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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hodgins, Dave
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ896873
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author Hodgins, Dave
author_facet Hodgins, Dave
Hodgins, Dave
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Dynamic Space for Rent: Using Commercial Web Hosting to Develop a Web 2.0 Intranet Hodgins, Dave Computers Academic Libraries Internet Word Processing Higher Education Librarians Social Networks Information Technology Computer Mediated Communication Sharing Behavior Online Vendors Computer Networks Computer Security The explosion of Web 2.0 into libraries has left many smaller academic libraries (and other libraries with limited computing resources or support) to work in the cloud using free Web applications. The use of commercial Web hosting is an innovative approach to the problem of inadequate local resources. While the idea of insourcing IT will seem daunting to some, the process of setting up and administering hosting and applications is remarkably accessible to staff with basic word processing and Web skills. This article demonstrates the degree to which recent advances in commercial Web hosting and open-source applications have reduced the process of administering Web services, once time consuming and technically demanding, to near point-and-click simplicity. This article reports on the Kraemer Family Library's use of commercial Web hosting to develop and host a Web 2.0 staff intranet. The staff of 9.5 full-time equivalent librarians and 21.5 full-time equivalent staff serve 8,000 students and 700 faculty and staff at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. The small number of library faculty and staff provided the opportunity to experiment with Web 2.0 concepts and applications. Since certain IT-supported requirements were lacking, the library looked for no- and low-cost ways to host the intranet outside the university computing environment. After researching the use of free Web applications, the library's planning team decided to build its intranet using open-source applications and commercial Web hosting. (Contains 3 figures.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ896873
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2010
record_format eric
spellingShingle Dynamic Space for Rent: Using Commercial Web Hosting to Develop a Web 2.0 Intranet
Hodgins, Dave
Computers
Academic Libraries
Internet
Word Processing
Higher Education
Librarians
Social Networks
Information Technology
Computer Mediated Communication
Sharing Behavior
Online Vendors
Computer Networks
Computer Security
Dynamic Space for Rent: Using Commercial Web Hosting to Develop a Web 2.0 Intranet Hodgins, Dave Computers Academic Libraries Internet Word Processing Higher Education Librarians Social Networks Information Technology Computer Mediated Communication Sharing Behavior Online Vendors Computer Networks Computer Security The explosion of Web 2.0 into libraries has left many smaller academic libraries (and other libraries with limited computing resources or support) to work in the cloud using free Web applications. The use of commercial Web hosting is an innovative approach to the problem of inadequate local resources. While the idea of insourcing IT will seem daunting to some, the process of setting up and administering hosting and applications is remarkably accessible to staff with basic word processing and Web skills. This article demonstrates the degree to which recent advances in commercial Web hosting and open-source applications have reduced the process of administering Web services, once time consuming and technically demanding, to near point-and-click simplicity. This article reports on the Kraemer Family Library's use of commercial Web hosting to develop and host a Web 2.0 staff intranet. The staff of 9.5 full-time equivalent librarians and 21.5 full-time equivalent staff serve 8,000 students and 700 faculty and staff at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. The small number of library faculty and staff provided the opportunity to experiment with Web 2.0 concepts and applications. Since certain IT-supported requirements were lacking, the library looked for no- and low-cost ways to host the intranet outside the university computing environment. After researching the use of free Web applications, the library's planning team decided to build its intranet using open-source applications and commercial Web hosting. (Contains 3 figures.)
title Dynamic Space for Rent: Using Commercial Web Hosting to Develop a Web 2.0 Intranet
topic Computers
Academic Libraries
Internet
Word Processing
Higher Education
Librarians
Social Networks
Information Technology
Computer Mediated Communication
Sharing Behavior
Online Vendors
Computer Networks
Computer Security
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ896873