A member of the Web4lib mail list asked:
How do I create a semantic web site?
I know I have to use either RDF or OWL but do I use either of these to create a mark up language which I then use to create the web site or, with the semantic web do we move away [...]
Posted January 9, 2008 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: libraries, markup, networked information, semantic web, semantics, web design. One Comment.
I couldn’t say it, but Alexander Johannesen could: libraries are the last bastions of the “not invented here syndrome” (scroll down just a bit, you’ll find it).
Between Alex’s post and mine, I don’t think there’s much to say except this: there may be five programmers in the world who know how to work with Z39.50, [...]
Posted January 29, 2006 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: Alexander Johannesen, data interchange, libraries, library, library standards, networked information, not invented here, standards, z39.50. 4 Comments.
We can be forgiven for not noticing, but the world changed not long ago.
Sometime after the academics gave up complaining about the apparent commercialization of the internet, and while Wall Street was licking it’s wounds after the first internet boom went bust, the world changed.
Around the time we realized that over 200 million Americans have [...]
Posted January 23, 2006 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: arrival, cultural effects, culture, future libraries, information age, internet, internet usage, libraries, library, networked information, reality, science fiction, social change, society, stupendous, tiny marvels. 19 Comments.
Rebecca Lieb reports for ClickZ Stats that, based on US Census data (report), most Americans have PCs and web access:
Sixty-two million U.S. households, or 55 percent of American homes, had a Web-connected computer in 2003, according to just-released U.S. Census data. That’s up from 50 percent in 2001, and more than triple 1997’s 18 [...]
Posted January 16, 2006 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: access, census, critical mass, information age, internet access, internet usage, networked information, statistics, the coming information age, us census, usage statistics. 3 Comments.
Oliver Brown introduced me to microformats a while ago, the Ryan Eby got excited about them, then COinS-PMH showed how useful they could be for libraries, but I still haven’t done anything with them myself (other than beg Peter Binkley to release his COinS-PMH WordPress Plugin).
What are microformats? Garrett Dimon explains the theory:
When writing markup [...]
Posted December 8, 2005 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: data standards, libraries, library, metadata, microformat, microformats, networked information, semantic web. 5 Comments.
Way back in April 1997, Jakob Nielsen tried to educate us on Zipf Distributions and the power law, and their relationship to the web. This is where discussions of the Chris Anderson’s Long Tail start, but the emphasis is on the whole picture, not just the many economic opportunities at the end of the tail.
Here’s [...]
Posted November 1, 2005 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: academia, academic library, google, google economy, googling, group think, jakob nielsen, libraries, library, lowest common denominator, networked information, popularity, quality, research, search engines, search rankings, search result rankings, search results, wikipedia. One Comment.
Note: these are my presentation notes for a brown bag discussion with library faculty and university IT staff today. This may become a series…[[pageindex]]
More: my presentation slides and the Daily Show video.
Introduction
Public awareness of blogs seems to begin during the years of campaigning leading up to the 2004 election, but many people credit bloggers for [...]
Posted October 25, 2005 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: blog, blog study, blogger, bloggers, blogging, blogs, content structure, libraries, library, livejournal, media, networked information, presentation notes, typepad, wordpress. 2 Comments.
Wikipedia seems to get mixed reviews in the academic world, but I don’t fully understand why. There are those that complain that they can’t trust the untamed masses with such an important task as writing and editing an encyclopedia, then there are others that say you can’t trust the experts with it either. For my [...]
Posted June 3, 2005 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: encyclopedia, integration, libraries, library of congress, networked information, Nikola Tesla, opac, wikipedia. 5 Comments.