Posted on 01/16/2008 3:29:34 PM PST by Daffynition
If youre reading this, then chances are you already know about Web 2.0. Even if you dont know the term itself, youre one of millions worldwide who are actively creating, sharing or benefiting from user-generated content that characterizes Web 2.0 phenomena.
As a communicator, I want to expand the reach of the Library and access to our magnificent collections as far and wide as possible. Of course, there are only so many hours in the day, so many staff in Library offices and so many dollars in the budget. Priorities have to be chosen that will most effectively advance our mission.
Thats why it is so exciting to let people know about the launch of a brand-new pilot project the Library of Congress is undertaking with Flickr, the enormously popular photo-sharing site that has been a Web 2.0 innovator. If all goes according to plan, the project will help address at least two major challenges: how to ensure better and better access to our collections, and how to ensure that we have the best possible information about those collections for the benefit of researchers and posterity. In many senses, we are looking to enhance our metadata (one of those Web 2.0 buzzwords that 90 percent of our readers could probably explain better than me).
The project is beginning somewhat modestly, but we hope to learn a lot from it. Out of some 14 million prints, photographs and other visual materials at the Library of Congress, more than 3,000 photos from two of our most popular collections are being made available on our new Flickr page, to include only images for which no copyright restrictions are known to exist.
The real magic comes when the power of the Flickr community takes over. We want people to tag, comment and make notes on the images, just like any other Flickr photo, which will benefit not only the community but also the collections themselves. For instance, many photos are missing key caption information such as where the photo was taken and who is pictured. If such information is collected via Flickr members, it can potentially enhance the quality of the bibliographic records for the images.
Were also very excited that, as part of this pilot, Flickr has created a new publication model for publicly held photographic collections called The Commons. Flickr hopesas do wethat the project will eventually capture the imagination and involvement of other public institutions, as well.
From the Librarys perspective, this pilot project is a statement about the power of the Web and user communities to help people better acquire information, knowledge andmost importantlywisdom. One of our goals, frankly, is to learn as much as we can about that power simply through the process of making constructive use of it.
More information is available on the Librarys Web site here and on the FAQ page here.
And with that, gentlemen (and gentlewomen), start your tagging!
Bain News Service, publisher.
Sir Genille Cave Brown Cave
[between 1910 and 1915]
1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
read later
I think of it as the changes that are making the web a lot cooler and more interesting. It’s users supplying the content: things like social-networking sites like Myspace, information wikis, Youtube, Liveleak, various video streaming, mp3 downloads. Stuff added to and shared on the web by users.
Regards
Oh...I thought it had something to do with redoing the internet...in particular, (256)^4 IP addresses aren’t enough to go around...also aren’t the packet routing algorithms nowhere near optimal?
That too.
Regards
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Thanks Daffynition. |
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