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Web 2.0 - Implications for IT Services Marieke Guy Interoperability Focus [email protected] UKOLN is supported by: www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk About Me • Work for UKOLN, National centre of expertise in digital information management • Located at the University of Bath • Funded by JISC and MLA to advise UK HE and FE communities and the cultural heritage sector • Areas of work include: UK Web Focus, Ariadne, support for digital repositories, Grand Challenge project • I work on the Interoperability Focus team, previous roles include…. • Following in the footsteps of Brian ‘the guru’ Kelly www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk About this Session • Start with an introductory talk that uses Web 2.0 technologies and attitude: – PowerPoint slides contain links to relevant resources, CC licence for slides – Resources bookmarked on del.icio.us (with tag ucisa-tlig-2006 ) – Always beta – not everything will necessarily work, but that's not the end of the world • Followed by a chance to discuss the challenges and implications • Finally a quick talk to sum up, conclude and take things forward www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Contents – Introduction – Where Are We Now? – Web 2.0: Web 2.0 technologies Web 2.0 culture – Deployment Challenges – Conclusions www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Where Are We Now? • Web now established as a communications medium • Many positive aspects of the UK Institutional Web and IT community: – Willingness to share experiences – Many annual events – Communication - people talk & socialise • Challenges we face: – Managing with limited resources – Managing service vs supporting user needs – Expectations of users – Role(s) of our Web services – Exploitation of new technologies www.bath.ac.uk www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management So What is Web 2.0? • Marketing term (derived from observing 'patterns') rather than technical standards - “an attitude not a technology” – now patented • Characteristics Of Web 2.0 – Network as platform, always beta – Clean URIs – Remix and mash-ups – Syndication (RSS) – Architecture of participation – Blogs & Wikis – Social networking and social tagging (folksonomies) – Trust and openness www.bath.ac.uk www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.ukoln.ac.uk Web2MemeMap, Tim O’Reilly, 2005 A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Web 2.0 Exemplars www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management Let's look at some examples www.bath.ac.uk Blogs • Weblog is a web-based publication made up of periodic articles, like an online diary • Ideal for use in HE (MySpace, Bebo, LiveJournal) – by students: sharing learning; reflections on learning; developing writing & social skills – by researchers: sharing knowledge and ideas; maximising impact… • Use Technorati to search new postings in Blogs (139 posts hits for UCISA on 6/06/2006) • Talis (UK library vendor), CETIS are publishing Blogs • Want to engage with your users? Why not set up an IT Services Blog? Issues with censorship etc. www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk http://www.technorati.com/ http://www.cetis.ac.uk/members/scott/ http://www.bath.ac.uk/e-learning/Auricle.htm http://blogs.warwick.ac.uk/ High www.ukoln.ac.uk profile e-learning Blog from Bath Univ. Note www.bath.ac.uk reference another verymanagement relevant technology Keep of e-learning developments from Ainformed centretoofPodcast expertise in–digital information Scott Wilson's (CETIS) Blog. Note use of an RSS Wikis • Wikis provide collaborative, easy-to-use Web-based authoring. • Again ideal for students, researchers and support staff for collaborative work allowing focus on content, not on authoring tools • Some issues for Web/marketing people – Should you be proactive in ensuring content is accurate? – Should you seek to lead in order to define structure? – Same old censorship issues • What about for systems documentation, note-taking, student group working, research work www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Web 2.0 http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/interop-focus/community/index/IWMW2006 www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Podcasts • University of Michigan School of Dentistry provide students with access to educationrelated content virtually anywhere • Are your University Podcasts available through iTunes?Aren't you missing out on a major distribution channel? (Student radio) • iPod/MP3 portable ownership at around 12% in 2005, heavilyskewed to 18-28 age group www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk http://www.dent.umich.edu/about/aboutschool/news/news2005/news091905.html http://www.everyobject.net/static.php?page=interactive www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Web 2.0 Instant Messaging (IM) http://www.meebo.com/ •IM – popular, widely used, with benefits for collaboration, but banned in some places •Meebo: – Web-based IM client – An AJAX application •Issues: – How do you ban it? – Interoperability – Doesn't it break WAI guidelines? www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Folksonomies • Keywords, tags, metadata • Created by groups/communities who are the resource users • Feedback loop is key • Used for bookmarking, Images, video and sound, other areas (events, goals, colours etc.) • Many flaws in the approach (ambiguity, searching etc.) • Many potential benefits (cheap and extendable, added value metadata etc.) • Implications include shift in metadata creation, trigger for communication, snap shot of current world, spam • Library use, IT services use – shared resources www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk www.ukoln.ac.uk www.bath.