[MCN-L] Best practices/workflows for converting catalogues to epub

2019-02-22 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:

I'm trying to figure out some workflows for our publications department to
convert their final InDesign-formatted catalogue files into ePub and I'm
finding it's not as straightforward as I hoped it would be.

First, the final copy of the catalogue has the spine and cover pages at the
front, so those need to be edited and moved about for ease of reading on a
browser. Second, they're not currently embedding their metadata, and I'm
not sure where the ISBN number should go, or editors and authors, etc. IPTC
doesn't seem to cut it here. And third, the Calibre conversion to ePub
is... yeah. Multiple columns within the pages get scrambled a bit, and
setting up the TOC is a bit maddening. I'd hoped the Adobe suite would have
a nice conversion tool by now, but not that I can see.

So, does anyone happen to have some workflows for converting museum
catalogues figured out, and that they'd be willing to share with me?

Thanks in advance,

~Perian Cohen
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[MCN-L] Kodak announces new ICO, KodakCoin, to track IP licensing and payment facilitation

2018-01-10 Thread Perian Sully
So this is an interesting use of blockchain technology. I can't quite wrap
my head around how this will work, but using blockchain for rights
licensing makes some sense.
https://techcrunch.com/2018/01/09/kodak-announces-ico-stock-jumps-44/

Does it use their blockchain to store the web crawls and maintain a list of
usage licensing? Does it automatically send out C letters? What happens
when the site changes and there's a disconnect with the blockchain? How do
creators get paid? Just with KodakCoins?

Blockchain: the newest tech to wrestle with!

~Perian
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[MCN-L] Open access but fees for publishers?

2017-02-22 Thread Perian Sully
Good morning everyone (on the West Coast at least),

For those of you who are pursuing open access initiatives, do you carve out
an exception for publishers? Obviously, publishers can grab whatever they
want if assets are offered at full-resolution, and it's hard for us to
police, but publication fees are still (?) a quantifiable source of
additional income. So I'm guessing honor system is mostly in play here.

What restrictions do you still have? Print run limitations before a fee
kicks in? Type of publication? Don't worry about it at all?

Thanks all,

~Perian
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Re: [MCN-L] Internal image use policies

2016-10-21 Thread Perian Sully
Thanks everyone for your replies.

Amalyah, what I mean regarding internal use policies is exactly as you
stated - curators wishing to retain full control of representations of
objects in the collection. Currently, it's a blanket rule that everything,
regardless of copyright or sensitivity, needs to be run by curatorial
before the image is cropped or edited for use by all other departments. The
vast majority of the collection is public domain.

Obviously, this increases workloads for the staff and slows down production
of program materials, but it would also prohibit any efforts to ultimately
adopt an open access policy for the public. So I'm looking for the balance
between respect for collection representation/copyright and facilitating
access.

~P

On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 12:06 PM, Amalyah Keshet  wrote:

> Hi Perian
>
> Rather depends on what you mean by "internal use policies". Could you
> clarify?
>
> If a work is in the public domain, it is no longer protected and anyone
> can reproduce it in any way they want, including cropping it, etc. Are you
> implying institutional policies that would override that?  Are you thinking
> of reproductions in catalogs, or in marketing materials, or on social
> media, or on signage...?
>
> I can think of situations in which a curator might object to misleading
> manipulation of a public domain work from the collection, and in fact the
> role of our institutions is to preserve the integrity of the works in our
> collections, but in general cropping for graphic reasons would be
> considered just that: a design decision, and those tend to be taken during
> the editorial / design process by those involved: curators, editors,
> graphic designers.
>
> If a work is still protected by copyright and (in some countries) by moral
> rights, then cropping or manipulation would require the approval of the
> artist or copyright holder.  That's not an "internal use" policy; let's
> call it best practice.
> There are artists who are fine with things like cropping; others are not.
>
> Amalyah Keshet
> Head of Image Resources & Copyright Management
> The Israel Museum, Jerusalem
>
>
>
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[MCN-L] Internal image use policies

2016-10-19 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:

I'm looking for a few examples of internal use policies for images,
especially for public domain or orphan works. Do you allow free cropping
and editing by staff or do you require curatorial approval before each use?
what kinds of materials have restrictions, if any?

Thanks in advance,

~Perian
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Re: [MCN-L] Maker spaces and 3D printing

2016-02-26 Thread Perian Sully
there're a few makerspaces in San Diego:

http://makerplace.com/
http://www.fablabsd.org/
San Diego Public Library:
http://sandiego.communityguides.com/content.php?pid=493213=5377126 and
http://www.meetup.com/Makers-at-San-Diego-Central-Library-Meetup/messages/boards/thread/45532332
and
http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/Central-Library-To-Expand-Popular-3D-Printer-Lab-335365811.html
UCSD: http://prototyping.calit2.net/makerspace.php



On Tue, Feb 23, 2016 at 8:17 AM,  wrote:

> My students have an opportunity to print museum objects but some have not
> found a location for 3D printing in their area. Do you know of locations in:
>
> Paris
> San Diego
> Fort Lauderdale
>
> Many thanks,
>
> Kathy
>
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[MCN-L] Fwd: [MUSEUM-L] Take the Survey of Digital Image Collection Management Practices and Receive a Free Copy of the Ensuing Report

2016-01-27 Thread Perian Sully
Take the Survey of Digital Image Collection Management Practices and
Receive a Free Copy of the Ensuing Report

Primary Research Group seeks managers of large image collections to take
the Survey of Digital Image Collection Management Practices. Colleges,
libraries, museums, archives, government agencies, and other organizations
with large digital image collections qualify. Your organization will be
listed as a participant but all answers are aggregated and/or are not
connected to individual participants. Your responses are confidential.
Survey participants receive a free PDF copy of the report generated from
the survey data.

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/DigitalImageManagementPractices
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Re: [MCN-L] data archiving

2016-01-11 Thread Perian Sully
Hi Matt:

What kind of preservation services are you looking for? Backup, regular
migration, integrity audits? Others here can speak to their own methods and
what the best practices are nowadays, but if you're just trying to have an
offsite backup with some redundancy, you might look into Amazon's Glacier.

On Mon, Jan 11, 2016 at 1:32 PM, Matt Wheeler 
wrote:

> Good evening. In trying to come up with a long-term preservation plan for
> digital image master files, we've spoken to reps at a few digital
> repositories which offer professional services, but at a higher per-TB
> annual storage cost than our small museum can afford (anywhere from
> $1200-$2000/TB/year). Are there reputable archives with lower fees? I'm not
> sure where to begin looking. Thanks for any insight.
>
> Best regards, Matt
>
> --
> Matt Wheeler,
> Photography Archives,
> Penobscot Marine Museum
> Archives (207) 548-2529 ext. 211
> 5 Church Street, PO Box 498
> Searsport, Maine 04974
>
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Re: [MCN-L] Project management systems

2015-12-16 Thread Perian Sully
Seconding what Ari said. What're your priorities? Trello is quite popular
for agile project management and supports everything you mentioned, but not
sure to what degree you need these things. I'm not up to speed on Slack but
I know lots of people use it. Currently using Igloo as an intranet and it
can, kinda, support workflow management, but has a lot of
information-sharing and document sharing tools.

do you want something for a small team or for an institution? Trello and
Slack would be great for just picking up and going (assuming you don't need
waterfall PM features), while Jira or Igloo or BaseCamp are better for
institution-wide project management.
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[MCN-L] "easy" file duplication cleanup

2015-12-07 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:

I know this is possibly something of a fool's errand, but I'm hoping
someone has come up with some magic tool or process for more-easily
cleaning up file storage than going through 12 years of files one-by-one.

As part of our DAMS project, I've run some TreeSize Pro scans on three of
the 20-25 or so network storage directories. Just in those three, there are
approximately 66,467 duplicate files. We initially thought about creating
hardlinks for the duplicates, which will at least help the server access
files more efficiently, but it won't solve the problem of actually having
files all over the place that the DAMS will ultimately ingest.

Another thought was to do symlinks, but as far as I know, there aren't easy
tools to automagically create these for Windows desktops or servers. Plus,
it might create havoc for all of the file permissions.

So does anyone have any other ideas that I might try? Or are we really just
stuck with all of this junk until someone manually goes in and cleans it up?

Thanks,

~Perian
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Re: [MCN-L] LAM interoperability SIG?

2015-11-18 Thread Perian Sully
This is absolutely a favorite topic of mine and something I've spent my
professional career working on. Sign me up!

