| Believe me, Lynne, that's not a mistake I would ever make! :-) For the purposes of this study, I would consider standalone online exhibits like the Raid on Deerfield to be either beyond the scope of or consumed within the questions I ask in this study -- depending on one's point of view! I would be very interested, however, in the potential of the Raid on Deerfield website to raise visitor interest / awareness in the Memorial Hall Museum or about Deerfield, MA in general -- have you found any crossover there? Another interesting question (yet one that is also beyond the scope of this study) concerns the visitor relationship with virtual museums that have no physical counterpart. I remember well a usability analysis I did once at Museums and the Web with just such a website. The user tester was so excited by the online exhibits that she wanted to know where in the world the museum was located (to visit it in person). She searched in vain for this information, as not only did this online museum not have a physical counterpart, but this fact was virtually impossible to determine from the museum's website. Best, --Paul -------------- Paul F. Marty, Ph.D. ([email protected]) Assistant Professor, College of Information Florida State University, Tallahassee FL 32306-2100 On Sep 12, 2005, at 5:28 PM, Lynne Spichiger wrote:
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- Museum websites in the life of the visitor Paul Marty
- Re: Museum websites in the life of the visitor Lynne Spichiger
- Re: Museum websites in the life of the visitor Paul Marty
- Re: Museum websites in the life of the visitor Amalyah Keshet
- Re: Museum websites in the life of the visitor Lynne Spichiger
- Re: Museum websites in the life of the visitor Paul Marty
