blogs, wikis and more: web 2.0 demystified for information professionals
DESCRIPTION
Marieke Guy from UKOLN will help you find out how Web 2.0 applications are being used in libraries and information centres, and what actually works. Blogs, wikis, RSS? Podcasts, Slideshare, Flickr and del.icio.us? Social Networking, Social Bookmarking and Video Sharing are the buzz words.TRANSCRIPT
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
UKOLN is supported by:
Blogs, Wikis and more:
Web 2.0 demystified for information professionals
Eastern RSC event Monday 23rd February from 11:00 - 12:00.
Marieke Guy
Research Officerwww.bath.ac.uk
This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 licence (but note caveat)
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Introduction to UKOLN
• UKOLN is a National centre of expertise in digital information management
• Library and cataloguing background• Located at the University of Bath• Funded by JISC and MLA to advise UK HE and FE
communities and the cultural heritage sector• Many areas of work including:
– Digital preservation: DCC– Metadata, registry work– Repositories: eBank, Intute, SWORD, DRIVER– Dissemination: Ariadne, International Journal of
Digital Curation– eScience: eCrystals….etc.
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Introduction to Me
• Been at UKOLN 9 years• Now a remote worker• Member of the Community & Outreach Team• Currently working on:
– Good APIs project– Chair of the Institutional Web Management
Workshop – Cultural heritage work
• Previous roles/projects include:– JISC-PoWR, JISC Standards Catalogue, QA Focus, SPP
Project Manager, ePrints UK project manager, Public Library Focus work, NOF-digitise, Web Magazines
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Workshop Programme• Presentation on Blogs, Wikis and more
– 20 minutes• Do It Yourself - A chance for you to try out some of the tools
– 20 minutes• Discussion - A chance for you to think about the challenges
– 5/10 minutes• Presentation/Discussion on Challenges of Web 2.0 for the
Information Professional– 10 minutes
• Final Feedback -Any final questions, comments etc.– 5 minutes
Will use this logo when it’s time for questions
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Workshop Resources• All resources (and more) linked with Delicious tag:
http://delicious.com/mariekeguy/rsc-eastern-200802• Wiki for you to work on
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
So…What is Web 2.0?• Marketing term (derived from observing 'patterns')
rather than technical standards - “an attitude not a
technology”
Web2MemeMap, Tim O’Reilly, 2005
Characteristics Of Web 2.0
•Network as platform•Always beta•Clean URIs•Remix and mash-ups
•Syndication (RSS)•Architecture of
participation•Blogs & Wikis•Social networking •Social tagging
(folksonomies)•Trust and openness
Characteristics Of Web 2.0
•Network as platform•Always beta•Clean URIs•Remix and mash-ups
•Syndication (RSS)•Architecture of
participation•Blogs & Wikis•Social networking •Social tagging
(folksonomies)•Trust and openness
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
BlogsFlickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/cecio/259559422/
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Blogs• A blog is a Web log, online diary• Professionals are increasingly using blogs to describe
what they are doing• A social phenomenon of the 21st Century• Key characteristics are openess, collaboration and
syndication • There is a need for information professionals to:
– Understand blogging and related technologies (e.g. RSS, Technorati)
– Be able to find resources in the 'Bloggosphere'– Explore how to use blogs to support business
functions (support users, staff & organisation)
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Why Blog?• Community of library professionals• Long tradition of sharing experiences and knowledge• New issues – need to find new communities• Blogs can be a timely way to
– Offer advice and commentary– Make new connections– Record discussion over time– Also provide a different view to email discussion
threads
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Reading BlogsW
eb
2.0
Bloglines – a Web-based Blog reader. You are informed of changes since you last viewed the page.
Bloglines – a Web-based Blog reader. You are informed of changes since you last viewed the page.