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management http://del.icio.us/tag/iwmw2006 Mash Ups • Mashup – merging information from multiple sources (cf music mashups) • Web services releasing APIs – Google Maps, (Is your campus map rescalable without loss of resolution?), Google Earth, • Can you merge data from 3rd party sources with your maps • Examples include google maps and BBC traffic data, crime information <http://www.chicagocrime.org/types/theft/58> hurricane Katrina information <http://www.scipionus.com/katrina.html> • See <http://backstage.bbc.co.uk/> for more examples www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Feeds See RSS briefing paper • E-mail has its role but: – Why send messages which time-out when many users will read them too late? – Why not use delivery channels which are spam-free and are more suited to receiving information (as opposed to discussions)? – Why not allow users to select their preferred channels? • Feeds allow syndication of content – use RSS 2.0 or Atom • Great for education – an attenuation device www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Feeds • Allows you to mix, organise, rate and annotate resources • Perfect for news, many other uses too – courses, social activities • Use a dedicated RSS viewer - Opera or Pluck plugin • Maybe RSS viewers should be standard on desktops? • Can also be used for people (FOAF) and events (iCalendar) www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Personalised Web Environment http://www.netvibes.com/ • Netvibes is an example of a personalised Web environment – just add your favourite RSS feeds • Can be: – Conventional news feeds – RSS from email (e.g GMail) – Dynamic RSS from searches • Also have a look at www.bath.ac.uk Suprglu Note that Netvibes has an AJAX interface, so that www.ukoln.ac.uk the windows can be dragged centre of expertise in digital information around Abrowser area, closed, etc. management Mobile Devices • Potential of mobile devices in learning, research, etc. • GPS combined with web services for weather, traffic ETC. • mobile-based email www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Web 2.0 Skype / VoIP • Skype is a good example of Internet telephony: Integrated voice, IM, Web (and now video) Can be high quality Free / cheap calls Conference calls Accessibility benefits Proprietary Network issues VoIP is coming, so now’s the time to gain experiences. What are the www.bath.ac.uk www.ukoln.ac.uk implications of ‘free’ always-on telephony (i.e. it's not just about A centre of expertise in digital information management software) - you could be broadcasting this talk now! Open Culture • Culture of openness, trust, beta and open source • Creative commons licences for work • EUNIS 2005 paper on "Let's Free IT Support Materials!" as an example of what UK HE could be doing www.ukoln.ac.uk www.bath.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital informationhttp://creativecommons.org/ management Break Out Session • How can IT services deploy Web 2.0? • More importantly, should we (isn't it just hype?) • What are the technical and cultural barriers to implementing Web 2.0? www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Technical & Cultural Barriers •Technical Barriers: – Will it work? Is it interoperable? – Is it secure? Is performance acceptable? – Do we have the expertise, resources, … – … •Cultural and Organisational Barriers: •What/who? – Some stereotypes! – IT Services!!! Librarians – Academics Senior management – Users … www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk IT Fundamentalists • • • • • • • • • • We need to avoid simplistic solutions to the complexities: Open Standards Fundamentalist: we just need XML Open Source Fundamentalist: we just need Linux Vendor Fundamentalist: we must need next version of our enterprise system (and you must fit in with this) Accessibility Fundamentalist: we must do WAI WCAG User Fundamentalist: we must do whatever users want Legal Fundamentalist: it breaches copyright, … Ownership Fundamentalist: must own everything we use Perfectionist: It doesn't do everything, so we'll do nothing Simplistic Developer: I've developed a perfect solution – I don't care if it doesn't run in the real world www.bath.ac.uk www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management IT Services • Don't understand learning and teaching and think that students only ever use the Web for messing around • Have no interest in what the users actually want and generally prefer to give the users what they themselves think they want. • Tend to work in silos (example: student information systems team which won't talk to the VLE team). They have no concept of team working across services or with academic staff. • Consultation usually consists of them telling you what they are going to do. If you tell them what you want they don't listen! • Computer says “no”! image www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk The Librarian Fundamentalists • Think they know better than the user e.g. they don't like people using Google Scholar; they should use Web of Knowledge • Think that users should be forced to learn Boolean searching & other formal search techniques because this is good for them • Don't want the users to search for themselves (cf folksonomies) because they won't get it right • They still want to classify the entire Web - despite the fact that users don't use their lists of Web links. • Want services to be perfect before they will release them to their users. They are very uncomfortable with the concept of 'forever beta' www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Academics • Many academic are conservative and won't care • Many will feel threatened • Many won't like WiFi in lecture theatres, students chatting on IRC, Googling answers, … • Many will soon ask for WiFi to be removed, blocked from lecture theatres (including areas where it's not yet available!) www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Senior Managers & Users • Senior management: – Don't understand technologies – Can be conservative – More comfortable with conventional business relations with vendors – May be over-cautious about being sued • Users: – Can be conservative and many don't understand technologies – Those that do may use the technologies in dangerous ways – Others may have high expectations (computer www.bath.ac.uk www.ukoln.ac.uk games A centre of expertise in digital information management Principles Draft principles available • IT Services should consider: – User Focus – Avoiding Dogma – Responsive to Change – Good Communications • Developers should consider: – Scalability – Sustainability – Reliability – Integration – Consistency www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Conclusions • • • • • • • • • We need a change in culture To be more open (surely what HE is about?) Revisiting AUPs – should not be a control mechanism Developing more sophisticated models for standards, accessibility, open source, … Integrating IT Policies With Institutional Policies Ongoing debate and discussion Holistic or blended approach - flexibility in implementation Exploit UKOLN's QA Focus briefing documents: 90+ documents available with CC licence Contribute to UKOLN's Wiki on Best Practices for CMSs www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk Questions? • Acknowledgements: Thanks to Brian Kelly and IWMW2006 for slides, inspiration and insight • http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/interop-focus/events/ucisa-tlig2006/futures/ www.ukoln.ac.uk A centre of expertise in digital information management www.bath.ac.uk