a centre of expertise in digital information management content creation: web 2.0 is providing the...
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Content Creation: Web 2.0 Is Providing The Solution!Brian Kelly, UKOLN,
University of Bath
Bath
EmailB.Kelly@ukoln.ac.uk
UKOLN is supported by:
http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/online/web-2.0-200705/http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/online/web-2.0-200705/
About This TalkThis talk argues that Web 2.0 services are providing solutions to many of the requirements we are currently facing in delivering services for our users.Thanks to Paul Walk for ideas originally presented at the recent Shock of the Social conference.
About This TalkThis talk argues that Web 2.0 services are providing solutions to many of the requirements we are currently facing in delivering services for our users.Thanks to Paul Walk for ideas originally presented at the recent Shock of the Social conference.
This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 licence (but note caveat)
Resources bookmarked using ‘web-2.0-200705' tag
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
2
Third Party Web 2.0 Services: The Future? (1)
Our users are using them anyway - at least, we think they are! (Note more data is needed)They can be more cost-effective (& greener?)
• Always difficult to measure• Energy cost of hosting servers locally is
increasingly a concernThey can benefit from network effects unavailable to local services because they can become global in scale
• Can an institution build a local system with a social network large enough to be useful?
Web
2.0
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
3
Third Party Web 2.0 Services: The Future? (2)
They develop more rapidly - perpetual beta & massive feedback
• Can our locally developed services compete with this?
There is so much already available - e.g. Office 2.0 Database at http://itredux.com/office-20/database/
• Demonstrates viability of working with only a web browser and a network connection
• Itself is built on a Web 2.0 database, Dabble DB (http://www.dabbledb.com/)
Why aren’t we doing this to a much greater extent?Why aren’t we doing this to a much greater extent?
Web
2.0
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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But What if the Service is Removed?
This is a real risk, in the sense that it can happen. Locally installed software can have its own peculiar problems, but sudden removal is unusual....Addressing the problem:
• Migration: make sure you can export your data in a format which allows service to be re-deploying (e.g. tools exist for extracting del.icio.us bookmarks)
• Identify alternatives which can import your data and provide a comparable service
• Do the business research - you do do this anyway for locally installed software, don’t you....?
A radical thought: perhaps this is simply a new reality - the downside of a new, generally better way of deploying services? Maybe our users will come to expect this and be able to deal with it?
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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We’ve Been Here Before! (1)
So what’s new:• Transition from mainframes• Transition from mini-computers• Transition from BBC, Acorn, PET, …
Similarly for the software:• dBase, Lotus, …
We just need to be able to be more agile.We just need to be able to be more agile.
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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We’ve Been Here Before! (2)
“But Google may go out of business!”
Yer, right.
Software & services do disappear:• Home-grown stuff (the developer leaves,
loses interest, …)• Project-funded deliverables (what
happened to ROADS?)• National services e.g. Mailbase• Licensed application (what happened to
WebCT?)
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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What if Service Suddenly Changes?
“Always beta makes me nervous!”:• A good, commercial service will not threaten
customer base by making sudden, significant changes, or removing important features
• However, unlike locally installed software (where you can at least choose not to upgrade), hosted services will tend to be upgraded steadily (this might be seen as a good thing)
• The notion of perpetual beta is being explored and argued about
• The customer needs to maintain an awareness of the service’s roadmap for future development
• Good IT support services will already be doing this for their locally installed software - they need to apply the same strategy to hosted services
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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What about Support, Security, FOI, SLAs ....?
We can’t be responsible if you decide to use Gmail:• Is this why we still issue an email address to our
students?Security & FOI issues
• May be issues of where the data is held, rather than who supplies the service
Service maintenance• SLAs - difficult to arrange in a distributed world• Diagnostics are difficult if service relies on others
outside your control: “You know you have a distributed system, when a company you didn't know you had a relationship [with] changes their business plan and your application stops working”
• Do you actually have an SLA with your local service? How often does one of your institutional services go offline unexpectedly?
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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What About Our Brand, Domain Name....?
Challenge:• If we encourage our students to use Fflickr,
for example, for uploading their work, can we advertise ourselves as providing this facility?
Service providers are aware of this issue:• Google have launched Google Apps for
Domains• If a remote service can be utilised in a
machine-machine way, then it can possibly be ‘wrapped’ in a local look-and-feel
Ob
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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“IT services should be an enabling service, not a barrier, but this requires a transformation in the way IT personnel see themselves in the organisation
“IT services should be an enabling service, not a barrier, but this requires a transformation in the way IT personnel see themselves in the organisation
Development: In-house Developers
What will developers do if there are no local systems?• There will always be some locally developed
systems - concentrate on developing solutions to problems where local/domain knowledge is crucial
• Integration - mashups! Leverage work which has gone into external services and add value locally
• Added-value work, rather than core services• Experimental, evaluation, research, …• The last mile - the presentation layer for the
institution (portals, personalisation)• Customisation via APIs• Consultation for colleagues - helping them to use
available services, even outside the institution
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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New Opportunities for Non-Developers
Does Web 2.0 offer the possibility of ‘development’ to more institutional players - not just the ‘developers’?
• Yahoo’s Pipes - drag and drop RSS mashups for everyone
• Free hosted portals - NetVibes, Pageflakes• Elgg spaces - DIY social networking in an
educational context• There is a (non-web) precedent: spreadsheets
are the most widely deployed and used development tool of all - almost anyone can develop useful functions with this technology
Op
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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Yahoo Pipes - Development Tool for the rest of usO
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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Hosting, Deploying, Developing: a SpectrumO
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A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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Yes Things Can Go Wrong!
Case study:
• RSS-> HTML conversion service used for UKOLN event
• On 21 Oct 2006 email received saying page had been hacked
• Service removed (and service restored later same day)
• Following day discovered service had admin problem in paying subscription for domain
http://www.rss-info.com/http://www.rss-info.com/
Reflections:• Problems fixed quickly (thanks to peers).• A records management problem (has happened to MS!)• A problem we could experience ourselves • Learnt about use of whois for checking domain records
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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Do It!
I use Slideshare for hosting many of my slides:
• Annotation service• Maximising impact• Resource discovery
through like-minded people
Master copy managed at UKOLN
Why don’t we do more of this?
http://www.slideshare.net/lisbk/content-creation-web-20-is-providing-the-solution/
http://www.slideshare.net/lisbk/content-creation-web-20-is-providing-the-solution/
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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Further Discussions
UK Web Focus blog discusses many related issues:
• New services• Risk assessment• Deployment strategies• “Web 2.0 Readiness
Rating”• …
Note also UKOLN’s 11th Institutional Web Management Workshop 16-18th July at the University of York (Google ‘IWMW 2007’)
http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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Thoughts
• When considering new service developments, look carefully at what existing Web services have to offer
• Third party services may provide evaluation and prototyping and proof-of-concepts and not just final service delivery
• Consider management & deployment costs• Devise an exit strategy when using external
services• Manage, rather than avoid, the risk of using
external services• Have a risk management strategy – and apply it to
conventional approaches and doing nothing
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
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Questions
Any questions?
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