On Mon, Nov 16, 2015 at 10:12 AM, Stefano Cossu  wrote:

> Hello,
> It was exciting to host a lively conversation at the last MCN conference
> about Libraries, Archives and Museums (topics: [1]; slides: [2]). I am
> happy to see that many colleagues are interested in tearing down the
> barriers between bibliographical, archival and collection records within
> museums, as well as promoting the exchange of information and technologies
> between Cultural Heritage institutions.
>
> I think the session sparked quite some interest and raised important
> topics from many of the participants. I also believe that this conversation
> needs to be brought forward.
>
> This mailing list may be a good place to follow up that conversation. I
> would love to propose a similar session for next MCN, actually even closer
> to a round-table discussion than to a panel.
>
> If enough people are interested, I would also propose to create a special
> interest group for this topic. Goal of the SIG would be torefine the core
> topics that we brought up at the conference using this mailing list, and
> then meet in person at the next MCN with a distilled down list of action
> items.
>
> Anyone interested in this proposal is welcome to respond.
>
> Thanks,
> Stefano
>
> [1] http://sched.co/3tND
> [2]
> http://www.slideshare.net/StefanoCossu/librarries-archives-museums-discussion-mcn-2015
> --
>
> Stefano Cossu
> Director of Application Services, Collections
>
> The Art Institute of Chicago
> 116 S. Michigan Ave.
> Chicago, IL 60603
> 312-499-4026
>
>
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Re: [MCN-L] 12 months of open access images at Te Papa: the report

2015-10-15 Thread Perian Sully
Congratulations Adrian! This is wonderfully useful info to keep on hand
(especially for those organizations that are still nervous about open
access). In other words: the sky didn't fall in!

Cheers,

~Perian

On Thu, Oct 15, 2015 at 4:02 PM, Adrian Kingston 
wrote:

> Hi all
>
> A few weeks ago I asked if anyone who had  active open access image
> policies had any data they could share to aid our analysis of the first
> year of Te Papa's download project, for a Museums and the Web Asia paper
> and presentation. I received a few replies with some helpful data, and lots
> of requests to share our findings, so that's what I'm doing today.
>
> I didn't get some of the data in time to inform my formal paper, but
> Cherie Chen from the Getty gave me some really useful info on the Getty
> statistics (quite a different scale from Te Papa) and other insights.
> Thanks Cherie!
>
> The formal paper is here. It's a long read (8000 words) but I hope there's
> some useful info in there. http://bit.ly/TPopenaccess (there are a few
> formatting issues, sorry).
>
> I did receive some really useful data from Rob Lancefield, Davison Art
> Center at Wesleyan University, and Martin Fell , York Museums Trust, in
> time to include in my presentation, so again, thanks Martin and Rob!
>
> The presentation slides are here http://bit.ly/TPopenaccessSlides. It was
> only a 30 minute slot, so it's obviously a much abbreviated version of the
> paper. (I think the video will appear via MWA at some stage).
>
> If you have any questions feel free to yell out.
>
> Adrian Kingston
> Digital Collections Senior Analyst
> Collections Information Services
> Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
>
>
> +++
> Visit the Te Papa website http://www.tepapa.govt.nz
> The email message together with the accompanying attachments may be
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> checking measures and accepts no liability for any loss caused either
> directly or indirectly by a virus arising from the use of this message
> or any attached file.
> +++
>
>
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Re: [MCN-L] Artifact photography organizations or conferences?

2015-10-15 Thread Perian Sully
Hi Ellice:

The Visual Resources Association http://vraweb.org/ has annual conferences
and a listserv.
Many people on the Registrar's Committee of AAM also do artifact
photography and their listserv is quite active. http://www.rcaam.org/

~Perian

On Thu, Oct 15, 2015 at 9:58 AM, Ellice Engdahl 
wrote:

> Hi folks,
>
> Does anyone have recommendations on professional organizations,
> conferences, and/or other developmental opportunities for artifact
> photography staff at museums?  I know of similar things for archival
> imaging, but we're hoping to find ways for our photo studio to get exposure
> to the equipment, workflows, methods, standards, etc. that other cultural
> organizations use in photographing artifacts (of the 3D rather than 2D
> variety), and also start to develop a professional network of peers.
>
> Thanks!
>
> .
> Gain Perspective. Get Inspired. Make History.
>
> Ellice Engdahl, PMP
> Digital Collections & Content Manager
> P: 313.982.6005
> E: elli...@thehenryford.org
>
> www.thehenryford.org
> .
>
> The Henry Ford
> 20900 Oakwood Boulevard
> Dearborn, MI 48124
>
>
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Re: [MCN-L] DDAM

2015-09-30 Thread Perian Sully
Thank you Niki and Deb (and everyone else who responded already to my
question).

One of the findings thus far from my informational interviews is that the
staff have adopted GoogleDocs, Dropbox, and other tools to facilitate their
work. They know these tools, they're easy and clear to use, and unless the
DM/DAMS we implement is as simple to learn and use, we'll have a difficult
time with adoption and we'll still have assets all over the place.

I've not seen the Piction DMS module in action yet, so I can't judge how it
works. But I primarily want to make sure that the ease-of-use factor is
extremely high. That means not a lot of upload-download-send email link to
asset-download-upload again actions between collaborators; that just gets
cumbersome. I like the idea of using APIs to link to SharePoint or
GoogleDocs or Dropbox (officially the museum uses Office 365, but its
capabilities are applied somewhat inconsistently) so we can encourage
collaboration and version control while maintaining some control over our
assets. I just don't know if seamless integration exists yet.

Sticky problems to think about!

~P

On Wed, Sep 30, 2015 at 6:21 AM, Niki Krause 
wrote:

> Perian & Deb,
>
> We're used Piction as our primary image & AV assets DAM for six years, and
> have a couple more public-facing Piction systems (collections online,
> ArtLens and Gallery One asset management). We've just implemented the
> Piction DMS module, integrated with our collection management system via
> API. We don't have DAM and DMS on the same physical server, but you could
> very easily...
>
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Re: [MCN-L] DDAM? (Document and Digital Asset Management)

2015-09-30 Thread Perian Sully
thanks Nate! I'll check it out.

Are you going to MCN this year?

On Wed, Sep 30, 2015 at 6:42 AM, Nate Solas  wrote:

> Not an exact fit, but you might want to check out Nuxeo DAM:
> http://www.nuxeo.com/solutions/digital-asset-management/
>
> Nuxeo under the hood is an extremely powerful Document Management System,
> and the DAM component fits naturally over that framework. I haven't used
> this setup so can't personally vouch for it, but I know back in the day the
> IMA was using Nuxeo for document management. Might be worth pinging Kyle or
> someone else at the IMA?
>
> Good luck and please post your findings!
> Nate
>
>
> On Mon, Sep 28, 2015 at 9:53 PM, Perian  wrote:
>
> > Hi everyone:
> >
> > I'm performing some digital asset and digital needs assessments in
> > preparation for DAMS selection and implementation. As I'm interviewing
> the
> > staff, it's becoming clear that there are at least two different types of
> > products that are needed: a DAMS and a document management system (DMS).
> > The staff has adopted the use of Google Docs, Dropbox, and other
> > collaborative tools to streamline their workflows, but the downside of
> this
> > is that materials and information are scattered absolutely everywhere. We
> > could also argue for the need for a third system, a knowledge management
> > system, but those needs can mostly be addressed through the intranet.
> >
> > We were sort of hoping that maybe we could implement a DAMS with a DM
> > overlay, but I don't think such a beast exists. Does it? Or are there
> other
> > solutions some of you have already hit upon that allows for the DAMS to
> > retain all of the digital files while allowing for version control and
> > collaboration (in an easy-to-use and elegant interface)?
> >
> > And if some of you have implemented both DM and DAM, I'd love to know the
> > interplay between these systems.
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > ~Perian
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[MCN-L] Looking for an MCN roomie

2015-09-21 Thread Perian Sully
As my 40th birthday/coming out of baby-retirement present to myself, I'm
giving me the gift of seeing you all again. Do any of you (preferably
ladies) need or want a roomie? I'm planning on arriving November 4th and
leaving on the 7th.

Cheers,

~Perian
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[MCN-L] Job posting: Lead Interactive Developer at BPOC

2011-11-14 Thread Perian Sully
The Balboa Park Online Collaborative is seeking a creative
self-motivated Lead Interactive Software Developer to join its team to
support innovative technology projects serving 26 cultural
institutions in Balboa Park. Learn a new definition of ROI as you work
alongside experienced museum technology implementers, educators,
curators, exhibition designers, and other park staff to conceptualize,
design and develop online and in-gallery visitor focused technology
projects and support web and kiosk projects that improve public access
to the collections and content from multiple museums including
history, art, science, transportation, military and sports. ?Work in
beautiful Balboa Park, San Diego, one of the nation?s largest urban
parks and enjoy Southern California on your days off.?Responsibilities
Under the direction of the Director of Web Development:?? * ? Supports
multiple concurrent web projects using Drupal, PHP, Java Script and
Ajax.? * ? Performs software design, development and implementation.
* ? Creates program specifications, Implementation/support
documentation, and Disaster Recovery documentation.? * ? Maintains a
cloud-based Linux server environment hosted on Amazon Web Services.? *
? Responsible for the quality of software deliverables in terms of the
technical design, implementation, testing and adherence to standards.
* ? Interacts with the members to understand business processes and
translate business requirements into technology solutions.? *
Provides/reviews estimates for design, build, test and implementation
phases, ensuring quality and accuracy is maintained.? * ? Advises on
the best time to engage outside resources.? * ? Provides hands-on
technical expertise on all aspects of implementation.? * ? Meet
project deadlines and handle multiple priorities at a time.
Requirements?? * ? 5-6+ years of professional experience with at least
4 years leading an internal or external development team.? *
Expertise with Linux, Apache, MySQL Administration, and shell
scripting.? * ? Experience building successful enterprise level
websites on the Drupal CMS platform with the requisite expert level
skills using PHP, MySQL, and CSS.? * ? Demonstrated talent with Java
Script, Ajax, and interface design skills.? * ? Knowledge of jQuery
and jQuery UI libraries.? * ? Demonstrated skills in discovery,
specification development, information architecture, and design.? *
Experience with SEO, registration systems, social media tools, content
syndication, and e-commerce.? * ? Experience in Content Driven
industries including Media, Publishing, Entertainment, Museums,
Education, Non-Profits, etc.? * ? Strong project management skills and
experience using code repositories such as Subversion and project
management systems such as Redmine to manage complex projects.? *
Ability to manage and communicate project expectations effectively
with team members.? * ? Experience with Mobile and HTML5 development
desirable.? * ? Entrepreneurial spirit and desire to make an impact.
* ? Dedicated to the use and support of open source.

