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Joanne S

What Is Web 2.0 - O'Reilly Media - 0 views

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    O'Reilly, T. (2005, September 30). What Is Web 2.0 - O'Reilly Media. Retrieved September 10, 2010, from http://oreilly.com/web2/archive/what-is-web-20.html To discover how Tim O'Reilly originally conceptualised Web 2.0, please read the following explanation. Do not worry too much about understanding every web tool mentioned or all the technical processes. Do pay particular attention to the discussion of RSS on page 3 and the different ways that users relate to the web in this vision.
Joanne S

Library 2.0 Discussion: Michael Squared | Librarian in Black Blog - Sarah Houghton - 0 views

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    Houghton-Jan, S. (2005, December 19). Library 2.0 Discussion: Michael Squared. The Librarian in Black. Retrieved April 16, 2011, fromhttp://librarianinblack.net/librarianinblack/2005/12/library_20_disc.html
Joanne S

blyberg.net » Blog Archive » 11 reasons why Library 2.0 exists and matters - 0 views

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    Blyberg, J. (2006, September 1). 11 reasons why Library 2.0 exists and matters. blyberg.net. Retrieved September 14, 2010, from http://www.blyberg.net/2006/01/09/11-reasons-why-library-20-exists-and-matters/
Joanne S

What Is Library 2.0 ? - 0 views

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    Greenhill, K. (2007, October 10). What Is Library 2.0 ? Presented at the Library 2.0 Unconference, State Library of Queensland. Retrieved from http://www.slideshare.net/sirexkat/what-is-library-20 This is a 20 minute presentation with audio synced to the slides. To hear the audio, click on the green arrow in the centre of the box
Joanne S

LTTO Episodes | COFA Online Gateway - 0 views

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    COFA Online. (2011, March 1). Understanding Creative Commons - case study. Retrieved April 29, 2011, from http://online.cofa.unsw.edu.au/learning-to-teach-online/ltto-episodes?view=video&video=239
Joanne S

Archives & Museum Informatics: Museums and the Web 2009: Paper: Gow, V. et al., Making ... - 0 views

  • New Zealand content difficult to discover, share and use
  • DigitalNZ is testing ways to create digital content, collect and share existing digital content, and build smart, freely available search and discovery tools.
  • Memory Maker blurs the line between consuming and producing content. What’s sometimes called ‘remix culture’ […]. Digital technologies have opened up new possibilities for young people to access and represent the stories of their culture by taking sound and images and recombining them to say something new, something relevant to them. (Sarah Jones, Lunch Box: Software & digital media for learning, November 2008) http://lunchbox.org.nz/2008/11/get-coming-home-on-your-schools-website-wiki-or-blog/)
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • The Memory Maker provides a taste of what is possible when collecting institutions modernise their practices for keeping and managing copyright information, using Creative Commons licenses or ‘no known copyright’ statements.
  • Learning about ‘hyperlinks’ today, these young New Zealanders will be the developers and creators of tomorrow.
  • The full set of contributions is accessible through a Coming Home search tool, occasionally on a google-like hosted search page (Figure 5), but more often through a search widget embedded on many New Zealand Web sites (Figure 6).
  • Digital New Zealand is developing and testing solutions that showcase what’s possible when we really focus on improving access to and discovery of New Zealand content.
  • Technically, the Digital New Zealand system is in three parts: a backend, a metadata store, and a front end.
  • The coolest thing to be done with your data will be thought of by someone else
  • “an API is basically a way to give developers permission to hack into your database”.
    • Joanne S
       
      George Oates
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    Gow, V., Brown, L., Johnston, C., Neale, A., Paynter, G., & Rigby, F. (2009). Making New Zealand Content Easier to Find, Share and Use. In Museums and the Web 2009. Presented at the Museums and the Web 2009, Toronto: Archives & Museum Informatics, Retrieved from http://www.archimuse.com/mw2009/papers/gow/gow.html
Joanne S

