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Tell them what you

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Title: Tell them what you


1

Headlights on Dark Roads
Guarding the past and neglecting the future
how to reframe the future of libraries or
libraries for the future reframing their
purpose or It's all on the web - isn't it?
Professor Derek Law University of Strathclyde
2
Not an Upgrade an Upheaval
  • The hard truth about the future of journalism is
    that nobody knows for sure what will happen the
    current system is so brittle, and the
    alternatives are so speculative, that theres no
    hope for a simple and orderly transition from
    State A to State B. Chaos is our lot the best we
    can do is identify the various forces at work
    shaping various possible futures.
  • Clay Shirky

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Because of the fundamental role that academic
libraries have played in the past century, it is
tremendously difficult to imagine a college or
university without a library. Considering the
extraordinary pace with which knowledge is moving
to the Web, it is equally difficult to imagine
what an academic library will be and do in
another decade. But that is precisely what
every college and university should undertake to
determine. Given the implications of the outcome,
this is not an agenda that librarians can, or
should, accomplish alone.
Campbell, J. EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 41, no. 1
(January/February 2006) 1631
5
The failure of Librarians
  • Making the technology work too well
  • Lack of underpinning philosophy
  • Rise of the managerial technocrat
  • From partnership to servitude
  • Complacency
  • Failure to engage with e-resources
  • Obsessed with licences
  • Digitising oddities

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Cabinets of curiosities
C.A.I.N.
Scottish Antarctic Expedition
Glasgow Digital Library
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Microsofts View
http//www.microsoft.com/mscorp/tc/scholarly_commu
nication.mspx
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What if. . .
Users have materially changed? A-literacy is
acceptable? Images replace words? New cultural
reference points
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Digital Content
  • It seems to me that after the digital
    "singularity" there are now two kinds of content
    "Legacy" content (to borrow the computer term for
    old systems) and "Future" content. "Legacy"
    content includes reading, writing, arithmetic,
    logical thinking, understanding the writings and
    ideas of the past, etc - all of our "traditional"
    curriculum.  It is of course still important, but
    it is from a different era. 
  • Some of it (such as logical thinking) will
    continue to be important, but some (perhaps like
    Euclidean geometry) will become less so, as did
    Latin and Greek.
  • "Future" content is to a large extent, not
    surprisingly, digital and technological.  But
    while it includes software, hardware, robotics,
    nanotechnology, genomics, etc. it also includes
    the ethics, politics, sociology, languages and
    other things that go with them.
  • (Prensky, 2001) 

13
From authority to consensus
  • 57 of teenagers create content for the Internet
  • 62 of content created by users under age 21 is
    generated by someone they know
  • 73 of students use the internet more than the
    library

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Great expectations final report
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Aliteracy Twitter roolz ok?
  • Txt msgs r gr8
  • Kidz cant spel
  • Wot z hpng 2 gramr?
  • they nevr read bks!!!
  • But itz stil cmunicashun
  • Snot dumming down
  • Currently, 17.8 of all Twitter traffic in the
    United Kingdom consists of status updates from
    Stephen Fry
  • A further 11 is made up of his 363,000
    followers replying "_at_stephenfry LOL!",
    "_at_stephenfry EXACTLY the same thing happened to
    me"

16
Action Man Available from All Good Bookshops..
Leonardo da Vinci was the original Renaissance
man. He was a master of painting, science,
language and the inspiration for Leonardo Di
Caprios name
17
Traditional Library Activity Web 2.0 World
Cataloguing Automated metadata, del.icio.us
Classification Folksonomies and the semantic web
Acquisitions e-bay, Paypal, Amazon and Abebooks
Reference Yahoo Answers and Wikipedia
Preservation Digital Archives and repositories
User Instruction Chatrooms
Working space Bedroom and Starbucks with a laptop
Collections Youtube, Flickr, Institutional Repositories, Open Access
Professional judgement The wisdom of crowds
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Traditional Library Web 2.0 World Library 2.0 World
Cataloguing Automated metadata, del.icio.us Metadata
Classification Folksonomies and the semantic web Locally provided and relevant folksonomy
Acquisitions e-bay, Paypal, Amazon and Abebooks E-archives, e-data trust metrics and quality assurance
Reference Yahoo Answers and Wikipedia Branded links to trusted resources
Preservation Digital Archives and repositories Institutional repository
User Instruction Chatrooms Moderate chatroom
Working space Bedroom and Starbucks with a laptop Wired campus and 24-hour workspace
Collections Youtube, Flickr, Institutional Repositories, Open Access Aggregation of unique content
Professional judgement The wisdom of crowds Teaching retrieval skills
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Web 2.0 A Research Agenda
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Collaborative research
  • Blue Obelisk
  • Open Wetware
  • nanoHUB
  • High resolution remote artefacts
  • Pooled research
  • Sermo
  • Open Communities
  • Innocentive
  • Nature Precedings

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Headlights on Dark Roads
For once I want to be the car crash Not always
just the traffic jam Hit me hard enough to wake
me And lead me wild to your dark roads Snow
Patrol Eyes Open
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Digital Overlap Strategy
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Digital footprint
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Forms of e-content
  • Research papers
  • Conference presentations
  • Theses
  • Wikis
  • Blogs
  • Websites
  • Podcasts
  • Reusable Learning Objects
  • Research data
  • E-Lab books
  • Streamed lectures
  • Images
  • Audio files
  • Digitised collections
  • E-Archives
  • E-mail
  • HR Records
  • Student/Staff records
  • Corporate publications
  • National heritage artefacts

31
The Good Old Days..
32
Trust Metrics
33
Trusted repositories the five Maori tests
  • Receive the information with accuracy
  • Store the information with integrity beyond doubt
  • Retrieve the information without amendment
  • Apply appropriate judgement in the use of the
    information
  • Pass the information on appropriately

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The content of an institutional repository is
  • Institutionally defined
  • Scholarly
  • Cumulative and perpetual
  • Open and interoperable

35
I think a wiki is highly appropriate for
scholarly communication if all the scholars trust
one another and are collaborating on a text ,
and security and rollback mechanisms are in
place.gtgtgt
David Mattison
http//lists.webjunction.org/wjlists/web4lib/2004-
August/000993.html
36
Options for information services
  • Building e-Research collections and contributing
    to a virtual research environment of born digital
    material
  • Importance of kite marking, quality assurance,
    trust metrics and relevance ranking
  • Managing institutional born digital assets
  • Making bibliographically sound content available
  • Value added content
  • And always be prepared to read the signs on dark
    roads

37
Expect the Unexpected
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