Please send resume and cover letter to bpoc at bpoc.org



[MCN-L] MCN Silent Auction in Atlanta - prizes!

2011-11-09 Thread Perian Sully
Dear Marla:

What's the procedure for dropping off items? At the check-in/registration desk?

On Wed, Nov 2, 2011 at 2:49 PM, Misunas, Marla mmisunas at sfmoma.org wrote:
 The MCN Silent Auction is coming up.
 Can you top last year's Elvis Mr. Potato Head?
 http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/37591725/ns/business-consumer_news/t/new-role-elvis-mr-potato-head/
 You should try! Prizes awarded for the auction item that brings in the most 
 cash, and for the
 most unusual item.

 Here's what to do:
 Come to Atlanta for MCN's annual meeting, November 16-19.
 Bring items to be auctioned off
 Bid and win items on Friday, November 18.
 Support MCN's Scholarship Fund




[MCN-L] Job posting: Director of Information Technology, Balboa Park Online Collaborative

2011-11-04 Thread Perian Sully
As we expand, the Balboa Park Online Collaborative is seeking a
dynamic, business minded proactive Director of Information Technology
with strong technical and communications skills who is aspiring to a
CIO role. The BPOC provides thought leadership and technical services
to more than 27 museums and cultural organizations with a focus on
providing innovative solutions, delivering exceptional customer
service, and creating a reliable infrastructure that demonstrates
value to our members.

The Director of IT is responsible for all aspects of information
technology operations, including supervision of information technology
employees; budget preparation and management; development of
guidelines, standards and procedures; deployment and maintenance of
enterprise application systems and services;information security; and
user support, training, and outreach. The director is charged with
both strategic planning and technical implementation to fulfill the
mission of the BPOC and the individual organizations. It is a
full-time, 12-month position located at the San Diego Hall of
Champions Sports Museum in San Diego.?

Responsibilities:

Oversee desktop and server support for a diverse collection of
museums and cultural organizations in Balboa Park, San Diego,
supporting approximately 250 users at 9 sites, with potential for
expansion.
Manage and maintain server environments and infrastructure,
including voice and data communications, including direct hands on
work.  Rapidly respond to emergency situations both during and outside
of normal business hours, as requested.
Together with the Director of BPOC, develop and implement a
strategic plan for campus-wide IT that supports the mission of the
cultural institutions that we serve as well as the innovative
technology mission of the BPOC
Manage a growing team of 3 full time staff and 10 interns using a
robust ticketing and project management system.
Provides strategic and operational leadership to the IT team and
assists in designing, implementing, maintaining and upgrading all IT
infrastructure on campus ? including wide area fiber optic network,
public access wireless, local area networks, application, file and
print servers (some in a virtualized environment), VoIP telephone
systems, integration with cloud-based services such as Google apps,
personal computers and operating systems.
Provide overall direction and advises on best practices for IT
activities campus-wide, including multimedia projects, in-gallery
displays, collections management (including library systems), digital
asset management, customer relations management, financial and
ticketing systems.
Work closely with colleagues to meet team goals and improve
processes and practices.

Requirements:

7+ years of network and server administration experience in a
fast-paced support environment
Broad base of technical knowledge in IT systems and emerging
technology trends and issues, especially in the museum or educational
technology space
Collaborative skills to work effectively with faculty, staff and
senior administrators in areas other than technology to develop and
implement appropriate uses of technology.
Expert knowledge of TCP/IP WANs and LANs, Active Directory,
SharePoint, desktop support systems, MS Exchange, VMware servers,
SANs, firewalls, remote access VPNs, PBX systems, and popular business
applications. Experience with museum- or nonprofit-specific software
packages is a plus.
Experience advising and communicating with non-technical staff and
guiding technical decisions
Strong combination of strategic planning, communication,
interpersonal, management, and leadership skills.
Demonstrated ability to successfully manage a team
Desire to work in non-profit / museum environment

Submit resume and cover letter via email to bpoc at bpoc.org. No phone
calls, please.



[MCN-L] New Flickr uploader for museums, Sammu, available for pre-release

2011-09-19 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:

As many of you know, Balboa Park Online Collaborative has helped seven
organizations in Balboa Park upload close to 110,000 images to Flickr.
Because of the diversity of information and images that these
organizations represent, we needed an easy-to-use way of marrying
database records with their images, ensuring that the information is
displayed properly within Flickr's Description, Tags, and Title
fields. As a result, we've been hard at work on a new image uploader
for the museum community that will greatly facilitate online access to
collections on Flickr. Called Sammu (for Synchronized Automated Media
Metadata Uploader), it ingests museum database exports and merges the
records with their images and uploads them together.

To see an example of an account uploaded using Sammu, check out the
Museum of Photographic Arts' Flickr stream:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mopa1 Since this account launched in May,
it has enjoyed over 160,000 views, and there's an active community of
commenters and discussions about the collection.

We're just about ready to release Sammu to the museum community at
large, but we'd like a few dedicated volunteers to check out the
software and help us kick the wheels. Sammu does require Mac OS 10.6
or higher to run. Sorry, PC folks.

If you're interested, please drop me a line at psully at bpoc.org. I look
forward to hearing from you!

~Perian

Perian Sully
Project Manager: Online Access and Digital Asset Management
Balboa Park Online Collaborative
http://www.bpoc.org



[MCN-L] Technology, Interpretation and Education Virtual Conference and Expo Hall - September 20-22, 2011

2011-09-09 Thread Perian Sully
Multi-day Online Conference and Virtual Expo Hall
Technology, Interpretation and Education 2011
September 20-22
11 a.m. - 5 p.m. each day (Eastern)

Join us for an exciting two-day online experience, where you can learn
from and interact with Media  Technology MUSE Award-winning museum
professionals, technology vendors and your fellow museum and
technology colleagues. Whether you're starting to introduce technology
to your institution, or are in the middle of a long-range
initiative--this conference is perfect for you.

And don't do it alone--register as a group to bring the online
conversation directly into your room! Invite staff, create dialogue,
encourage participation, come up with ideas for your institution.

TIE 2011 features a wide variety of interactive and educational
projects--video podcasting, audience-building websites, in-house
kiosks--even alternate reality games on mobile devices!

Get creative--get inspired!

http://www.aam-us.org/getinvolved/learn/tech.cfm

Don't miss it!



[MCN-L] Fwd: DEADLINE EXTENDED: 2012 Annual Meeting Session Proposals

2011-08-31 Thread Perian Sully
]




-- 
Perian Sully
http://www.emphatic.org
http://www.musematic.net
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org
Twitter: @p_sully


[MCN-L] Call for Proposals for AAM Media Technology sessions, deadline July 15!

2011-05-30 Thread Perian Sully
Dear Media  Technology and MCN members:

I want to apprise everyone of the deadline dates for proposal submissions
for the 2012 AAM Annual Meeting in Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 29-May 2:

Deadline date for proposals to go through the SPC Program Committee: *July
15 *

Final date for general submissions: *August 31*

The theme for this year is Creating Community.

Why is it important to get your submissions in early? Proposals that go
through the SPC Program Committee have a greater shot at being accepted,
because of the assistance you receive by yours truly to fine-tune your
proposal and make it stronger. The process is changing this year, so unlike
in past years when I (and Herminia before me) was able to work with you and
make final adjustments between July 15 until the Program Chairs meeting in
August, I will not be able to help fine-tune your proposal after the July 15
deadline. So PLEASE contact me in advance and tell me your ideas, if you
need someone to present with, or if you need a look-see or an editor to
ensure your program has the best shot it has at being accepted by the
National Program Committee in October.

This year's process:
*now-July 15*: MT Program Chair (i.e. me) works with interested session
chairs to develop sessions
*July 15-August 3*: ALL SPC programs chairs review ALL submissions (not just
their own SPC) and grades them according to a set of criteria, including
inclusion of international speakers and non-traditional presentation formats
*August 4*: Program Chairs meeting in Washington DC. The top 39 sessions
from all SPC-reviewed proposals are presented for approval by the entire SPC
council. These sessions will be marked as Endorsed by the SPC Council. One
session from each SPC will be protected as a nuts and bolts session
*August 5-31*: Program Chairs can discuss and fine-tune sessions with
session chairs for final SPC endorsement until the August 31 deadline
*October*: Final schedule is determined by National Program Committee

AAM has also said they will be setting up a site for session chairs to flesh
out ideas and look for co-presenters. I'll provide that address when it's
available.

Thank you so much to everyone who presented this year. It was a great
conference and I look forward to hearing from you soon so we can raise the
bar even more for Minneapolis.

