Friday, April 24, 2009

All together now! Anzac collaboration on The Commons

On 25 April New Zealanders and Australians mark Anzac Day, the anniversary of the 1915 landing of Allied troops at Gallipoli / Gelibolu Yarımadası in Turkey, and the beginning of the 9-month Gallipoli campaign of World War I.

This year Australian and New Zealand members of The Commons have worked together to share photographs of the campaign in Gallipoli and later Anzac Day events on Flickr. Sets have been loaded by


The idea was sparked by Ellen at the State Library of New South Wales and warmly supported by the Flickr Commons group. The Indicommons crew also got behind the idea, and zyrcster wrote a fabulous post pulling all the upload together.

For me, it's been really interesting watching how making this extra effort to coordinate a joint upload and work with the community to promote it has resulted in a much higher level of tagging than usual on the images we've shared. The four collaborators tried to use AnzacDay as a shared tag, and I'm already seeing 1915, Gallipoli, destroyer and anzac appearing in our top 150 tags:




Not to mention some great info about periscope rifles




If I could ask for one thing, it'd be to see people making connections between the images, either with tags or comments - I've dipped my toe in the water by connecting these two views of Anzac Cove.





That for me would really exploit the true power of The Commons to join up all this like content held in unlike institutions.

The Source: news about digital libraries and library innovations from around the web

Introducing The Source

Madison Researchers Use Brain Interface to Post to Twitter

From the AScribe website

In early April, Adam Wilson posted a status update on the social networking Web site Twitter - just by thinking about it. Just 23 characters long, his message, "using EEG to send tweet," demonstrates a natural, manageable way in which "locked-in" patients can couple brain-computer interface technologies with modern communication tools. A University of Wisconsin-Madison biomedical engineering doctoral student, Wilson is among a growing group of researchers worldwide who aim to perfect a communication system for users whose bodies do not work, but whose brains function normally. Among those are people who have amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), brain-stem stroke or high spinal cord injury.


Introducing Copyright: a plain language guide to copyright in the 21st century (Note: PDF)

From the Commonwealth of Learning website

This book is a map, not a guidebook. It introduces the reader to copyright and its important features and explains how they fit together. Chapters include: Copyright History; International Copyright Agreements; Copyright Works; Holders’ Rights; Users’ Rights; Copyright Licences; Open Licences; Digital Rights Management; Software Protection; Traditional Knowledge; Copyright Reform


Creative Economy Report 2008 (Note: PDF)

From the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development website

In the contemporary world, a new development paradigm is emerging that links the economy and culture, embracing economic, cultural, technological and social aspects of development at both the macro and micro levels. Central to the new paradigm is the fact that creativity, knowledge and access to information are increasingly recognised as powerful engines driving economic growth and promoting development in a globalising world. “Creativity” in this context refers to the formulation of new ideas and to the application of these ideas to produce original works of art and cultural products, functional creations, scientific inventions and technological innovations. There is thus an economic aspect to creativity, observable in the way it contributes to entrepreneurship, fosters innovation, enhances productivity and promotes economic growth.


Impacts of a national high-speed broadband network (Note: PDF)

From the nowwearetalking website

This report explores and quantifies the economic importance of expanding the coverage of high-speed broadband (HSBB) to the Australian economy under a range of different scenarios. Using the latest literature, economic data, coverage maps and subscriber numbers, the current and future impact of broadband has been modelled for the period from 2009 to 2020. The rapid evolution in information and communications technologies (ICTs) over the recent decades has transformed societies and economies throughout the globe. The latest and perhaps most far-reaching phase in this transformation is underway with the rollout of HSBB in most developed and many developing economies.


Report on the World Summit on the Information Society Stocktaking (Note: PDF)

From the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) website

The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) set out a clear vision to harness the vast potential of information and communication technologies (ICTs) to achieve the development aspirations of all the world’s inhabitants. Recognising the importance of ICT as valuable assets for economic growth, world leaders expressed their strong political commitment towards building an inclusive, people-centred and development-oriented information society.
The Summit was an important landmark in the global effort to eradicate poverty and achieve the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDG) by 2015. Since the Tunis Phase of WSIS, much progress has been made and many initiatives have been announced, as reflected in this report.
However, we need to keep in mind that there is much more to be done and there are only seven years remaining to 2015.


Reality Bites: Periodicals Price Survey 2009

From the Library Journal website

In the face of the downturn, libraries and publishers brace for big cuts.


The State of America's Libraries Report 2009 (Note: PDF)

From the American Library Association website

The value of libraries in communities across the country continued to grow in 2008 - and accelerated dramatically as the national economy sank and people looked for cost effective resources in a time of crisis. U.S. libraries experienced a dramatic increase in library card registration as the public continues to turn to their local library for free services. More than 68 percent of Americans have a library card. This is the greatest number of Americans with library cards since the American Library Association started to measure library card usage in 1990, according to a 2008 Web poll conducted by Harris Interactive. The report also says library usage soared as Americans visited their libraries nearly 1.4 billion times and checked out more than 2 billion items in the past year, an increase of more than 10 percent in both checked out items and library visits, compared to data from the last economic downturn in 2001.