http://www.bloglines.com/myblogshttp://www.bloglines.com/myblogs
• There are lots of dedicated blog readers
• You can sign up for RSS feeds to be alerted to changes
• Try not to be distracted by adverts etc
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Library Blogs• Lots of Individuals creating blogs: Phil Bradley’s,
Peter Scott, Technobiblio, Library Techtronics, Shifted Librarian, Free Range Librarian, DIY Librarian
• Lots of themed blogs: Going Green at your library, Librarians for Human Rights, The ‘M’ Word - Marketing Libraries
• Lots of branch specific blogs: i Know Gateshead Libraries, Oxford University Library, Manchester Lit List
• Some subject specialist and medical blogs, moving more towards library teams
• British Librarian Bloggers list (lis-bloggers)• Hot Stuff 2.0 – great list of library blogs (over 800)
collated by Dave Pattern
Spineless? http://hwlibrary.wordpress.com/
Paige Turner http://swansealibraries.blogspot.com/
The Unquiet Librarian - http://theunquietlibrarian.wordpress.com/
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Using Blogs• Blogs are very interconnected with each other (bloggers
discuss other blog postings, blogrolls etc.).• This can help to provide feedback; measure impact;
engage in discussions; etc.• Web Monkey extension can give blog comments on
your pages• Technorati can help find Blog articles, etc.• A search for “Oxford University Library Services” returns
87 hits, was mainly student blogs, now many others• The comments field can allow you to engage in
discussions• Time for you to establish a blog?
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Ideas for Blogs• A News Blog
– New branches, stock areas, user services, service changes, opening hours, fines, event information
• From the Librarian’s Desk– Blogging about your daily work, provides
transparency and openness• Library Resources Blog
– Special collections• Special Projects Blog/ Task Groups Blog• Reflective Blog
– Use as a ‘try it out’ experience• Professional Development Blog
– Chronicle your daily activities, identify progression, achievements, use it for annual appraisal
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
A Few Issues…• Institutional Issues – e.g. Can you have a corporate
voice, do you want one?• Technical Issues – e.g. What software will you use?• Barriers to making the decision to blog e.g. Do you
want all your thoughts to be accessible to all? What about an internal blog?
• Barriers to getting started• Gaining momentum e.g. A huge number of blogs are
not read and become deserted by their writers• Keeping your momentum! e.g. Will you be able to
come up with content?• Stopping?• Right person for the job!
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Gaining Momentum• Participate: embed yourself in the community, social
networks e.g. Ning, Facebook (need to be aware of privacy issues, ownership of data, dangers of data lock-in)
• Identify and follow other blogs• Get a great feed reader like Google Reader• Link, a lot, especially to other blogs• Comment, and use your URL when you do• Be fairly shameless in self-promoting:
“I like what you’re saying but over on our library blog we’ve taken a different approach..”
• Spread the URL around
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Keeping Momentum• Use Technorati, Google Blog search, etc • Start to embed these in people’s lives by reporting• Make sure you post regularly, and with high quality:
– Don’t post because you haven’t done one in a while...– Do post because you’ve got something to say
• If you’re losing momentum, maybe there’s a reason?• Do some evaluation of your blog: ask readers• Look for co-authors. Guest posts. You may be surprised! • if it’s getting stale, try some alternative approaches:
– Interviews, podcasts, surveys or polls– Video or other media embedding, live blogging
• ...be creative, and copy other people
Wikis
Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/cogdog/1627257/
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Wikis• Wikis are collaborative Web-based authoring tools –read
state and write state• They can be used for:
– team work and collaborative papers (avoiding emailed MS Word file around)
– Note-taking and social discussions at events– As an easy way to set up a group Web site– A great e-learning tool
• Uses a simple markup language (wikitext or wikisyntax)• Ability to compare previous versions of a page, revert back
and track who edited the page• Many allow users to discuss issues prior to making
changes• Increasing popularity in the public sector
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Wikipedia• Easy to create• Provides high-
profile information (Google-friendly)
• Allows the community to enhance and develop content
• Is time your library had an entry?
• Who will edit it?
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Wiki Issues• Vandalism, spam• Wiki etiquette• Searching (more tagging needed), archiving
(ephemeral), organisation of pages – no heirarchy• Mark up – no standardisation…yet – training implications• Stopping your wiki from becoming an unmaintained
storehouse of out-of-date information!• Organisational Culture - Freedom to move away from
usual design, protocols, habits• Resources - Staff training, time, costs• How will librarians add wikis and blogs to their
collections?
