Web Futures: Implications For Higher Education

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Web Futures: Implications For Higher Education

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Title: Web Futures: Implications For Higher Education


1
Web Futures Implications For Higher Education
http//www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/seminars/k
cl-2006-01/
Acceptable Use Policy Recording/broadcasting of
this talk, taking photographs, discussing the
content using email, instant messaging, Blogs,
SMS, etc. is permitted providing distractions to
others is minimised. Also feel free to access the
presentation, follow links, etc.
  • Brian Kelly
  • UK Web
  • UKOLN
  • University of Bath
  • Bath, UK


This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonComme
rcial-ShareAlike 2.5 licence (but note caveat)
Subject to confirmation at end of talk
UKOLN is supported by
2
Contents
  • Introduction
  • Background The History of the Web
  • Where Are We Now?
  • New Developments
  • W3C developments
  • Web 2.0
  • Deployment Challenges
  • Conclusions

3
About Me
  • Brian Kelly
  • UK Web Focus post funded by JISC and MLA to
    advise UK HE / FE and cultural heritage sectors
    on best Web practices
  • Based at UKOLN, University of Bath
  • Helped set up Web service in Leeds University in
    Jan 1993 - first in UK(?) and in first 50
    registered at CERN)
  • Web evangelist from 1993 (against Gopher
    orthodoxy!)
  • Attended several WWW conferences since first in
    1994

4
History Of The Web In HE
  • 1993 Early adopters
  • 1994 Web wins (Gopher starts to be phased out)
  • 1994? Web-support Mailbase list (David Riddle)
    start of (enthusiastic) UK HE Web community
  • 199? University Webmasters start to be
    appointed.Website-info-mgt Mailbase list set up
    to support University Webmasters (political
    pawns, not cool Web developers)
  • 199? Best practice docs published by AGOCG
  • 1997 First Institutional Web Management
    Workshop (IWMW) held at KCL (held annual ever
    since)

5
Reflections On IWMWs
  • KCL 2 days (lunchtime-lunchtime)
  • Newcastle 3 days (2 days content)
  • Goldsmiths "
  • Bath "
  • Belfast 3 days (2.5 days content)
  • Strathclyde "
  • Kent "
  • Birmingham 3 days (2 days content)
  • Manchester 3 days (2 days content)
  • Bath 3 days (2 days content)

June Sept " " June " " " July June
There are no easy answers ? We can all contribute
6
We're Doing Well ?
  • Positive aspects of the UK HE Web community
  • Willingness to share experiences (e.g. on
    web-support and website-info-mgt lists)
  • A well-established annual event
  • Avoidance of the ghetto mentality senior
    managers, information professionals, designers,
    software developers, trainers, meet, talk and
    socialise together
  • Challenges we face
  • Open sources vs licensed software debate
  • Role of standards (e.g. SMIL vs Flash)
  • Managing with limited resources
  • Managing service vs supporting user needs - cf
    Andrew Aird's talk in 2002 on "Pursuing A Radical
    Web Strategy"

7
What About Web Standards?
  • Early Days
  • HTMLCSSWAI WCAG ? (Netscape's support for
    CSS was a problem)
  • Later
  • XML a winner
  • New W3C formats (PNG, SMIL, SVG, )
  • Limited take-up and other solutions have
    benefits (e.g. Flash)
  • More Recently
  • Complexity and Confusion Semantic Web, Web
    Services, deployment difficulties (e.g. XHTML
    2.0), patent issues, process issues,

8
Summary UK HE Web In 2004/5
  • State of play in 2004/5
  • Web is mission critical
  • We have Web teams and resources (but we'd like
    more)
  • We have a Web/Information Strategy
  • Focus tends to be on publishing
  • Key applications areas
  • Institutional Web site ? Intranets
  • VLEs ? Portals
  • Digital repositories ?

9
Web For 2006
  • Significant changes seem to be happening
  • Blogs and Wikis
  • RSS and Podcasting
  • Mobile devices
  • Pervasive networks (WIFi, broadband at home, 3G,
    )
  • Integration of services ("mashups")
  • Microformats
  • Google developments
  • SOA
  • Web 2.0

10
Web 2.0
  • What Is Web 2.0?
  • A marketing term, rather than a formal technical
    standards ("an attitude not a technology)
  • Characteristics Of Web 2.0
  • Network as platform
  • Architecture of participation
  • Social networking
  • Social tagging
  • Remix and mash-ups
  • Blogs Wikis
  • Syndication
  • Users
  • Always beta

Web2MemeMap, Tim OReilly, 2005
11
Web 2.0 Exemplars
Let's look at some examples presented to SWLAC
staff
12
AJAX, XML, Web Services,
Does your campus map use Google Maps, or is it
trapped in a GIF file?
13
Google Earth tour of IWMW events
14
(No Transcript)
15
  • Note
  • Greasemonkey environment

16
  • Note
  • BBC Backstage competition (free iPod??)

17
Mobile Devices
  • Potential of mobile devices in learning,
    research, etc.

Lectures on iPods student-created Podcasts ..
18
Note that Talis (UK library vendor) are
publishing Blogs and Podcasts about "Library
2.0" And UKOLN/CDNTL have also been experimenting
PDF
19
http//www.everyobject.net/static.php?pageinterac
tive
Are your University Podcasts available through
iTunes? Aren't you missing out on a major
distribution channel? (Note Student's Union radio
shows are leading the way)
20
Creative Commons, Science Commons,
Open Access, Open Source, are helping to drive
Web 2.0. What's the UK HE's take on this?
UK participants include National
Archives Natural History Museum
21
http//creativecommons.org/
See "Let's Free IT Support Materials!" (EUNIS
2005 paper) as an example of what UK HE could be
doing
22
http//www.flickr.com/

folksonomies
  • Issues
  • "Claim your tag" (e.g. "iwmw-2005") and
    convention (e.g. "kcl-publicity",
    "imperial-graduation-2006") for your photos,
    Blogs, etc.?
  • NB londonterroristattack tags on 7/7
  • Should you proactively make you photos, etc.
    available?

