynix IFLA, Seoul South Korea - August 21, 2006

  2. This is not discovery or finding. It’s just search. This is knowledge or even information. It’s just web pages and popularity

  3. Get Our Heads Out of the Book (or PDF) Towards a broader understanding of content management

  4. Content Management What’s Next? • Objects (books and microforms) and Metadata • Databases • Institutional Repositories • Digital Vaults What’s Wrong with This History?

  5. What about the user’s experience?Can we let the user interact with the record at a a much higher level?

  6. Expectations 1.0 • Search • Retrieve • Print • Link • Post • Navigate • Read • . . .

  7. RSS – really simple syndication Wikis New Programming Tools: AJAX, API Blogs and blogging Recommender Functionality Personalized Alerts Web Services Folksonomies, Tagging and Tag Clouds Social Networking Open access, Open Source, Open Content Commentary and comments Personalization and My Profiles Podcasting and MP3 files Streaming Media – audio and video User-driven Reviews Rankings & User-driven Ratings Instant Messaging and Virtual Reference Photos (e.g. Flickr, Picasa) Socially Driven Content Social Bookmarking WEB 2.0

  8. Pandora

  9. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 RSS – really simple syndication Connecting with your community (and discovering new communities in the process

  10. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 New Programming Tools: AJAX, API, Mash-ups, widgets, XML, Java/J2EE, wizards Moving beyond annual improvements to the user experience

  11. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Blogs and blogging Based on repositories and Aimed at user needs (e.g. policy history, local history)

  12. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Personalization and My Profiles Personalized Alerts

  13. Personalization

  14. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Getting beyond text Streaming Media – audio and video Podcasting, P2P and MP3 files Photos (e.g. Flickr, Picasa)

  15. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Reviews and User-driven Ratings Recommender Functionality Commentary and comments

  16. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Renewed Emphasis on Discovery And the User Experience e.g. Rollyo, Squidoo, portals / portlets

  17. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Web Services Making repositories open to market generated user experiences

  18. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Instant Messaging and Virtual Reference Putting help were it’s needed – archivists, librarians, subject experts

  19. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Device Neutral and Independent Liquid Display, XML Blackberries, SmartPhones, Crackberries

  20. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Folksonomies, Tagging and Tag Clouds Visualization Support navigation and discovery We must be more open to user driven metadata

  21. Barbara Tillett US LC (8/9) • Australian aborigines to Aboriginal Australians (in 2003) • Cripples to Handicapped to People with disabilities (with the latter change in 2002) • Gypsies to Romanies (in 2001) • Negroes to Afro-Americans to African Americans (the latter change in 2000). • “We have just changed “Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975” to “Vietnam War, 1961-1975.”

  22. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Socially Driven Content SocialNetworking SocialBookmarking e.g. del.icio.us

  23. What does it really mean? WEB 2.0 Open Access, Open Source, Open Content e.g. Wikis

  24. Free Like a Kitten

  25. Credit: Lorcan Dempsey

  26. So, what’s next… • Focus on the user experience and not on the data, records, etc. It may be messier but the pay-off is much bigger! • Focus on what’s relevant not just what you’ve got. • Discovery, Creation, Invention, Learning, Insight, Decisions… • Understand the User’s real needs – and BIG HINT – they don’t need information for information’s sake. • Focus on radical trust and user involvement in every last instant - right down to the record and the metadata. Ouch.

  27. Stephen Abram, MLS, VP Innovation, SirsiDynix Cel: 416-669-4855 stephen.abram@sirsidynix.com http://www.sirsidynix.com Stephen’s Lighthouse Blog http://stephenslighthouse.sirsidynix.com

More Related