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Mobile Technology and the Museum

  1. Aleksandra Janus Dorota Kawęcka innemuzeum.pl Mobile Technology and the Museum
  2. consultants bloggers researchers
  3. galleries libriaries GLAM archives museums
  4. it’s all about experience…
  5. leisure industry sales marketing experience tourism museums
  6. Barbara Kirshenblatt-­‐Gimblett (1998) If in the past museums were object-­‐ centred and the collections managed by curators were their biggest asset, nowadays museum come to be increasingly defined by their relationship with visitors – customers expecting good quality service. B. Kirshenblatt-­‐Gimblett, 1998, Destination: Culture. Tourism, Museums and heritage, p. 138.
  7. Anthony Jackson, Jenny Kidd (2011) Visits to museums and heritage sites have in recent years become (not least in promotional rhetoric) less about the object and more about the experience: an ‘encounter’ with a past that is ‘brought to life’, peppered with ‘events’ and advertised through a list of ‘What’s On’. A. Jackson, J.Kidd , 2011, Performing heritage: Research, practice and innovation in museum theatre and live interpretation, p. 1.
  8. Mads Daugbjerg (2011) Experience seems to be the word of the day in today’s heritage industry. M. Daugbjerg, Playing with fire: struggling with ‘experience’ and ‘play’ in war tourism, “Museum and Society”, 2011, nr 9 (1). p. 17.
  9. Joseph Pine, James Gilmore (1999) experience model • immersion • passive participation • active participation • absorption Entertainment Educa-on Esthe-c Escapist J. Pine, J. Gilmore, 1999, Experience economy. Work is Theatre & Every Business a Stage, p.
  10. Why mobile technologies? familiar technology personal device rescue in small space post visit
  11. wayfinding extra resources external use function equivalent
  12. Explorer -­‐ American Museum of Natural History
  13. Explorer -­‐ American Museum of Natural History
  14. Muzeum Dźwięków – National Museum in Krakow
  15. Muzeum Dźwięków – National Museum in Krakow
  16. Muzeum Dźwięków – National Museum in Krakow
  17. extending the experience discovering the city mapping the non-­‐existent difficult heritage urban memory
  18. Lublin 2.0 (Layar) – Grodzka Gate
  19. Warsaw ’44 (Layar) – Warsaw Uprising Museum
  20. Warsaw ’44 (Layar) – Warsaw Uprising Museum
  21. Oszpicin – Jewish Center in Oświęcim (Auschwitz)
  22. Oszpicin – Jewish Center in Oświęcim (Auschwitz)
  23. MyWarsaw – Museum of the History of Polish Jews
  24. Witold Lutosławski Guide to Warsaw – Fryderyk Chopin Institute
  25. Witold Lutosławski Guide to Warsaw – Fryderyk Chopin Institute
  26. Malopolska’s Virtual Museums
  27. Malopolska’s Virtual Museums
  28. Malopolska’s Virtual Museums
  29. Nina Simon “The Participatory Museum” museum 2.0
  30. Nina Simon (2010) I define a participatory cultural institution as a place where visitors can create, share, and connect with each other around content. N. Simon, 2010, The Participatory Museum, p. ii.. Available at: http://museumtwo.blogspot.com/
  31. Create Nina Simon (2010) means that visitors contribute their own ideas, objects, and creative expression to the institution and to each other. Share means that people discuss, take home, remix, and redistribute both what they see and what they make during their visit. Connect means that visitors socialize with other people—staff and visitors—who share their particular interests. Around content means that visitors’ conversations and creations focus on the evidence, objects, and ideas most important to the institution in question. N. Simon, 2010, The Participatory Museum, p. ii-­‐iii.. Available at: http://museumtwo.blogspot.com/
  32. trusting visitors building community participatory sharing authority giving up control
  33. Old Weather – The Citizen Science Alliance
  34. See: https://speakerdeck.com/tokumine/from-­‐visitors-­‐to-­‐science and https://vimeo.com/49844515
  35. Supertagger -­‐ Huis van Alijn (Ghent)
  36. Europeana
  37. Europeana 1989
  38. Europeana 1989
  39. Open Definition A piece of data or content is open if anyone is free to use, reuse, and redistribute it — subject only, at most, to the requirement to give credit to the author and/or making any resulting work available under the same terms as the original work Source: http://opendefinition.org/
  40. An OpenGLAM institution champions these principles: 1. Release digital information about the artefacts (metadata) into the public domain using an appropriate legal tool such as the Creative Commons Zero Waiver 2. Keep digital representations of works for which copyright has expired (public domain) in the public domain by not adding new rights to them. 3. When publishing data make an explicit and robust statement of your wishes and expectations with respect to reuse and repurposing of the descriptions, the whole data collection, and subsets of the collection. 4. When publishing data use open file formats which are machine-­‐ readable 5. Opportunities to engage audiences in novel ways on the web should be pursued. Source: http://openglam.org/principles/
  41. Source: Rui Guerra, https://twitter.com/ruibeep/status/388016195535790080/photo/1
  42. Yes, you can harvest it with their API ! Did you know the Rijksmuseum opened their data ? Source: http://www.slideshare.net/CollectieInformatie/presentation-­‐museumnext
  43. Open Cultuur Data & Hack de Overheid
  44. Faces of the Rijksmuseum
  45. Dook voor in je hook
  46. Source: http://www.makelifeeasier.pl/img/image/IMG_3276.jpg
  47. Dook voor in je hook
  48. Open Monuments – Centrum Cyfrowe
  49. What’s the potential of mobile technologies in the context of OpenGLAM?
  50. Thank you! @DorotaKawecka @AleksandraJanus innemuzeum.pl
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