wesleyan2.0
DESCRIPTION
A PowerPoint slideshow created for Wesleyan's Web2.0 workshop - May 2007TRANSCRIPT
Wesleyan2.0:
A Workshop Exploring Web2.0 TechnologiesKeynote by:Connecticut’s State Librarian, Kendall Wiggin &Connecticut State Library’s Web Resources Librarian, Sharon Clapp
Web2.0
What can you expect today?
Learning, sharing ideas, playing with the technology
Step 1 in any web2.0 initiative is awareness Exposure to tools that might be useful to you
in achieving your current goals Web2.0 concepts An understanding of what is happening on the
web today Innovation: this is also play-time;
Google workers spend 10% of their time on experiments & “play”
Web2.0: Evolution
Web2.0: evolution of the internet (fulfillment of some of the early Internet’s promise)
Cluetrain Manifesto (1999): http://www.cluetrain.com/ - markets are conversations
Tim O’Reilly coins term (2005): http://www.oreillynet.com/lpt/a/6228 [also visible at: http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html]
Tim O’Reilly clarifies (2006): http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2006/12/web_20_compact.html
TechCrunch [http://www.techcrunch.com/]: “a weblog dedicated to obsessively profiling and reviewing new web 2.0 products and companies”
Web2.0: Defined?
From Wikipedia: “…a perceived second-generation of Web based communities and hosted services — such as social networking sites, wikis and folksonomies — that facilitate collaboration and sharing between users…” [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2]
Web2.0 technical aspects The web as platform Rich user experiences (Rich Internet applications) Separation of data and format
The read/write web (Blogging, commenting, wikis) Harnessing collective wisdom (Wikipedia)Empowering end-users
Concepts/terms related to Web2.0
Meme: As defined by Richard Dawkins in The Selfish Gene (1976): "a unit of cultural transmission, or a unit of imitation."
The Long Tail: “In a 2006 working paper titled "Goodbye Pareto Principle, Hello Long Tail"[7], Erik Brynjolfsson, Yu (Jeffrey) Hu, and Duncan Simester found that, by greatly lowering search costs, information technology in general and Internet markets in particular could substantially increase the collective share of hard to find products, thereby creating a longer tail in the distribution of sales... the Internet channel exhibits a significantly less concentrated sales distribution, when compared with traditional channels. An 80/20 rule fits the distribution of product sales in the catalog channel quite well, but in the Internet channel, this rule needs to be modified to a 72/20 rule in order to fit the distribution of product sales in that channel.” [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Long_Tail]
Why does it matter to Wesleyan?
Change has already happened on the web and will continue to happen. Will Wesleyan need to adjust to fulfill its mission and if so, how?
Today’s students will have preferred modes of communication – IM preferred to email, for example
More than half (55%) of all online American youths ages 12-17 use online social networking sites, according to a new national survey of teenagers conducted by the Pew Internet & American Life Project. [http://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_SNS_Data_Memo_Jan_2007.pdf]
Today’s students use Wikipedia (46%; use is higher than in other groups http://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_Wikipedia07.pdf)
What will your users’ expectations be? What types of things will students and alum expect from your website, for example?
This is where everything is going – so the students of today must be ready to use social networking sites upon graduation
Web2.0 offers space for innovation, creativity, knowledge-sharing
Blogs
Defined: Blog is short for weblog. A weblog is a journal (or newsletter) that is frequently updated and intended for general public consumption. Blogs generally represent the personality of the author or the Web site. www.bytowninternet.com/glossary
Uses: News & Events Marketing Dialogue with users/constituencies Consumption for research
Technologies: Consumption of blogs:
Bloglines, iGoogle (Google’s personalized home page), MyYahoo! Discovery of blogs/blog entries:
Technorati, IceRocket, search engines’ blog searches Creation of Blogs
Blogger Wordpress Typepad Movable Type Components of other systems, such as Community Server, or even learning management systems
Making RSS feeds more useful FeedBurner FeedBlitz Feed2js
Wikis
Defined: A wiki is a web application that allows users to add content, as on an Internet forum, but also allows anyone to edit the content. Wiki also refers to the collaborative software used to create such a website (see Wiki software). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WIKI
Common Uses: Collaborative knowledge creation, intranets
Popular Technologies (there are many): MediaWiki (Wikipedia), PBWiki, Wikispaces, Wikia, JotSpot, many others
Social Bookmarking Sites
Key concept = folksonomies: A folksonomy is a user generated taxonomy used to categorize and retrieve web content such as Web pages, photographs and Web links, using open-ended labels called tags. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folksonomy]
Del.icio.us Furl CiteULike [http://www.citeulike.org/]:
“CiteULike is a free service to help academics to share, store, and organise the academic papers they are reading. When you see a paper on the web that interests you, you can click one button and have it added to your personal library. CiteULike automatically extracts the citation details, so there's no need to type them in yourself.”
Connotea: “Free online reference management for all researchers, clinicians and scientists”
Del.icio.us - http://del.icio.us/
Furl – www.furl.net
CiteULike - http://www.citeulike.org/
Connotea
Social Networking Sites
FacebookMySpaceOrkutLinkedInNing
University Tennessee Library on Facebook
UIUC Undergrad Library on MySpace
LinkedIn - http://www.linkedin.com/
Ning.com - http://www.ning.com/
Multimedia (with Social Aspects)
Photos & Screenshots: Flickr - http://www.flickr.com ScreencastingVideos: YouTube - http://www.youtube.com/ Vodcasting / VideoBlogging (vlogging)Audio: Last.fm - http://www.last.fm/ Podcasting
Wesleyan on Flickr
Library Uses of Flickr
Productivity & Collaboration Tools
BaseCamp (by 37Signals) – project management http://www.basecamphq.com/
43things - http://www.43things.com/ - list of life goals
Zoho Office suite - http://www.zoho.com/ Google Docs (spreadsheet, documents) -
http://docs.google.com Slideshare.net - http://www.slideshare.net/ -
post/share presentations Gliffy – http://www.gliffy.com/ - create flow
charts, diagrams, mind maps
BaseCamp Project Management - http://www.basecamphq.com
BaseCamp for Project Mgt
43things - http://www.43things.com
Zoho - http://www.zoho.com/
Gliffy – http://www.gliffy.com/
Virtual Worlds
SecondLife - http://www.secondlife.com/ Activeworlds Education Universe -
http://www.activeworlds.com/edu/index.asp
Second Life
Active Worlds Education Universe
Miscellaneous (check these out, too!)
LibraryThing - http://www.librarything.com/
Instant Messaging: e.g., Meebo (http://wwwl.meebo.com/index-en.html)
Twitter - http://twitter.com/ - the hot new “micro-blogging” trend – uses cell phone or web-based text messaging
Mashups – (e.g., Google Maps & Flickr)
LibraryThing - http://www.librarything.com/
Meebo - http://wwwl.meebo.com/index-en.html
Twitter - http://twitter.com/
How to keep up?
Read blogs (get a bloglines account – my feeds are visible at http://www.bloglines.com/public/sclapp)
Check out TechCrunch - http://www.techcrunch.com/ - about Web2.0 startups – new tools debut here
Technorati - http://www.technorati.com/ Socially-defined news source: Digg -
http://digg.com/ Business2.0 magazine Social networking sites!
Conclusions: I have only ?s for you
How far can you go – how far should you go with Web2.0 technologies?
What will happen if you ignore Web2.0? What will Web3.0 look like and how do we
get there? [Semantic Web, more work with data and searchability, combined with AI - http://www.alistapart.com/articles/web3point0]
Share / collaborate / be creative and innovative - have fun!
THANK YOU!!