Sincerely,

~Perian Sully
AAM Media  Technology Program Chair


[MCN-L] DAM pricing

2011-05-18 Thread Perian Sully
Hi Megan:

It really depends on what you want to do and how big your institution is. On
the low end, you can anticipate something in the 15-20K range. On the high
end, up to several hundred thousand.

There are also a bunch of open source dams available, but you'll have to
factor in the cost of hardware (true for the commercial products, too).

Sorry for the non-answer, but if you're able to provide more specifics about
the size of your institution and what you want the DAMS to do, someone might
be able to help fine-tune the numbers.

~Perian

On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 12:28 PM, Megan Brett megan.brett at gmail.com wrote:

 Greetings all,

 I've been following the conversation about Digital Asset Mgmt systems with
 interest, as it's something my site is starting to think seriously about.
 I've been asked to try and pull together some figures, but I'm having a bit
 of trouble. Would anyone be willing to share a range figure with me?

 Thanks much,

 Megan Brett



[MCN-L] Museum Mobile App List

2011-05-16 Thread Perian Sully
Hi Kurt:

Check out this great list: http://www.museums2go.com/

Charles includes reviews with the apps, too.

On Sat, May 14, 2011 at 8:37 AM, MuseumPods museumpods at gmail.com wrote:

 Hello,

 A lot of people have asked me for a list of available museum mobile apps
 (iPhone, Android) and I don't have one -- is there a list or directory I
 can
 reference?  If not, send me the URL of the app in the iPhone app store or
 Google Marketplace. I would be glad to make a directory for people to use.

 Thanks,
 Kurt
 museumpods at gmail.com


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[MCN-L] Online Collections Publication

2011-04-29 Thread Perian Sully
I wholeheartedly agree with Deb. To date, the evidence is inconclusive that
online collections=increased foot traffic EXCEPT when one takes into account
the fact that easy access to museum collection materials increases the
feelgood quotient for a percentage of your audience.

Anecdotally, I do hear on a regular basis from the institutions I work with
that they are seeing an uptick in researcher visits. Their researchers are
coming from out of town to see the materials firsthand. This doesn't add
substantially to the amount of visitors an institution gets, but it does
reflect well on the museum to have those visitors making a special trip.

You might also take a look at Dr. Paul Marty's 2005-2008 study about museum
websites and visitorship. He interviewed 1200 visitors at 9 museum websites
and asked them what their expectations were for the website.
http://marty.ci.fsu.edu/preprints/marty_mmc_2008.pdf (preprint) According to
his research, a majority of online visitors (60-70%) believe that the
website should offer access to research materials and online collections.
The Canadian Heritage Information Network's 2004 study showed 50% of
visitors go to the website to learn about the collections. 2004 Survey of
Visitors to Museums? Web Space and Physical Space
http://www.pro.rcip-chin.gc.ca/contenu_numerique-digital_content/2004survey-2004survey/index-eng.jsp

Also check out the the IMLS National Study on the Use of Libraries, Museums
and the Internet, 2008: http://interconnectionsreport.org/ It suggests that
there is, in fact, a positive correlation between website use and on-site
visitation. From the intro: The study concludes that ?the amount of use of
the Internet is positively correlated with the number of in-person visits to
museums and has a positive effect on in-person visits to public libraries

Hope these are of use,

~Perian

P.S. because the question will invariably arise, when I was at the Magnes,
we saw our RR revenue increase by about 500% within the first year
following online publication of the collections. Some of that revenue was
due to a big book publication; take that away, the increase was around
100-150%.

On Fri, Apr 29, 2011 at 6:23 AM, Deborah Wythe deborahwythe at hotmail.com
wrote:

 Hi Maggie,

 We've have had an uptick in image requests since putting the full
collection on line -- makes sense, of course: people looking for images are
going to want to see images. Having PayPal available for quick purchases and
people who want an image to print and hang on their wall has also helped.

 I don't think there's any competition between catalogs and online
collections: the first is about interpretation, pulling together related
groups, and (yes) providing beautiful images. The second is about searching,
images, and data, and (in our case) interaction, tagging, commenting.

 I don't have stats on hand, but you could look over our blog posts about
the collections online and see if there are any comments that ring true to
you. This one is a good starting point http://bit.ly/jPSKXk  (I can't
believe it's only a year ago that we released everything!) Try the Labs
pages, too: http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/labs/

 I'm also not sure that collection online is about attendance -- at least
not in a bricks and mortar sense. We all need to start seeing our audience
as something broader than the people who walk in the door. People who don't
actually come to the museum don't pay admission, but when we build worldwide
audience and community, we're banking for the future. If people have a good
experience with your collection online and the rest of your website and feel
connected with you on a personal level, that may prime them to visit the
next time they're in the area, or to talk you up and spread the word (The
Brooklyn Museum is a way cool place.).

 Deb Wythe
 Brooklyn Museum

 deborahwythe at hotmail.com




 From: maggie.hanson at gmail.com
 Date: Wed, 27 Apr 2011 12:24:06 -0700
 To: mcn-l at mcn.edu
 Subject: [MCN-L] Online Collections Publication

 (*I apologize if anyone has already received this message.  I'm having
 trouble with my subscription so I'm trying from a different email
address!*)

 Hi, all!

 We are in the nascent stages of publishing museum objects online.  I?ve
 recently had a few staff members ask questions and raise concerns about
 online publication hurting exhibition catalog sales (and that general
idea).
  This is an old concern that I know has been disputed and calmed over the
 past decade or so, but it?s a new concept/process for some of our staff.
  I?d like to share some examples or refer concerned parties to statistics
 that show that online publication of collections has been shown to
*increase
 * attendance and sales.  I know that there are good quotes in the *LA Art
 Online* report; can anyone point me toward other reports, stats, or
personal
 anecdotes that I could share?  Thanks so much!

 Maggie



[MCN-L] Institutional image database - Lightroom?

2011-04-20 Thread Perian Sully
Hi Sarah:

If you're at all interested preserving your images and making sure you don't
have multiple copies of the same image in your directories (albeit in
different sizes), what you probably want is a digital asset management
system. There are a number of them on the market, and some pretty decent
open source alternatives. Since it seems like your needs are fairly modest,
something like Razuna, DSpace, EnterMedia, or ResourceSpace would work well,
or for a proprietary solution, Extensis Portfolio will probably suit you
nicely. A good DAMS will automatically recognize the EXIF and IPTC data
already embedded in the image and should write back to the image.

The problem with using Lightroom or Bridge or another photo management tool
of that sort is that it's far too easy for your other users to make an
oops and delete or overwrite your assets. Similarly, if you need a
multitude of sizes, photo management software won't allow your users to
create derivatives on the fly. For example, if you're using your assets for
the web, for print publications, etc., you may want a bunch of different
qualities. With a DAMS, a user can download what they need at will, leaving
your master image untouched, and you servers uncluttered with multiples.
Plus, you'd have to purchase a bulk license for the Adobe products if you
wanted an instance on each desktop.

There are some good tips about DAMS and digital preservation on the CHIN
website: http://www.pro.rcip-chin.gc.ca/index-eng.jsp?Ne=8110N=8110

Hope this helps,

~Perian

Perian Sully
Project Manager: Digital Asset Management and Online Access
Balboa Park Online Collaborative


On Wed, Apr 20, 2011 at 2:52 PM, SARAH PUCKITT visionary62000 at 
yahoo.comwrote:

 Hello- thanks for your suggestions so far from my recent query. Before I
 posted
 the first question, we were looking at Adobe Lightroom. So my question now
 is,
 why not use Lightroom for this? I've not used it before, but I've
 downloaded a
 trial version along with many of the programs others have suggested.

 What I like about Lightroom, so far, is that its intuitive, which I see as
 an
 advantage for our various staff to be able to access it. I was able to view
 and
 enter data within 10 minutes of downloading the software. Also, it
 automatically
 loads in data that we want (EXIF) and I like the keyword function.

 I've been fumbling along with some of the other programs I've tried (i.e.
 not as
 intuitive), so they may be able to do all this and more, but I havent seen
 that
 yet.

 We are looking for something more sophisticated than iPhoto, but we're
 primarily
 interested in an image cataloguing software, not image editing.
 Thanks again for the input-
 Sarah Puckitt
 Collections Information Specialist
 Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts
 spuckitt at mmfa.org
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[MCN-L] Skype- use it or block it?

2011-03-28 Thread Perian Sully
We use it, too. Same with my last museum, where I used it for my AAM
conference calls, instead of charging my calls to the organization.

~Perian

On Mon, Mar 28, 2011 at 3:22 PM, Sandy Moore SMoore at toledomuseum.orgwrote:

 We have several staff members using it, including our Director.

 Sandra J. Moore, MBA
 Director of Information Technology
 The Toledo Museum of Art
 Grove Place
 Toledo, OH  43620
 Telephone:  (419) 255-8000 x7308
 Fax:  (419) 255-5638
 smoore at toledomuseum.org
 www.toledomuseum.org



  On 3/28/2011 at 5:14 PM, in message 
 AANLkTikGa7qz3bHHVr1sSgN7LjMwyiShTypeF7x65oUn at mail.gmail.com, John Bedard
 jbedard at artsmia.org wrote:

 We have some staff members interested in using Skype.  Interested in
 finding
 out if others are using, blocking it, or have done any analysis of using
 it.