23
Semantic Web or semantic web
  • Semantic Web
  • W3C approach to provide a Web with meaning
  • Hard
  • Lower case semantic web / microformats
  • Been waiting too long for the SW, let's make use
    of today's technologies
  • Microformats provide semantic in (X)HTML using
    ltspangt, ltdivgt and lta .. rel"foo"gt

Examples Define structured date about people,
dates, etc. thus ltspan class"vcard"gtBrianlt/spangt
XSLT transformations to VCard, etc NB Tom
Heath's acronym harvester
24
Blogs (1)
  • Blogs
  • User created content (diary-style interface)
  • Student use
  • Shared learning ? Social use
  • Gaining experience ?
  • Research use
  • Dissemination ? Engagement
  • Resource discovery ?
  • Support use
  • What's On, for sale, ? Email alerts
  • Creating RSS ?

25
Blogs (2)
  • Challenges
  • Can we trust our users?
  • Will we be sued, get embarrassed, ?
  • In-house or externally-hosted?
  • Should we do it?
  • Can we afford not to?
  • Experiences
  • University of Warwick Blog service - see Podcast
    interview
  • Interests from talk at IWMW 2005 and UCISA/UKOLN
    event, Nov 2004

26
Wikis (1)
  • Wikis
  • Collaborative Web-based authoring environment
  • Wikipedia is an example of a successful Wiki
  • See QA Focus "An Introduction To Wikis" briefing
    document
  • Issues
  • Can we trust the contributors?
  • Wiki spam, grafitti, IPR, ?
  • Best practices, interoperability,

27
Wikis (2)
  • Discussion
  • Can you afford not to contribute to Wikipedia?
  • Can provide Wikis for use by small groups
  • Can be used for annotation
  • Is being increasingly used
  • Implementation
  • Which is the best?
  • Wiki migration

UKOLN intends to host a Wiki (using MediaWiki) to
develop community resources on CMSs, VLEs,
28
Instant Messaging (1)
  • Instant Messaging
  • Trivial chat which should be banned?
  • Learning is a collaborative activity, so instant
    messaging, chat rooms, etc. are important
  • Issues
  • Which environment MSN, Yahoo, Jabber, IRC,
  • ID management
  • Spamming, noise, etc
  • Whats this got to do with the Web?

29
Instant Messaging (2)
http//www.meebo.com/
  • Meebo
  • A Web-based IM client
  • An AJAX application
  • Issues
  • How do you ban it?
  • Interoperability

30
GMail
  • Who needs a University email account when you can
    get 1 Gb from a GMail account (with AJAX
    interface) ?
  • My Plans
  • Get GMail ID
  • Use it as secondary source for mailing lists
  • Don't divulge ID (no spam)
  • Wait and see what extras Google provide (RSS feed
    would be nice now available)
  • Gain feel for privacy issues

31
Skype / VoIP
  • VoIP future of telephony
  • Popular applications such as Skype
  • Integrated voice, IM, Web, (and now video)
  • Can be high quality
  • Free (or cheap to landlines mobiles)
  • Conference calls

VoIP is coming, so nows the time to gain
experiences. What are the implications of free
always-on telephony. You could all be
broadcasting this talk now!
32
RSS
See RSS briefing paper
  • E-mail has its role but
  • Why send messages which time-out when many users
    will read them too late?
  • Why not use delivery channels which are
    spam-free?
  • Why not use delivery channels which are more
    suited to receiving information (as opposed to
    discussions)?
  • Why not allow users to select their preferred
    channels?

33
Deployment Challenges
  • Such questions
  • How do we go about deploying Web 2.0?
  • More importantly, should we (isn't it just hype?)
  • Challenges
  • The Web policy is owned by the marketing people
    they see the Web as a publishing vehicle not as a
    communications tool
  • We can't use Creative Commons, open access, etc.
  • We shouldn't make use of commercial services
  • These services are
  • Technically / philosophically flawed
  • Don't reflect our views on open source /
    standards
  • Breaking out of our existing culture, software,

34
Answers
  • What are the answers to these questions?
  • How do we face the challenge of 'disruptive
    technologies'?
  • Is this a real issue don't we simply absorb
    such technologies through evolution?

Answers to questions will be sought at the
UKOLN/UCISA/CETIS workshop on "Initiatives
Innovation Managing Disruptive Technologies" at
University of Warwick, 24 Feb 2006.
lthttp//www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/seminars
/kcl-2006-01/gt
Or submit a proposal for a talk or workshop at
the 10th Institutional Web Management Workshop at
University of Bath, 14-16 June 2006. (Call for
papers currently open) lthttp//www.ukoln.ac.uk/web
-focus/events/workshops/webmaster-2006/gt
35
Some Answers For Free ?
  • Thoughts about deployment strategies
  • The need to be an adaptable/agile audience (cf.
    the Monarchy and the London Whale / Di's funeral)
  • It's not new cf eLib Hybrid Libraries, the
    RDN's Behind the Headlines as 'mashups'
  • Benefits of modular approaches to reflect the
    diversity of the HE environment (cf E-Frameworks
    and SOA approach to development)
  • If you don't
  • Your rivals will
  • Your departments will use the stuff anyway
  • Who needs central services when we can get better
    services for free from Google, Yahoo, !

36
Discussion
  • Questions, comments, etc. welcome
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