Signs of epistemic disruption: Transformations in the knowledge system of the academic journal

From the First Monday website

This article is an overview of the current state of scholarly journals, not (just) as an activity to be described in terms of its changing processes, but more fundamentally as a pivot point in a broader knowledge system. After locating journals in what we term the process of knowledge design, the article goes on to discuss some of the deeply disruptive aspects of the contemporary moment. These not only portend potential transformations in the form of the journal, but possibly also in the knowledge systems that the journal in its heritage form has supported. These disruptive forces are represented by changing technological, economic, distributional, geographic, interdisciplinary and social relations to knowledge. The article goes on to examine three specific breaking points.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

NDF conference 2009 - call for contributors

The call for contributors at the 2009 National Digital Forum conference has opened. The 2009 conference is being held in Wellington at Te Papa on 23-24 November.

The conference organising committee is seeking:

  • people to give short kick-off presentations for forum sessions
  • facilitators for forum sessions
  • presenters for demonstrations

Forum sessions

These 90 minute sessions are designed to get attendees talking. Each forum session will start with two or three short presentations related to a particular topic, and then move into a facilitated group discussion.

Topics likely to be of interest include (but aren't limited to):
  • Where do we stand now on issues of intellectual property, Creative Commons and copyright? How does licensing impact on commercial imperatives?
  • How do we preserve and encourage the appropriate sharing of indigenous knowledge and Mātauranga Māori in digitisation and online activities?
  • What are the issues and opportunities surrounding digital repatriation?
  • Should we prioritise access or preservation when planning digitisation projects?
  • What does the education sector want from us, and how can we get it to them?
  • How can we balance privacy and access in the online world?
  • What do we need to be doing to face the geo-future (geo-tagging, geo-caching, geo-data)?
You might like to work with other people to submit a proposal for an entire forum session, or submit an individual proposal and work with the conference committee to build a session.

Expressions of interest are also invited from people keen to help out by facilitating a session. Alternatively, if you know someone who'd make an awesome facilitator, why not nominate them?

Demonstrations

These 30 minute sessions are designed for more relaxed presentations about projects, products, websites or applications. They are an opportunity for presenters to describe what they've have been up to, what they've have achieved, and share lessons they've learned.

More information

The call for contributors closes on 11 May 2009. You can get more information about the conference theme and presentation formats, and download the Presentation Submission form, on the NDF website.

I'm on the 2009 conference committee, so if you have questions or want to bounce some ideas around before submitting a proposal, please feel free to get in touch: courtney DOT johnston AT natlib.govt.nz

Friday, April 3, 2009

The Source: news about digital libraries and library innovations from around the web

Introducing The Source


The myths and fallacies of digital photographs and their preservation (Note: PDF)

From the DigitalPreservationEurope(DPE) website

Digital photographs offer fascinating new possibilities and seem to be easier to store and preserve for the future than their analog counterpart, promising incredibly valuable, massive photo archives available at your fingertips. However, securely storing massive amounts of data, as well as ensuring that the file formats produced by professional cameras can be read in the near and longterm future, is a significant endeavour. This briefing paper reviews some of the core challenges in preserving digital photographs to make sure that the value of a digital photo archive remains and grows for the benefit of the photographer.


Will E-Book Anti-Piracy Technology Hurt Readers?

From the National Public Radio (NPR) website

As the book industry attempts to move from hardbacks to downloads, booksellers and publishers are struggling to prevent readers from pirating eBooks the way some music fans pirate music.
On the front line of that effort is digital rights management technology, or DRM, that is embedded into eBook files. DRM lets the companies control how copies can be made of eBooks and which devices can display them. But some users say DRM also prevents them from reading the eBooks they’ve bought.


Internet Typology: The Mobile Difference

From the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project website

Cast a glance at any coffee shop, train station or airport boarding gate, and it is easy to see that mobile access to the internet is taking root in our society. Open laptops or furrowed brows staring at palm-sized screens are evidence of how routinely information is exchanged on wireless networks. But the incidence of such activity is only one dimension of this phenomenon. Not everyone has the wherewithal to engage with “always present” connectivity and, while some may love it, others may only dip their toes in the wireless water and not go deeper. Until now, it has not been clear how mobile access interacts with traditional wireline online behaviour. Does availability of mobile access crowd out desktop access? Does it draw some users further into digital lifestyles?


How People Read Books Online: Mining and Visualizing Web Logs for Use Information (Note: PDF)

From the Human-Computer Interaction Lab website

This paper explores how people read books online. Instead of observing individuals, we analyse usage of an online digital library of children’s books (the International Children’s Digital Library). We go beyond typical webpage-centric analysis to focus on book reading in an attempt to understand how people read books from websites. We propose a definition of reading a book (in comparison to others who visit the website), and report a number of observations about the use of the library in question.


Friending Libraries: Why libraries can become nodes in people’s social networks

From the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project website

Lee Rainie, Director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project, recently discussed Pew Internet’s latest findings and why they suggest that libraries can play a role in people’s social networks in the future. He described the reasons that people rely more and more on their social networks as they share ideas, learn, solve problems, and seek social support. And he explored how libraries can act as “nodes” in people’s networks.