 John

 --
 John R. Bedard  |  Director of Information Systems
 Minneapolis Institute of Arts
 2400 Third Avenue South
 Minneapolis, MN 55404

 612-870-3268  |  JBedard at artsmia.org  |  www.artsmia.org

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 To unsubscribe or change mcn-l delivery options visit:
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-- 
Perian Sully
http://www.emphatic.org
http://www.musematic.net
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org
Twitter: @p_sully


[MCN-L] Multilingual collection database

2011-02-03 Thread Perian Sully
I hope EMu has launched their unicode support. At this time last year, it
was still in development, but I haven't checked back since then.

IDEA (www.idea-alm.com) does offer special characters and multilingual
capabilities. It worked great for the Hebrew/Russian/Chinese/Hindi
characters that are represented in the Magnes collection. Plus translation,
transliteration and synonym indexes.

~Perian

On Thu, Feb 3, 2011 at 11:26 AM, Chuck Patch chuck.patch at gmail.com wrote:

 Hi John,

 I'm sure there are a number of systems that do this, and I would check
 with those operating out of that side of the planet, including K-Emu
 and Vernon. I would also check Minisis Inc. (www.minisisinc.com) which
 I've worked with and know offers very strong support for a huge number
 of character sets and languages (i.e., doesn't just recognize a
 character set, but can sort on the language/character set).

 Chuck

 On Thu, Feb 3, 2011 at 2:00 PM, Gordy, John j-gordy at nga.gov wrote:
  Hello everyone
  I have a question on behalf of the National Museum of Cambodia. They have
  approximately 17,000 objects, mostly sculptural including bronze, stone,
 and
  ceramics. They need to store collection information in 3 languages.
 Khmer,
  English, and French. They have imagery for all the objects and would
  ultimately like to put it online. We are interested if anyone?s found a
  collection engine that supports Latin and Asian Character sets.
  Happy Tet
  -jg



[MCN-L] CAL SIG members meeting Berkeley, May 21?

2011-01-12 Thread Perian Sully
AAM begins on May 22nd, so lots of folks will be flying into Houston 21-22

On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 4:20 PM, Misunas, Marla mmisunas at sfmoma.org wrote:

 Hi all,
 I'm working with our friends at UC Berkeley to arrange a Cal SIG meeting
 there for us in May.
 Due to the end of the school year, things are pretty busy and though we
 normally meet on
 Fridays, it may not work this time around.

 Would you come to Berkeley for the meeting on Saturday, May 21?
 Or is Friday the only day you could come?

 Meetings are usually 10-5-ish, depending on the program.

 Let me know what you think, we'll plan based on your responses.

 Thanks


 Marla Misunas
 Collections Information Manager
 Collections Information and Access
 San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
 415-357-4186 (voice)

 Museum Computer Network
 Northern California SIG Chair



[MCN-L] Fwd: REMINDER: Call for Participants, MITH API Workshop due Friday, Jan 14

2011-01-10 Thread Perian Sully
(please excuse the cross-posting ~Perian)


We're nearing the Friday deadline for accepting applications to our
NEH-funded API workshop, so this is your last chance to apply!

The Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities will host a two-day
workshop on developing APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) for the
digital humanities. http://mith.umd.edu/apiworkshop/ The workshop will
gather 40-50 digital humanists, who along with industry leaders will
demonstrate their APIs during this ?working weekend.? We will discuss ways
that existing and future APIs could be leveraged for digital humanities
projects.

The workshop format will consist of morning presentations and afternoon
unconferencing. We?ll also schedule time for lightning talks. Some
participants may seek to explore hands-on hacking of APIs following
presentations; others may want to discuss ways that they could use an
existing API. The workshop will include participants of varying skill levels
and technical knowledge, and engage both developers and project managers.
Once the participant list is finalized, we plan to kick-off a discussion
online before the workshop so that we?re ready to make the best use of our
afternoon unconference time.

We invite those interested in participating to apply for the workshop by
January 14th. http://mith.umd.edu/apiworkshop/apply/ Participants will be
notified shortly after the deadline. Due to limited space, we can
accommodate 40-50 participants.

Questions can be directed to MITH Assistant Director, Dave Lester:
dlester at umd.edu.

-- 
Dave Lester, Assistant Director
Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH)
University of Maryland
http://mith.umd.edu
http://davelester.org


[MCN-L] RIP Delicious

2010-12-16 Thread Perian Sully
This makes me very sad indeed:
http://gizmodo.com/5714292/rest-in-peace-delicious

I spent a lot of time adding cultural heritage content and links and
tutorials to Delicious. Maybe I should just migrate them to Zotero
instead? Anyone else have any suggestions for a comparable service?
The article linked to above offers some options for migrating your
bookmarks.



[MCN-L] Online Photo Sharing

2010-08-18 Thread Perian Sully
Hi again:

Hmm, thinking about it more, what about using a free, web-based, self-hosted
image gallery software like Gallery (http://gallery.menalto.com/ )? Just
install it on your servers within a password-protected sub-directory or on a
subdomain. I personally haven't used it a lot, but I know lots of people who
do, and they've been pretty pleased with it.

On a slightly different note, is there a reason why the staff wouldn't want
the images public? If the image library is going to have to resize them
anyway, then hopefully they'll be tracking in-house use. When I was at
Magnes, we set up collections of all of the events (
http://www.flickr.com/photos/magnesmuseum/collections/72157617062521384/ ),
exhibitions (in progress:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/magnesmuseum/collections/72157604290884123/ )
as well as a separate press image folder (
http://www.flickr.com/photos/magnesmuseum/collections/72157619249161210/ ).
Any proofs could simply be made private or visible to selected people.

On Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 5:58 AM, Travis Fullerton 
Tfullerton at vmfa.state.va.us wrote:

 David, thanks for the response. We currently use Drop Box and You Send It
 for file transfers, but my goal here is not to actually transfer and allow
 access to the files. What I am after is a simple method for museum staff to
 simply browse the available event and publicity images. Once they found
 what
 they wanted, they would still need to contact the image library to obtain a
 copy in the appropriate size for their use.

 As an example, if we photograph an event or program and generate 75-100
 images, we will send contact sheets of the images to the original
 requestor. But, often the images could serve multiple purposes for other
 users and we currently have no method for other staff to then see those
 images without making an appointment with the image librarian or sending
 contact sheets to everyone. Both of which are a little to laborious and
 inconvenient.

 My hope is that one of the online photo sharing sites will provide the
 browsing and cataloging we need, but be secure and private enough to
 monitor
 in house distribution and use.

 Based on Perian's experience it seems like it should work as a temporary
 solution, although we do not intend to use it for collection images.

 -Travis





[MCN-L] Online Photo Sharing

2010-08-17 Thread Perian Sully
 Good: The Library of Congress Pilot Flickr Project
http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/flickr_report_final.pdf It's a really
accessible and interesting read.

Perian Sully
http://www.emphatic.org
http://www.musematic.net
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org
Twitter: @p_sully

On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 10:07 AM, Travis Fullerton 
Tfullerton at vmfa.state.va.us wrote:

 Sorry for the cross-posting (but, we should all be used to it by now...)

 Hi all.

 I was wondering if anyone has had any experience with using online photo
 sharing websites such Shutterfly, Picasa, Flickr, Photobucket, or the like
 to share and distribute publicity and event images internally. We don?t
 have
 a DAMs set up that can be accessed by multiple users (yet) and we are
 looking for a simple and cheap solution for allowing image users to browse
 publicity images that are ?fresh? and available. We would have about a
 dozen
 people that would need private access. People like publications, marketing,
 education, and web would be the primary users.

 Any comments, advise, or anecdotes are welcome...

 -Travis


 --
 Travis Fullerton
 Assistant Photographer, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
 200 N Boulevard, Richmond, VA 23220
 804.340.1538




[MCN-L] FailFaire - NYT article about non-profit technology failures

2010-08-16 Thread Perian Sully
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/17/technology/17fail.html?_r=1

Personally, I think this would be a really useful and interesting discussion
for our own purposes. What do you guys think? I'm wondering if this should
occasionally be a feature at our conferences. I think we could all
commiserate!

Cheers,

~P

-- 
Perian Sully
http://www.emphatic.org
http://www.musematic.net
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org
Twitter: @p_sully



[MCN-L] Applications now open! THATCamp Bay Area, October 9-10, 2010

2010-08-03 Thread Perian Sully
(apologies in advance for the cross-posting)

Hi everyone! Applications for THATCamp Bay Area just opened! It's easy, and
I strongly encourage anyone with an interest in technology and cultural
institutions to apply. This is a great event for newbies and seasoned
experts alike. http://www.thatcampbayarea.org/apply

Many of you are familiar with the THATCamp concept, but if you're not, The
Humanities And Technology unconference is a user-generated  conference (or
powwow) in which folks from museums, archives, libraries, and all sorts of
other digital humanities disciplines get together and talk shop, share new
ideas, and make new friends. There's a more detailed about page here:
http://www.thatcampbayarea.org/about which explains unconferences and
THATCamp.

