Margaret Birtley, CEO of the Collections Council of Australia, visted Collections Trust today and gave us a short presentation about the work of the Council.
Visitor from the Antipodes
November 26th, 2008 | Posted by in Australia | International Links - (0 Comments)Informing the Croats
November 21st, 2008 | Posted by in Croatia | International Links - (0 Comments)Nick Poole, CEO of Collections Trust was in Zagreb in Croatia today at the invitation of the Museum Documentation Centre. While there he is giving a presentation on: The UK Experience of Taking Culture Online.
Europeana Launches to ‘Overwhelming’ Success
November 20th, 2008 | Posted by in Europeana - (0 Comments)I attended today’s Museum Computer Group meeting at the London Transport Museum and gave a short (7 minutes!) presentation about OpenCulture and some of the wider strategic and political issues affecting the Digital agenda.
It was a great meeting – a lot of the usual suspects, but also many new faces. Particularly striking was the sheer quality of the work being presented – from the London Transport Museum’s website to the use of Google Maps on My Yorkshire. Lots of good clean design, interesting interfaces and some really powerful ideas.
Bryan Wills from LT museum gave an excellent presentation on the issues they had faced when incorporating User Generated Content into their site. The system they have used – built for them by System Simulation Ltd – is interesting. It’s an ‘offsite’ UGC server which has a minimal impact on the museum’s systems. This looks like a really promising mechanism for embedding UGC around collections with minimal risk.
James Watson from the National Maritime Museum gave a really storming (albeit brief) exposition of their experience of putting their collections into Flickr Commons. Although he didn’t make a big deal about it, one of the most interesting things is that they did some work on the copyright risks, and decided that the benefit of large-scale public access outweighed the risks. I think they will turn out to be right on this one.
Finally, the ever-brilliant Claire Sussums gave an overview of her experience of planning and developing Information Management Policies across both the Museum of London and the other Hub museums. Structurally and theoretically very sound, it was also really impressive for the depth of thought which went into it and the way in which Claire has secured management buy-in.
Ultimately, it’s a similar proposition to the idea which did the rounds when Freedom of Information was first mooted – information is what museums do, and even if they aren’t covered by FOI, an Information Management Policy is a very important thing to have.
Overall, a really good day. Museums are really forging ahead with technology and online service delivery and it was great to see such interesting and innovative work.
Making Connections meeting with Hub museums
November 16th, 2008 | Posted by in Uncategorized - (1 Comments)To Birmingham last Friday, where Linda Spurdle had organised ‘Making Connections’, a forum for the UK Hub Museums funded through the Renaissance in the Regions programme.
The aim of ‘Making Connections’ was to provide an opportunity for the Hub museums to share the insights and experiences gained over the past 2-3 years of technical development, to identify areas of common interest and to test the appetite for further collaboration between Regions.
I gave a presentation looking at the tension between the ‘command and control’ method of developing technical programmes and the more fluid but diffuse model adopted in recent years. It was also an opportunity to talk about the need to provide simple, single points of access to the sector’s information for services such as Google and other public/government sites.
Jane gave an excellent presentation looking both at the development of the new Culture24 website, and at the role of C24 in bringing cultural content to a far wider audience. There was an interesting discussion of the need to ‘emancipate’ cultural sites from Local Authority web services, which was also the subject of a paper we published last year.
Finally, we agreed that communication – the simple sharing of knowledge, experience and current work – is perhaps the thing which people valued the most. We agreed to look into ways in which the Collections Trust can help this communication happen over the next 2-3 years.