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
• Book reviews, FAQs • Comments section, suggestion box• Commonly asked questions (reference or general library)• Local history, personal stories• Course collaboration, e-portfolios• Library project work, input for research work
• Workshops
Potential for Libraries“At their best, they can become true community resources that can position the library as a an online hub of their local community”
Meredith Farkas
Social Web
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Social Networks• Sharing and community are what Web 2.0 is all about• Some of the most famous networks are MySpace,
Facebook, del.icio.us, Frappr and Flickr• Library is a social network in itself so the implications
for it are huge• Tagging – allows users to add keywords to items
– Created by groups/communities who are the resource users
– Natural language – common understanding– No hierarchy, feedback
• RSS Feeds
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Sharing - FlickrW
eb
2.0
• Web 2.0 includes community-building
• You can help support your community-building by making it easy to share photos at events (e.g. this seminar)
• Simply suggest a tag and encourage delegates to upload their photos with this tag
• Flickr Commons
http://www.flickr.com/photos/westmontlibrary/176505152/http://www.flickr.com/photos/westmontlibrary/176505152/
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Sharing – DeliciousW
eb
2.0
Who else has bookmarked this resources? What are their interests?(I may have similar interests) How many have bookmarked my resource?
Who else has bookmarked this resources? What are their interests?(I may have similar interests) How many have bookmarked my resource?
• Another aspect of sharing is sharing bookmarks
• This can be used to:– Manage your
bookmarks– Allow others to
contribute resources– Allow lists of
bookmarks to be repurposed
– Carry out impact analysis
http://del.icio.us/mariekeguy/rsc-eastern-200802/http://del.icio.us/mariekeguy/rsc-eastern-200802/
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Sharing - Slidesharehttp://www.slideshare.net/MariekeGuyhttp://www.slideshare.net/MariekeGuy
• Many other resources can be shared e.g.:
• Slides• Photos• Maps• Video• Travel info• Events info• Music • Etc.
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Web
2.0
Google Maps/Mashupshttp://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/webmaster-2007/maps/
http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/webmaster-2007/maps/
• Web 2.0 provides valuable opportunity to provide mapping & location services:– Embedding Google
maps on your Web sites
– Developing rich services using this
– Providing location metadata / microformats which can be processed by simple browser tools
http://www.talis.com/tdn/competitionhttp://www.talis.com/tdn/competition
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Creative CommonsW
eb
2.0
Openess is a key aspect of Web 2.0: open source; open standards and open content can all help to bring benefits through maximising usage of services
Openess is a key aspect of Web 2.0: open source; open standards and open content can all help to bring benefits through maximising usage of services
• Creative Commons offers copyright holders licences to assign to their work
• The licences aim to clarify the conditions of use and avoid many of the problems current copyright laws pose when attempting to share information.
• CC maximises impact of work
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
• The Facebook platform provides access to (a) Skype (b) Twitter micro-blogging service (c) mini-
questions
• Facebook:– A social networking
Web site– Had the largest
number of registered users among college-focused sites with over 30 million members worldwide
– Ranked between top 10–20 Web sites
– Seventh most visited site in the US
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Podcasts• Podcasts are
syndicated MP3 files• New items in a
podcast can appear automatically in your Podcast client (e.g. iPod) or RSS reader
• Resources can be accessed via iTunes
Web
2.0
http://www.podanza.com/podcast/...http://www.podanza.com/podcast/...
The University of Bath won a European award for its podcasts from guest lecturers, etc. We can regard this as maximising impacts of the ideas and promoting the University, at little cost
The University of Bath won a European award for its podcasts from guest lecturers, etc. We can regard this as maximising impacts of the ideas and promoting the University, at little cost
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
CommunicationW
eb
2.0
• Realtime discussion is a key part of the Web 2.0 and the .net generation (IM, SMS…)
• Can be used by patrons, chat reference services with transcript
• How much effort does it take to provide an instant messaging service for your library?
• Try Gabbly.com• What about Skype?
http://www.gabbly.com/http://www.gabbly.com/
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
TwitterM
icro
Blo
gs
• Twitter:– Best known of the micro-
blogging applications– Web application, with
desktop & mobile clients• Uses:
– Community-building– Support from your peers– Answers to questions– Ideas– Marketing– …
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Do It Yourself (20 Minutes)• Time try out some of the applications that have been
mentioned• Try to keep in mind how this could be applied in your
working environment• Any problems just communicate in the chat area
http://rsc-eastern-200802.wetpaint.com/page/Tasks
http://rsc-eastern-200802.wetpaint.com/page/Tasks
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Discussion (10 Minutes)So what are the challenges of Web 2.0 for information professionals?