THATCamp is open to anyone with an interest in the humanities and
technology, and is accessible to newbies as well as experienced hackers and
professionals. For newbies, or those who want to brush up on their skills, a
concurrent BootCamp will be run, and will provide an introduction to some of
the tools, methods, technologies and standards used by researchers in the
digital humanities. There's no formal agenda, so if there's something you'd
like to hear about in BootCamp, list it on the application form.

It will be held on Pier 38 at the Automattic Lounge (Automattic are the
folks behind Wordpress, and they've graciously agreed to host THATCamp Bay
Area), October 9-10, 2010. This is over near the
Financial District (not near Pier 39!), and for folks coming in from out of
town, there are a number of wonderful hotels in downtown San Francisco, all
within walking or streetcar distance from Pier 38.

Because space is tight, there is an application process. If you?re
interested in attending THATCamp Bay Area just fill in the brief application
form, which has space for a bio, session ideas you might
propose, and skills you might want to learn or teach in BootCamp.
Applications will be open from August 1 to September 1, 2010 on the
THATCampBay Area website:
http://www.thatcampbayarea.org Participants will be notified by September
9th.

The cost is cheap! We?re asking for a $25 donation which helps cover some of
the costs of coffee and breakfast snacks, lunch on Saturday, T-shirts, and
drinks on Saturday night.

Be sure to check back on the website for more information, and follow @
THATCamp and #thatcamp on Twitter. Please let your friends know and feel
free to share this with other listservs.

~Perian

From the organizer:

Hi folks,
Thanks to you, THATCamp Bay Area is ON.  We've got an inspiring location to
hold it, and thanks to the help of a host of diverse sponsors, we'll be able
to provide food and drink and swag and still keep the cost minimal to
participants.  Now for the exciting part--opening up the party to passionate
people from multiple fields to come together with their questions and ideas
and a blank sheet of paper for two days and see what happens.

Now what?
1. Submit your Application.  Because we're tight on space and doing this for
the first time in the Bay Area, we're not sure what kind of turn out to
expect, so early registrations will help!

2. Spread the Word.  Please pass on info about THATCamp Bay Area to other
innovators, humanist, technologists and the like that you think would be
interested in it.  If you use Twitter, I've put in some sample tweets below.
 We have a Call For Participants
PDFhttp://www.thatcampbayarea.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/THATCampBayArea2010CFP.pdf
available
on the site which you can pass around or post.  And I've included below a
sample email you can use if you want to communicate that way as well.

3. Still Have Sponsor Ideas? We've kept our sponsorships small to attract a
diverse group of sponsors, and this is an unconference--our costs are low.
 If you're thinking of sponsoring to support this kind of creative
gathering, now's the time.  We could still use the help, and it's a great
opportunity to reach a unique group of catalysts.

I'm looking forward to seeing you in October!

Jon

Jon Voss
LookBackMaps.net http://www.lookbackmaps.net/
 jon at LookBackMaps.net
Twitter: LookBackMaps

*Ideas for Tweets under 140 characters:*
Apps now open! @THATCampSF: Innovators, humanists, technologists: join us
Oct 9-10 for #THATCamp Bay Area. http://bit.ly/96E7Iu

Innovators, humanists, technologists: join us at Automattic Lounge Oct 9-10
for #THATCamp Bay Area. http://bit.ly/96E7Iu via @THATCampSF

*A 3 paragraph email--feel free to cut or include anything:*

The Humanities and Technology Camp (THATCamp) Bay Area will take place
October 9-10, 2010.  Automattic/WordPress.com is hosting it at the
Automattic Lounge on Pier 38 in SF.  Since we have a limited number of spots
(about 75), we'll be opening a simple application process on August 1.  I
hope you'll consider applying and spreading the word to your colleagues.
 The best place to subscribe to reminders and notices is
www.twitter.com/thatcampsf.

Attendees will 

[MCN-L] newly released W3 emotion markup language

2010-07-29 Thread Perian Sully
I am more bemused by this than I should be and have to share:

http://www.w3.org/TR/2010/WD-emotionml-20100729/

I'm trying to come up with some reasonable use of this, and all I can
come up with is some sort of metaverse or semantic web application.
But I don't think I'd want to code in it... the variables are too
wide!

Anyone else have some ideas about how this might be used in current or
future applications?



[MCN-L] REMINDER! SPC-endorsed session proposals for AAM 2011 are due tomorrow (Friday, July 16th)

2010-07-15 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone!

Just a reminder that the deadline for SPC endorsements is tomorrow, Friday,
July 16th. Thanks to everyone I've heard from so far!

To submit your proposal, you'll go through the website here:
http://www.museumexpo.org/aam2011/Public/Content.aspx?ID=569sortMenu=107000

Make sure everything is complete, as AAM will reject the proposal if it's
not. That includes contact info and biographies for all speakers.

I'm really excited by what I've seen so far, and I'm looking forward to
hearing from more of you.

Best,

~Perian Sully
AAM Media and Technology SPC Program Chair

-- 
Perian Sully
http://www.emphatic.org
http://www.musematic.net
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org
Twitter: @p_sully



[MCN-L] Save the Date! THATCamp Bay Area, October 9-10, 2010

2010-07-07 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone!

Many of you are familiar with the THATCamp concept, but if you're not, The
Humanities And Technology unconference is a user-generated conference (or
powwow) in which folks from museums, archives, libraries, and all sorts of
other digital humanities disciplines get together and talk shop, share new
ideas, and make new friends. There's a more detailed about page here:
http://www.thatcampbayarea.org/about which explains unconferences and
THATCamp.

THATCamp is open to anyone with an interest in the humanities and
technology, and is accessible to newbies as well as experienced hackers and
professionals. For newbies, or those who want to brush up on their skills, a
concurrent BootCamp will be run, and will provide an introduction to some of
the tools, methods, technologies and standards used by researchers in the
digital humanities. There's no formal agenda, so if there's something you'd
like to hear about in BootCamp, list it on the application form.

It will be held on Pier 38 at the Automattic Lounge (Automattic are the
folks behind Wordpress, and they've graciously agreed to host THATCamp Bay
Area), October 9-10, 2010. This is over near the Financial District (not
near Pier 39!), and for folks coming in from out of town, there are a number
of wonderful hotels in downtown San Francisco, all within walking or
streetcar distance from Pier 38.

Because space is tight, there is an application process. If you?re
interested in attending THATCamp Bay Area just fill in the brief *application
form*, which has space for a bio, session ideas you might propose, and
skills you might want to learn or teach in BootCamp. Applications will be
open from *August 1 to September 1, 2010 on the THATCamp Bay Area website:
http://www.thatcampbayarea.org Participants will be notified by September
9th.

The cost is cheap! *We?re asking for a $25 donation which helps cover some
of the costs of coffee and breakfast snacks, lunch on Saturday, T-shirts,
and drinks on Saturday night.

Be sure to check back on the website for more information, and follow
@THATCamp and #thatcamp on Twitter. Please let your friends know and feel
free to share this with other listservs.

Hope to see you there!

~Perian

Perian Sully
http://emphatic.org
http://musematic.net
http://mediaandtechnology.org
Twitter: @p_sully



[MCN-L] scanner recommendations?

2010-06-25 Thread Perian Sully
I second Denise's recommendation. The Epson 1XL series is fantastic.

~Perian

On Fri, Jun 25, 2010 at 9:37 AM, Gose, Denise gosed at ccp.library.arizona.edu
 wrote:

 We love our Epson 1XL scanners - but you'll pay close to $3000 for the
 version with Silverfast software and transparency unit, which is what you'll
 need. The price has dropped this year from over $4000, so it's a good deal.

 Not sure what else is out there for large format scanners.

 Denise Gos?
 Head of Image Resources and Copyright Management
 Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona
 1030 N. Olive Road, Tucson, AZ 85719
 T: 520.307.2830  F: 520.621.9444
 gosed at ccp.library.arizona.edu





[MCN-L] Database access for curators?

2010-06-23 Thread Perian Sully
Hi Maggie:

I don't know if Mimsy has workflow capabilities, but some systems allow you
to be notified of changes or let you see/approve the changes before they
become live.

Barring that, I've also instructed my curators to place the original
information into a notes field before they delete it entirely (but I also
have backups to refer to, in a worst case scenario).

~Perian



[MCN-L] Database access for curators?

2010-06-23 Thread Perian Sully
Chuck, Gabriela, and Maggie have it correct. One would hope that the db
staff worked with the curators in advance, to determine the correct
terminology terms! However, I can tell you that no one applies terms
consistently, so having that final approval by the information manager is
critical.

Likewise, I can't tell you how many times I've gotten into discussions with
curators who want to delete the description field (used by registration for
identification purposes) in favor of a more contextual, historical curated
description. I have had to go into backups to restore the identifying
description and re-incorporate it. These days, I'm in favor of a curator's
description (or history, or curator's notes) field that the curators can
use, in addition to a physical description field for the registration staff.


On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 12:59 PM, Maggie Hanson maggie.hanson at pam.orgwrote:

 Thanks, Gabriela.  This is a concern as well as the fact that
 corrections in many instances included deleting prior information,
 which may be needed and useful for records in departments like the
 registrar even if the information is not necessarily (or any longer)
 correct.





[MCN-L] Bad news for the public domain

2010-06-23 Thread Perian Sully
Yikes...

