A brief presentation I gave recently for a Museum and Gallery Services Queensland (http://www.magsq.com.au/) event, highlighting some good examples of collecting institutions making innovative use of online technologies.
1. Open Access Collections: some case studies Jessica Coates Creative Commons Clinic October 2009 CRICOS No. 00213J Carpeted commons by Glutnix, http://www.flickr.com/photos/glutnix/2079709803/in/pool-ccswagcontest07 available under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 licence, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en
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3. Powerhouse Museum CRICOS No. 00213J Powerhouse Museum collection record http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/dmsblog/index.php/2009/04/27/another-opac-discovery-the-gambey-dip-circle-and-the-value-of-minimal-tombstone-data/ “ If your organisation is still having doubts about the value of making available un-edited, un-verified, ageing tombstone data then it is worth showing examples like these.” - Seb Chan
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5. Australian newspapers online AUSTRALIA part of the Creative Commons international initiative CRICOS No. 00213J http://newspapers.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/title/12
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7. Tropenmuseum AUSTRALIA part of the Creative Commons international initiative It was an easy way to…engage new audiences…[and] spread the stories from the collection…In the end I think more people will visit the museum and look online. – Susanne Ton, Manager of Multimedia Production, Tropenmuseum http://www.youtube.com/user/wikimedianl#play/all/uploads-all/0/4aPatvL5kvo Images being used in articles and seen by audiences that have no connection to museum – with link back http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropenmuseum http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_karbala http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Iran_Battle_of_Karbala_19th_century.jpg
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Hinweis der Redaktion
The open access movement is in a better place than its ever been before, as far as gaining ‘mainstream’ acceptance and being adopted by large players There have, of late, been lots of official statements endorsing open access – from the OECD, from Venturous Australia etc
The open access movement is in a better place than its ever been before, as far as gaining ‘mainstream’ acceptance and being adopted by large players There have, of late, been lots of official statements endorsing open access – from the OECD, from Venturous Australia etc
Click and flick has turned out to be highly successful, with over 9,000 photos uploaded since January This may not seem like much on internet scale, but it’s a huge number for a library collection It’s also significantly raised the profile of the PictureAustralia collection, with the NLA reporting much higher usage, even during traditionally slow periods The NLA doesn’t have any statistics on how many people are using CC licences, but they say anecdotally that they think it is a large portion, or even the majority.
Click and flick has turned out to be highly successful, with over 9,000 photos uploaded since January This may not seem like much on internet scale, but it’s a huge number for a library collection It’s also significantly raised the profile of the PictureAustralia collection, with the NLA reporting much higher usage, even during traditionally slow periods The NLA doesn’t have any statistics on how many people are using CC licences, but they say anecdotally that they think it is a large portion, or even the majority.
Click and flick has turned out to be highly successful, with over 9,000 photos uploaded since January This may not seem like much on internet scale, but it’s a huge number for a library collection It’s also significantly raised the profile of the PictureAustralia collection, with the NLA reporting much higher usage, even during traditionally slow periods The NLA doesn’t have any statistics on how many people are using CC licences, but they say anecdotally that they think it is a large portion, or even the majority.