1. The top 5 challenges for the information Professionals community?
2. Possible ways that you can meet these challenges
Best to write thoughts in notepad, refresh wiki page, paste onto wiki then save
http://rsc-eastern200802.wetpaint.com/page/Challenges
http://rsc-eastern200802.wetpaint.com/page/Challenges
http://rsc-eastern200802.wetpaint.com/page/Meeting_Challenges
http://rsc-eastern200802.wetpaint.com/page/Meeting_Challenges
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Librarian/IP Stereotypes• They think they know better than the user e.g. they
don't like people using Google Scholar; they should use Web of Knowledge
• They think that users should be forced to learn boolean searching and other formal search techniques because this is good for them
• They don't want the users to search for themselves ( folksonomies) because they won't get it right.
• They want to classify the entire Web - despite the fact that users don't use their lists of Web links
• They want services to be perfect before they release them to users. They are uneasy with the concept of 'forever beta' (they don't believe that users have the ability to figure things out themselves and work around the bugs).
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Web 2.0 Backlash• When significant new things appear:
– Enthusiasts / early adopters predict a transformation of society
– Sceptics outline the limitations & deficiencies• There’s a need to:
– Promote the benefits to the wider community (esp. those willing to try if convinced of benefits)
– Be realistic and recognise limitations– Address inappropriate criticisms, avoid the chasm
in the Gartner curve
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Library 2.0• Paul Miller stated that he saw Web 2.0 as being about:
– freeing of data, remixing and the opening up of the long tail
– the building of virtual applications,– participation, sharing, communication and facilitating
community – applications that work for the user, are modular and
are smart• Web 2.0 + Library = Library 2.0• With Web 2.0 libraries have an opportunity to work their
wealth of data harder and serve their existing audiences better
Warning: Users will bypass processes and institutions that they perceive to be slow, unresponsive, unappealing and irrelevant in favour of a more direct approach to services offered by others that just might be 'good enough' for what they need to do.
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Safe Experimentation
• Are you interested in using Web 2.0 in your organisation?
• Worried about corporate inertia, power struggles, etc?• What you need is a deployment strategy:
– Addressing business needs– Low-hanging fruits– Encouraging the enthusiasts– Gain experience of the browser tools – and see what
you’re missing!– Staff training and development– Address areas you feel comfortable with– Risk management strategy– …
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Staff DevelopmentD
ep
loym
en
t C
hallen
ges
http://podcasts.alablog.org/blog/_archives/2006/4/12/1881517.html
http://podcasts.alablog.org/blog/_archives/2006/4/12/1881517.html • There's a need for your
staff to:– Understand what Web
2.0 is about– Learn how to make use
of Web 2.0• This is all subject to
constraints of lack of time; resources; etc.
• The Library 2.0 Podcasts Web sites provides a useful resources for learning about new tools, techniques, etc.
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Some Low Hanging Fruit… • Librarything provides a
good example of a Web 2.0 service:– Catalogue your books– AJAX interface– Exploit data provided
by the community– Export capabilities– Other books you may
like– Implications for reader
recommendations– …
http://www.librarything.com/http://www.librarything.com/
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Other Ideas• RSS feeds, create them and use them• Wikipedia• Secondlife, Cybrary city• Slideshare• Bookmarks - del.icio.us, citeulike, connotea• Librarylookup – Library mashups• Folksonomies – different ways of organising
information • YouTube – video, streaming of video
OPACs - Think of your library system as “an interlocking set of functional components rather than a monolithic black box” – Plinkit (Public Library Interface Kit)
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Risk Managment• Take a risk management approach to your evaluation of
Web 2.0 technologies (as we do with IWMW)– Establish Agreements– Use well-established services: Google & Delicious are
well-established and have financial security. – Notification: warnings that services could be lost. – Engagement: with the user community: users actively
engage in the evaluation of the services. – Provision of alternative services– Use in non-mission critical areas: not for bookings! – Long term experiences of services: usage stats– Availability of alternative sources of data: e.g.
standard Web server log files.– Data export and aggregation: RSS feeds, aggregated
in Suprglu, OPML viewers, etc.
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Conclusions• Web 2.0 can provide real benefits for our users,
however organisations tend to be conservative• We therefore need:
– Advocacy– To listen to users' concerns– To address users' concerns e.g. risk management– A change of culture
• We can all benefit by adopting Web 2.0 principles of openness and sharing. So let us– Share our advocacy resources, risk management
techniques, etc.– Develop your own social network based on
openness, trust, collaboration, ..
A centre of expertise in digital information management
www.ukoln.ac.uk
Questions?