Court Says It's Okay To Remove Content From The Public Domain And Put It
Back Under Copyright
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20100621/2320049908.shtml

From the article:

...last year, a district court made a very important ruling on what
appeared to be a minor part of copyright law. The Golan
casehttp://www.techdirt.com/articles/20090403/1619494384.shtmlasked
a simple question: once something is officially in the public domain,
can Congress pull it out and put it back under copyright? The situation came
about because of (yet another) trade agreement that pulled certain foreign
works out of the public domain. A district court had initially said that
this move did not violate the law, but the appeals court sent it back,
saying that the lower court had not analyzed the First Amendment issue, and
whether this was a case where the inherent conflict between the First
Amendment and copyright law went too far to the side of copyright by
violating the traditional contours of copyright law. Getting a second
crack at this, the district court got it right -- and was the first court to
point out that massively expanded copyright law can, in fact, violate the
First Amendment.

But, of course, it couldn't last.

On Monday, the appeals court reversed the lower court's
rulinghttp://courtlistener.com/ca10/09-1234/and said there's no
problem with the First Amendment because copyright law
addresses a substantial or important governmental interest.

If I read this right, because the ruling is less about international trade
agreements and more about First Amendment issues, this undermines the
sanctity of public domain in the United States, regardless of origin. And
since it's likely to go to the Supreme Court, AND the Roberts Court has been
notoriously pro-corporate, I'm not feeling terribly secure about the fate of
public domain.

Anyone else have other perspectives about this?

~Perian



[MCN-L] Change of contact information

2010-06-21 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:

Just wanted to let you all know that my last day at the Magnes (in fact, the
last day OF Magnes as a museum) is at the end of June. Would you please
update your email contact for me from psully at magnes.org to
perian at emphatic.org ? I don't know where I'll be landing yet,but I'm looking
forward to whatever life may bring.

And for the curious, the Magnes is merging with UC Berkeley, to be part of
the Bancroft Library. There's a press release here:
http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2010/06/21_magnes_collection.shtmlThree
(and a half) of our current staff will be moving over to UCB, and I
wish them the best of luck.

With thanks,

Perian Sully
http://www.emphatic.org
http://www.musematic.org
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org



[MCN-L] Records for displaying unrelated objects together

2010-06-15 Thread Perian Sully
Robyn:

I haven't used Mimsy, so I couldn't say if it supports this, but what I've
done with a few different databases now is to create an Exhibition record
that links all of the items. But for individual, discrete groups, I've
always had to manually massage the labels, then save the label to the
individual records. These records will share a record that they were in an
exhibition together, and the same label document or record, but have no
other relationships.

I know that's kind of fiddly, but that might be one way of attacking the
problem.

Best,

~P

On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 11:22 AM, Sanford, Robyn rsanford at lacma.org wrote:

 I have a question for all of you data people out there.



 We're going to have a costume show of our permanent collection where
 mannequins will be dressed in complete outfits. This means that there
 will be objects that each have their own individual record in our
 database on a single mannequin. These objects may have had no previous
 relationship to one another in the past (they do not share similar
 accession numbers, etc, etc...). My dilemma is that we use the database
 to create our labels and of course we want to retain the label text in
 the database for perpetuity.

 I am not sure how to do this short of creating a single parent record in
 the database that links to them all, which I do not want to do. Aside
 from the expected questions of what number am I supposed to give a
 record like that, I also don't think it is a good policy to implement as
 users would be inclined to update the label text on the record for the
 labels and not the objects themselves. Or if they were so good to update
 everything, well then they are just duplicating data across 2 or more
 records which just seems unnecessary.



 Has anyone had to deal with this before or have any ideas? We use Mimsy
 by the way.



 Robyn Sanford

 Associate Registrar, Database Manager and Special Projects



 LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART

 5905 WILSHIRE BOULEVARD

 LOS ANGELES CALIFORNIA 90036



 T 323 857 4769

 F 323 857 6213

 E rsanford at lacma.org mailto:rsanford at lacma.org









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[MCN-L] FW: Media and Technology SPC-endorsed session proposals for AAM 2011 are due July 16!

2010-06-14 Thread Perian Sully
(Forwarded from the Media and Technology listserv)

Hello everyone!

It was great to meet and talk with so many of you in Los Angeles. It
was, I think, the most entertaining of all of the Annual Meetings I've
attended. Each one has its special flavor, but it's hard to beat daily
celebrity sightings and bike races!

Regardless, next year's Annual Meeting in Houston will be just as
exciting - or it will be, with your help. Your knowledge and expertise
are
instrumental in shaping and supporting our professional practice and
shared body of information.

The theme for AAM 2011 is The Museum of Tomorrow, and the deadline for
SPC-endorsement for your proposal is *July 16*!!

Why should you submit your proposal through the Media and Technology
SPC?

1) You will get personal assistance (by yours truly) crafting and
shaping your proposal for submission to the annual Program Meeting in
August. At
this meeting, the Program Chairs from each of the 13 SPCs present each
proposal and lobby for its acceptance in the final program.

2) Other SPCs may choose to endorse the session proposal. At the Program
Meeting, other Program Chairs may decide if the proposal is valuable to
their area of focus and agree to co-endorse the session. More
endorsements mean a greater likelihood of acceptance by the Final
Program panel.

We encourage you explore those topics you've expertise and interest in;
were there sessions at AAM10 that you would like to explore further?
Something you've not seen addressed at the annual meetings that should
be? What were the issues that you would like to see addressed again, in
greater detail, or differently? Even if you didn't attend, take a moment
to review the same questions: what information or topics need to be
explored in a forum where so many diverse associates gather?  What
should we, as a committee, be looking at as our important, central
concerns?

Here're some possible topics that you might consider:

*   Methods for engaging audiences via social media
*   Web development: sustainability vs. sustainability
*   Collections online on the cheap
*   Micro-donations for museums
*   Don't just gather metrics. Use your metrics
*   Homegrown history - personal archiving by the public
*   Crowdsourcing and audience curation
*   The handheld museum and smartphone apps

Additionally, feel free to play with the formats. Non-traditional,
interactive sessions have received some of the highest evaluations and
the Programs Chairs have been especially encouraged to support these.

If you are interested in participating in a session as a panelist or as
a chair, (or want to know more about what that might mean in terms of
commitment, logistics, etc.) let me know ASAP. If you simply wish to be
a facilitator, and not speak, then pass along some names (nominate your
colleagues to do it!) and pass along ideas. This is not an empty
solicitation, you will be responded to, and this is a direct path to
having your voice heard... join in!

DEADLINE FOR MT SPC ENDORSEMENT (complete proposal) is July 16, 2010.
Please submit your completed proposal via the online database here:
http://www.museumexpo.org/aam2011/public/Content.aspx?ID=569sortMenu=10
7000

You can find AAM Session Proposal Guidelines at
http://www.museumexpo.org/aam2011/CUSTOM/Handout/Session_Guidelines/Sess
ion%20Proposal%20Guidelines.pdf

Please note that any incomplete submissions (including biography,
addresses, etc) won't be considered, so please contact me ahead of time
if
you have any questions about filling in the form!

Again, thanks to you all for being a part of this committee. I look
forward to our further conversations and getting to know you better.

Perian Sully
Media and Technology SPC Program Chair
programs at mediaandtechnology.org

P.S. A special shout-out to Herminia Din, who has been the MT Program
Chair for the past five years - a record! Many thanks for all of your
hard
work and service over the past few years.



[MCN-L] (no subject)

2010-06-14 Thread Perian Sully
blargh. sorry guys. its been a long week

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA



[MCN-L] image file names

2010-06-09 Thread Perian Sully
Dear Danielle:

I have a detailed document for our file naming conventions that I'm
happy to send along (I'd post it here, but everything's outlined in
table format and won't work for copying and pasting). Likewise, if
anyone else is interested in taking a look, I'll gladly forward it to
you as well. Please respond to me individually.

Funnily enough, I was just about to draft up a file naming standards
document and post it online. Other than some of the inherent
difficulties with trying to align the digital filenames with the
accession number (particularly when you don't have an accession number
yet), what are some other arguments in favor of using a unique
identifier instead of the accession number?

~P

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Images
Sent: Tuesday, June 08, 2010 12:03 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] image file names

We're reviewing how we name our image files and I'm hoping that some of
you may have worked through this same issue. Currently, we use our
accession number, however as this contains periods it has been
identified as potentially problematic. For example, accession # 42.3.11
= VAG-42.3.11.jpg. One suggestion is to change the decimals to zeros but
we are concerned that this makes the image file name difficult to read.
Have any of you found a good solution to a problem  like this? Any
thoughts or samples of your naming structure would be most appreciated!

thanks very much
Danielle


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[MCN-L] Thumbnail strategies; social media and copyright.

2010-05-11 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:
 
I'm part of an all-day copyright workshop at AAM in a couple of weeks,
and we'll be discussing, among other things, fair use and thumbnails on
museum websites. In addition, I'll be moderating a breakout session
about social media and copyright. With that in mind, I have a few
questions that I'd like to get your collective perspectives on. Please
reply to me offlist.
 
**Thumbnail strategies:
 
I've already queried a couple of institutions directly, but I think it
would be valuable to get a broader perspective (and thanks again to you
who've already answered!).
 
