Title: It
1Its their cloud, not yours!
2contents
- residents visitors
- bring your own everything
- approaches to personalisation
- emerging issues
- the personal cloud a glimpse at a future
- how do we respond?
3residents visitors
4Web-users are either residents or visitors
- a new way of framing types of users conceived by
David White (Oxford University) - We found that our students could not be usefully
categorised as Digital Natives or Digital
Immigrants. i.e. This distinction does not help
guide the implementation of technologies it
simply provides the excuse that some people
just dont get it which is why your new
approach has failed so badly - In effect the Resident has a presence online
which they are constantly developing while the
Visitor logs on, performs a specific task and
then logs off.
http//tallblog.conted.ox.ac.uk/index.php/2008/07/
23/not-natives-immigrants-but-visitors-residents/
5bring your own everything
6bring your own device?
7bring your own infrastructure!
8approaches to personalisation
9It's Not Information Overload. It's Filter
Failure
Clay Shirky, 2008
10building better filters
11library activity data
- The University of Huddersfield Library
- We have collected 3.9 million library
circulation records over 15 years. - If you do not use the library, you are over
seven times more likely to drop out of your
degree. 7.19 to be precise."
http//www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/reports/2012/ac
tivity-data-delivering-benefits.aspx
12Local context, expressed as activity data
- analytics are fashionable
- evidence-based service provision is the goal
- highly responsive service delivery is something
to aim for - predictive analytics are the holy grail
http//www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/reports/2012/ac
tivity-data-delivering-benefits.aspx
13Jerome axes of personalisation
- Where?
- which campus do you study on? Which library do
you want to use? how far from the University do
you live? Are you a distance learner/researcher? - Who?
- are you a student? Undergraduate or postgrad? Or
a member of staff? Teaching- or research-focused
or both? Or maybe youre one of our Associate
Readers or a visitor to the Library? - What?
- which subject(s) do you study/teach/research,
within which of the Universitys faculties? - http//jerome.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/
14emerging issuesaccuracy, privacy, control
15poor characterisations of individual users
- current recommender systems do not work so well,
especially when the context is broad. Within a
single, focussed application, they can be made to
work, but not across the internet - data is gathered anonymously and from poorly
differentiated contexts - this adds up to what Eli Pariser, in The Filter
Bubble, calls - a bad theory of you
16cookies
From the Wall Street Journals What do they Know
About You?
"The one site that installed the most was
Dictionary.com. A visit to Dictionary.com
resulted in 234 trackers being installed on our
test computer ... the vast majority of the
trackers (200 out of 234) were installed by
companies that the person visiting the site
probably had never heard of." http//www.npr.org/t
emplates/story/story.php?storyId129298003
17privacy, control the Facebook experiment
- we gain personalised services at the expense of
the possibility of having any control over what
were willing to reveal - the regular mistakes made by Facebook have all
eroded the users control over their privacy in
the system by making it very, very hard to
understand - contract of adhesion - a contract between
parties of greatly unequal bargaining power.... - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Kessler
- but - this is not the internet, its just one
application. Facebook will fade.... - the world is experimenting with privacy
18uncoordinated personalisation everywhere
- the only place this can really be coordinated in
a future-proof way is by the client - either acting directly as a user
- or
- through some proxy which is instructed and
trusted by the user - attention (data) is a valuable currency
19expectations are changing - VRM
- from Customer Relationship Manager (CRM) to
Vendor Relationship Management (VRM) - Principles of VRM
- Customers must enter relationships with vendors
as independent actors - Customers must be the points of integration for
their own data - Customers must have control of data they generate
and gather. This means they must be able to share
data selectively and voluntarily - Customers must be able to assert their own terms
of engagement - Customers must be free to express their demands
and intentions outside of any one company's
control - http//cyber.law.harvard.edu/projectvrm/Main_Page
20the personal cloud a glimpse at a future
21The Personal Cloud will replace the Personal
Computer as the centre of users' digital lives by
2014
http//www.gartner.com/it/page.jsp?id1947315
22defining the personal cloud (1)
- those remote, digital services used by you,
personally - essentially, you have your own infrastructure,
provided by a number of suppliers - you choose (within quite narrow constraints)
which systems you use
23defining the personal cloud (2)
- as for definition 1, but with the following
constraints - data you decide what data to store and control
access to it - apps you decide which apps to use from which
vendors and what data they can access - terms you define your own terms of service for
anybody interacting with the data or the apps on
your personal cloud. You can easily move your
personal cloud to a competing hosting vendor if
you so desire
http//personal-clouds.org/wiki/Main_Page
24VRM fourth parties
- a new type of business on the net
- third parties who work for the user, rather than
the service provider - the fourth party represents the users interests
- in other words, an agent, or broker, or mediator
- a new breed of companies providing such services
starting to appear
25the live web
- a very different way of looking at the Web
- the Web is fundamentally based on a
request-response paradigm - the requests can be enriched by applying
contextual information supplied by the client -
under the control of the user - mixing APIs, rules and events
- when this event happens, send this message to
this service
26the future - APIs for users?
