1 / 25

library 2.0 why not let the users run the library?

library 2.0 why not let the users run the library? jakob harnesk 13 th nordic i&d conference june, 2007 something someone might have said (17th century) “Why didn’t we let the sailors build the ship?” (Wasa shipbuilding company) something else someone might have said (21th century)

paul2
Télécharger la présentation

library 2.0 why not let the users run the library?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. library 2.0why not let the users run the library? jakob harnesk 13th nordic i&d conference june, 2007

  2. something someone might have said (17th century) • “Why didn’t we let the sailors build the ship?” (Wasa shipbuilding company)

  3. something else someone might have said (21th century) • “Why not let the readers write the encyclopedia?” Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia

  4. Democracy 2.0 Culture 2.0 Enterprise 2.0 / Business 2.0 ESP 2.0 Human being 2.0 Openness 2.0 (Carl Bildt) Government 2.0 Freedom 2.0 Enlightenment 2.0 And …. we are living in world 2.0

  5. blogs • Approaching 100 million blogs • > 120 Swedish library blogs • Why? • Simplicity • C Me gen • Culture of Exposure • Communication and diversity

  6. the long tail • Chris Andersson • “We sold more books today that didn't sell at all yesterday than we sold today of all the books that did sell yesterday” (Amazon)

  7. wikipedia • Jimmie Wales • Encyclopedia Galactica / Asimov • History of Encyclopedias • 17th century: Diderot, Voltaire and other: Encyclopédie (29 yrs) • 18th century: Encyclopedia Britannica, 3rd ed: 20 volumes, 80 000 articles (10 yrs) • 21st century: Wikipedia, 7,5 million articles in 253 languages (1,8 million in English). (6 yrs)

  8. (looking back) • “no matter how small and narrow your subject is, it is very likely that you can find something written on it in Wikipedia”.

  9. (word swap) • “no matter how small and narrow your subject is, it is very likely that you can find something written on it in ……..”.

  10. et voilá! • “no matter how small and narrow your subject is, it is very likely that you can find something written on it in - the library”. • What constitutes a library? • A sufficient number of resources • A sufficient number of users

  11. tagging • Good old classification • Added: design elements • A way to group and connect users • Del.icio.us • LibraryThing • Last.fm

  12. Flickr YouTube MySpace FaceBook LinkEdin RSS Podcasting Twitter Mash-ups instant messaging open source more web 2.0

  13. library 2.0 concepts • Understand the user and get closer to the user • Trust the user • User-generated content • What do other players do? • Integrate web site with OPAC • Constant beta • Visibility of staff competence • Library community is users and staff.

  14. Public libraries at a crossroad • Lending figures going down • Public service crisis • Changed relation to the book • Use of other media types

  15. thank you for listening! jakob.harnesk@comhem.sewww.harneskinformation.se

More Related