Hastings, S. K. and Lewis, E. C. (2005) Let's get digital. In N. Courtney, (Ed.), Techn... - 0 views

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    Hastings, S. K. and Lewis, E. C. (2005) Let's get digital. In N. Courtney, (Ed.), Technology for the rest of us (Ch.11, pp 133-153). Westport, Conn.: Libraries Unlimited. Available from Curtin's eReserve:
Joanne S

Library 2.0 and User-Generated Content What can the users do for us? - 0 views

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    Danowski, P. (2007). Library 2.0 and User-Generated Content What can the users do for us? In World Library and Information Congress: 73rd IFLA General Conference and Council. Durban, South Africa: IFLA. Retrieved from http://archive.ifla.org/IV/ifla73/papers/113-Danowski-en.pdf
Joanne S

Laughey, D. (2007). Music Media in Young People's Everyday Lives. In Music, Sound and M... - 0 views

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    Laughey, D. (2007). Music Media in Young People's Everyday Lives. In Music, Sound and Multimedia: From the Live to the Virtual (pp. 172-187). In E-Reserve. How is music interlaced with our everyday lives in general? What has been the impact of the Internet in the way music is used by young people privately and publicly (and the way this intermingles)?
Joanne S

Social Media: Libraries Are Posting, but Is Anyone Listening? - 0 views

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    "We keep it fun. I tell my staff that they should follow a very simple rule, don't post anything you wouldn't be comfortable saying at a service desk. Beyond that they are using their voice, following their passions, and engaging with our community," commented Brown."
Joanne S

Wright, J., & Cowell, J. (2014). ALICE: are we ready for a startup? - 0 views

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    Questioning the purpose and functions of a modern state library. Well worth reading to get an idea of one state librarian's vision of what Australian state libraries could be doing. Wright, J., & Cowell, J. (2014). ALICE: are we ready for a startup? Presented at the VALA 2014: Streaming with possibilities, Melbourne Australia: VALA: Libraries, technology and the future. Retrieved from VALA2014-Session-15-Wright-Paper
Joanne S

Re-imagining Libraries 2012-2016 | National and State Libraries Australasia - 0 views

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    National and State Libraries Australasia. (2012, May). Re-imagining Libraries 2012-16. Retrieved fromhttp://www.nsla.org.au/publication/re-imagining-libraries-2012%E2%80%932016
Joanne S

National and State Libraries Australasia. (2008). Re-imagining library services: strate... - 0 views

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    Browse these two vision statements to compare and contrast the directions taken by the National and State Libraries. Note the modified and less ambitious vision of the later version. National and State Libraries Australasia. (2008). Re-imagining library services: strategic plan. Retrieved fromhttp://nsla.org.au/sites/www.nsla.org.au/files/publications/NSLA.Discussion-Paper-Reimagining.Library.Services.Strategic.Plan_200807.pdf
Joanne S

Quihampton, W. (2011). Re-imagining Libraries: Delivering services in a digital world. ... - 0 views

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    National and State Libraries Australasia vision for the future Quihampton, W. (2011). Re-imagining Libraries: Delivering services in a digital world. Presented at the ALIA Information Online, Sydney, Australia. Retrieved from http://conferences.alia.org.au/online2011/papers/paper_2011_A14.pdf
Joanne S

Trove: Innovation in Access to Information in Australia | Ariadne: Web Magazine for Inf... - 0 views

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    Holley, R. (2010). Trove: Innovation in access to information in Australia. Ariadne, (64). Retrieved fromhttp://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue64/holley/
Joanne S

unglue.it - So You Want to Be a Librarian is a Free eBook - 0 views

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    Pressley, L. (2009). Types of Libraries. In So you want to be a librarian! (pp. 22-79). Duluth, Minn.: Library Juice Press. Retrieved fromhttps://unglue.it/work/76348/ 
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