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Autor principal: Green, David
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2009
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Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED507641
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author Green, David
author_facet Green, David
Green, David
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents WebWise 2.0: The Power of Community. WebWise Conference on Libraries and Museums in the Digital World Proceedings (9th, Miami Beach, Florida, March 5-7, 2008) Green, David Internet Social Networks Creativity Information Technology Sharing Behavior Computer Mediated Communication Community Development Influence of Technology Organizations (Groups) Archives Libraries Cultural Centers Museums Web Sites Electronic Publishing Interpersonal Relationship Interaction Conferences (Gatherings) Since it was coined by Tim O'Reilly in formulating the first Web 2.0 Conference in 2004, the term "Web 2.0" has definitely caught on as a designation of a second generation of Web design and experience that emphasizes a high degree of interaction with, and among, users. Rather than simply consulting and reading Web pages, the Web 2.0 generation is contributing material and participating in new online communities. As the nature of community is affected by these new technologies, archives, libraries, and museums will need to strategize how they address and harness these new patterns for their own future. The 2008 WebWise Conference, co-hosted by the Institute of Museum and Library Services and The Wolfsonian-Florida International University, addressed these issues with its theme, "WebWise 2.0: The Power of Community." Over the course of two and a half days (March 5-7, 2008), several hundred members of the archives, library, and museum community met in Miami Beach, and online via a conference blog, to consider the implications of these new ways of organizing knowledge and social interaction for their own institutions. This summary report provides another view of the conference: an abbreviated overview of participants' observations and discussions about the new kind of social contract that is being woven between cultural institutions and their communities, catalyzed by the new creativity and communications tools easily available on the Internet. Full text of keynote addresses by the following are provided: Jonathan Fanton; Jose-Marie Griffiths; and Jeffrey Schnapp. Conference speaker biographies, project demonstration information, and a Web 2.0 terminology glossary are also included. (Contains 14 figures and 45 footnotes.)
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record_format eric
spellingShingle WebWise 2.0: The Power of Community. WebWise Conference on Libraries and Museums in the Digital World Proceedings (9th, Miami Beach, Florida, March 5-7, 2008)
Green, David
Internet
Social Networks
Creativity
Information Technology
Sharing Behavior
Computer Mediated Communication
Community Development
Influence of Technology
Organizations (Groups)
Archives
Libraries
Cultural Centers
Museums
Web Sites
Electronic Publishing
Interpersonal Relationship
Interaction
Conferences (Gatherings)
WebWise 2.0: The Power of Community. WebWise Conference on Libraries and Museums in the Digital World Proceedings (9th, Miami Beach, Florida, March 5-7, 2008) Green, David Internet Social Networks Creativity Information Technology Sharing Behavior Computer Mediated Communication Community Development Influence of Technology Organizations (Groups) Archives Libraries Cultural Centers Museums Web Sites Electronic Publishing Interpersonal Relationship Interaction Conferences (Gatherings) Since it was coined by Tim O'Reilly in formulating the first Web 2.0 Conference in 2004, the term "Web 2.0" has definitely caught on as a designation of a second generation of Web design and experience that emphasizes a high degree of interaction with, and among, users. Rather than simply consulting and reading Web pages, the Web 2.0 generation is contributing material and participating in new online communities. As the nature of community is affected by these new technologies, archives, libraries, and museums will need to strategize how they address and harness these new patterns for their own future. The 2008 WebWise Conference, co-hosted by the Institute of Museum and Library Services and The Wolfsonian-Florida International University, addressed these issues with its theme, "WebWise 2.0: The Power of Community." Over the course of two and a half days (March 5-7, 2008), several hundred members of the archives, library, and museum community met in Miami Beach, and online via a conference blog, to consider the implications of these new ways of organizing knowledge and social interaction for their own institutions. This summary report provides another view of the conference: an abbreviated overview of participants' observations and discussions about the new kind of social contract that is being woven between cultural institutions and their communities, catalyzed by the new creativity and communications tools easily available on the Internet. Full text of keynote addresses by the following are provided: Jonathan Fanton; Jose-Marie Griffiths; and Jeffrey Schnapp. Conference speaker biographies, project demonstration information, and a Web 2.0 terminology glossary are also included. (Contains 14 figures and 45 footnotes.)
title WebWise 2.0: The Power of Community. WebWise Conference on Libraries and Museums in the Digital World Proceedings (9th, Miami Beach, Florida, March 5-7, 2008)
topic Internet
Social Networks
Creativity
Information Technology
Sharing Behavior
Computer Mediated Communication
Community Development
Influence of Technology
Organizations (Groups)
Archives
Libraries
Cultural Centers
Museums
Web Sites
Electronic Publishing
Interpersonal Relationship
Interaction
Conferences (Gatherings)
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED507641