- agents which can act as the users persona -
presenting a constrained and focussed interface
to the world - filters which learn and adapt to changing
priorities, sources rules in a chaotic world - a secure place for them to curate data about
themselves and their preferences - resulting in
- systems which use contextual information curated
by the user or by their agent, and which deliver
accurately personalised services and
recommendations
27how do we respond?
28responsive (Web?) design
Image taken from the Kineo website
http//www.kineo.com/mobile-learning/responsive-e-
learning-for-multi-devices.html
- designing for interaction with users through the
same systems interface but on different - devices (desktop laptop computers, tablets,
smart-phones, even not-so-smart phones) - applications (apps)
29new patterns - notifications, trusted
application...
- users have expectations about the sorts of
features they expect from online services, e.g. - notifications - presented in a standard way (not
so much through RSS as through dedicated apps) - integration and trust relationships between
systems they are already happily using - e.g.
OAuth
30changing attitude of institutional IT support
- BYOE is welcome opportunity for customers,
unwelcome problem for staff - What excites IT leaders in higher education most
about BYOE are opportunities to diversify and
expand the teaching and learning environment,
while the greatest challenges are issues that
pertain to faculty and staff use of their own
devices for work-related purposes. - IT infrastructure is middle-ware between
institution and users infrastructure - Think of IT infrastructure as BYOE "middleware"
the commodities that bridge users, their devices,
and their consumer-level applications to the
institution's data, services, systems, and
enterprise-level applications. IT middleware
should be robust, yet nimble. - Eden Dahlstrom, BYOD and Consumerization of IT in
Higher Education Research, 2013, - http//www.educause.edu/ero/article/executive-summ
ary-byod-and-consumerization-it-higher-education-r
esearch-2013
31serve residents visitors
- build a picture of which of your users are
residents, and which are visitors - be mindful that users who are visitors in the
library context, may be residents elsewhere - consider how you might reach out to the residents
in their wider residency - consider how library services (will) appear in
each users personal cloud
32turn the problem into an opportunity
- new literacies
- Those of us who work with students must guide
them to build their own personal
cyberinfrastructures ... And yes, we must be
ready to receive their guidance as well. - Gardner Campbell, A Personal Cyberinfrastructure,
http//www.educause.edu/ero/article/personal-cyber
infrastructure - we should surely embrace this empowerment of the
user? - Very few faculty or administrators are curious
enough about the Internet, or eager enough to
learn about the participatory culture it
empowers, to even begin to imagine how to use or
empower personal, interactive, networked
computing in meaningful, effective ways in
teaching and learning. - Gardner Campbell http//www.educause.edu/ero/artic
le/wild-card-character-bring-your-own-panel-discus
sion
33implications for the library
- we need to
- be ready to anticipate a growing demand from our
users that they control the relationship more
than we - be ready to respond to pressure to reform how
users activities are tracked (c.f. new Cookie
legislation) - consider how our services (will) fit into each
users personal cloud - the library system
- the notion of the user visiting the library
system to find resources will become increasingly
anachronistic - browsing as a human activity will fall away,
search is king for now - over time, search will gradually become less
apparent to the user too - the ratio of software to human agents
interfacing with the LMS will shift away from the
human
34thank you!
Paul Walk paul_at_paulwalk.net _at_paulwalk http//www.
paulwalk.net
35image credits
- Iphone http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileIph
one_4G.jpg - Google logo http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fil
eGooglelogo.png - iCloud http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileApple_iC
loud.png - Amazon http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileAmazon.c
om-Logo.svg - Amazon Kindle http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileA
mazon_Kindle_logo.svg