Library 2.0 is much more than adding a blog to the library website, it’s a
philosophy of service built on three components: constant change, participatory
service and mindful evaluation. Involving users in planning new and improved
library services, breaking down barriers to participation and recognizing the
need to assess process and ‘what we’ve always done’ are important factors as
well.
Contents contributed and discussions participated by Ellen Hrebeniuk
ISTE | do schools still need brick-and-mortar libraries - 4 views
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If we'd had just one functioning computer, connected to the entire world—and in this case, to the universe—in that classroom, within literally a minute Mark would have attained multimodal comprehension. Sure, we had a big library upstairs, but I couldn't leave the rest of my class to take Mark on a Mars quest. So the librarian sat, probably alone, in her information monarchy.
Content is a Service Business - Tools of Change for Publishing - 0 views
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Google and other aggregators haven't stolen any value from the creators of the content they are aggregating -- they have done what intermediaries have always done, which is create new value based on doing for customers what those customers cannot or do not want to do themselves -- the service of sorting through all that content to find the thing that solves their problem.
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Rather the PSL are needed for the distribution of the users' attention back to the works. From an ocean of possibilities the PSL find, nurture and refine the work of creators that they believe fans will connect with.
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This is not just about using free digital content to sell physical goods. It's an acknowledgment that what you're selling as an artist (or an author, or a publisher for that matter) is not content. What you sell is providing something that the customer/reader/fan wants.
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