1)  How has your institution decided to display thumbnails of works
on your website? Specifically, how do you manage it with works in which
the institution isn't the copyright holder (or it isn't entirely clear
that they are)? Do you rely on fair use or do you actively seek
permissions from each copyright holder before displaying the work at
all? Somewhere in the middle?
2)  What size(s) do you display the works at?
3)  Do you, or how do you denote the copyright holder?
4)  Do you put protections in place to prohibit visitors from taking
the images?
 
I know not everyone will have answers to all of these, but any answers
would be great.
 
**Social media and copyright
 
1)  Do you have any particular questions or concerns about copyright
and social media engagement from visitors or by institutions? (I hope I
can post the answers to some of these questions after the workshop)
2)  Have you adjusted your practices in response to social media
engagement and increased web presence by the institution, or by its
visitors? How? (this also includes photography policies in galleries, in
addition to institutional website practices)
 
I really appreciate any time you can spend to answer some of these
questions. Please respond to me offlist, and denote if I may identify
your institution's practices during the workshop. I would like to
collate all answers and distribute them to the list, but I'll strip
identifying information from those answers entirely.
 
Best,
 
~Perian
 
Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
2911 Russell St.
Berkeley, CA 94705
Work: 510-549-6950 x 357
Fax: 510-849-3673
http://www.magnes.org
http://www.musematic.org
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org
 



[MCN-L] Heading to Denver for MW2010? Got an iPhone?

2010-04-13 Thread Perian Sully
I'm, alas, not going to MW (and I'm really, really envious of all of you
who are), but this is AWESOME! Well done!

Ok, I want one for AAM now...

~Perian

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
2911 Russell St.
Berkeley, CA 94705
http://www.magnes.org
http://emphatic.org 
http://www.musematic.org 
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org 

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Ben Rubinstein
Sent: Monday, April 12, 2010 6:59 PM
To: MCN
Subject: [MCN-L] Heading to Denver for MW2010? Got an iPhone?

If you can answer 'yes' to at least two of the above questions, you  
might want to take a look at this app, which lets you search papers  
and view them by speaker, session or keyword, and mark favourites:

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mw2010/id348377811?mt=8

It's a first cut, and done in a bit of a hurry, so if you do try it  
out please let us know what you think.

Have a great conference!

Ben
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[MCN-L] Copyright Questions? We have answers!

2010-04-06 Thread Perian Sully
It is not too late to register for the Copyright Workshop in LA.
But hurry, advance registration ends on April 16th!
See attached flyer.
Please email workshop coordinator, Tamara Johnston, with questions:  
tamarakjohnston at gmail.com

Tamara K. Johnston
Collections Manager/Registrar
Milwaukee, WI
 Collections Manager/Curator for NSMHF
 Instructor, MIAD
 RC-AAM Education Committee Chair
 Collections Consultant, AGSL


[MCN-L] Content-based social media strategies

2010-04-05 Thread Perian Sully
Happy Monday everyone! I've got a discussion question for y'all,
prompted by a discussion Nancy (Proctor) and I were having yesterday
about educational outreach:
 
Do you think that different types of museums (art, history, science,
etc.) have different approaches for leveraging social media?
 
Personally, I haven't seen that there's a consistent difference in the
way types of museums use social media for outreach, but there definitely
is for institutional websites and web-based programs. The differences I
have seen  tend to be based more on the size and organizational
structure of the museum, rather than the content. But I have to admit
that I haven't done an exhaustive survey of the field.
 
Have you noticed differently? Have you adjusted your strategy based on
the type of content being presented?
 
~P
 
Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
2911 Russell St.
Berkeley, CA 94705
Work: 510-549-6950 x 357
Fax: 510-849-3673
http://www.magnes.org
http://www.musematic.org
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org
 



[MCN-L] Switching to Gmail

2010-03-16 Thread Perian Sully
We use Google Docs extensively at the Magnes for collaborating on inventory, 
determining deaccessions, and tracking software bugs. That being said, we also 
use MS Office for the majority of tasks for the following reasons:
 
1) formatting
2) sharing (not everyone can use Google Docs if we send them a link)
3) templates (like letterhead, etc)
4) image-embedded documents
5) Powerpoint has many more features than Google Doc's slideshow functionality
6) Not all of our staff are computer-savvy enough or comfortable with using 
web-based apps, and we don't have the time or staff to train them otherwise.
 
We have also considered moving from our MS Exchange server to Google, but we 
want more control over our assets, and we don't have the physical 
infrastructure to support everyone working online (seriously - I have to do 
offside database backups over the weekend when no one's going to be using the 
interwebs around here).
 
~Perian

 


[MCN-L] ye olde TIF vs. JPEG2000 debate

2010-03-10 Thread Perian Sully
Howdy everyone:
 
I'm in the midst of reprocessing all (!!) of our image assets from .NEF
(a RAW format) and I'm wondering if I should take another look at
JPEG2000 now.
 
When I first started imaging the collection, JPEG2000 was in its infancy
and not widely adopted. As a result, I have my master files in NEF and
TIF, my high-quality derivatives in TIF, and my accessible and web-ready
images in JPG.
 
Part of this reprocessing will including making new copies of the
high-quality derivatives as well as the accessible JPGs. So I'm
wondering if I should replace the HQ derivative TIFs with JPEG2000 at
this time.
 
Anyone have any opinions, experiences or suggestions before I commit to
this?
 
~Perian
 
Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
2911 Russell St.
Berkeley, CA 94705
Work: 510-549-6950 x 357
Fax: 510-849-3673
http://www.magnes.org
http://www.musematic.org
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org
 



[MCN-L] Comments on your collections online

2009-12-08 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:
 
I'm preparing a lecture (tomorrow) about collections access and the
creation of wonder and discussion. I know I've seen some museum
collections online that allow for comments on their site, and have
generated some great discussions between users. Aaaand, of course, I
can't seem to remember which sites those were.
 
SO! Do any of you know/have collections online that allow for user
comments? Have you seen some great discussions between users that have
served to enlighten the staff and public alike?
 
Thanks in advance and hope y'all are staying warm.
 
Best,
 
~Perian
 
Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
2911 Russell St.
Berkeley, CA 94705
Work: 510-549-6950 x 357
Fax: 510-849-3673
http://www.magnes.org
http://www.musematic.org
http://www.mediaandtechnology.org
 



[MCN-L] Project management systems for inter-organizationalcooperation

2009-11-16 Thread Perian Sully
We're currently working on a website project using Basecamp. We're
pretty impressed with it and it makes things nice and easy to keep track
of tasks. http://basecamphq.com/

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Ari Davidow
Sent: Monday, November 16, 2009 3:36 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Project management systems for
inter-organizationalcooperation

Several people have mentioned Huddle to me - would love to hear from
people using it. It does sound good.

I have personally found Google Groups to be an even klunkier (who'da
thunk?) Yahoo groups - not my idea of group project management.

Our last couple of projects used Redmine (www.redmine.org) which
includes some decent project management tools, a wiki, files area, and
hooks to subversion.

We have also looked hard at www.zoho.com for all sorts of
collaborative work. Those parts we have tested (docs, spreadsheet)
have been more comfortable and less buggy than Google Docs. I'm
looking for an excuse to try out the MS Project hosted analog, too.
Very promising.

Hope this helps,
Ari Davidow

On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 2:04 AM, Hanan Cohen hanan at mada.org.il wrote:
 Hello,

 We at the Bloomfield Science Museum in Jerusalem are taking part in a
 number of international projects.

 Managing and participating in these projects using Email is becoming
 hard.

 We are considering two solutions - Google Groups (with other Google
 tools) and http://huddle.net

 Both have pros and cons.

 If any of you is using those tools for this purpose or use other
tools,
 we would love to hear your opinions.

 Thanks,

 Hanan Cohen
 Webmaster
 Bloomfield Science Museum Jerusalem
 www.mada.org.il - Facebook - Twitter - YouTube
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[MCN-L] The Great Ebook Throwdown - my summary

2009-11-06 Thread Perian Sully
Speaking personally, I use the free app Stanza on my iPhone for reading e-books 
in bed (it's nice to have the lights out and still be able to read!). The 
disadvantage is the small size of the page, which Kindle obviously excels at. 
But having an e-book reader that doubles as phone, game player, calendar, web 
browser, etc. means I wouldn't buy the Kindle. What's the point, especially if 
Amazon is going to occasionally automagically delete books off your reader?

~P

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of Nik 
Honeysett
Sent: Thursday, November 05, 2009 4:06 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] The Great Ebook Throwdown - my summary

I don't think Kindle is the device of choice. In September, iPhone
books (some running on Kindle for iPhone (
http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/product/54917/review/kindle_for_iphone.html?tk=rel_news
)) overtook games for the first time, while one in every five new apps
in the App Store in October were books. ... The analytics firm [Flurry]
predicts that Apple could steal market share from Amazon's Kindle, as
more publishers release new book apps for the iPhone at record rates.
 
http://www.pcworld.com/article/181142/iphone_as_an_ebook_reader_threatens_kindle_says_report.html

-nik

 Lesley Ellen Harris lesleyeharris at comcast.net 11/5/2009 1:46 PM

I live within driving distance and went to the discussion.  It was in 

a relatively small boardroom in the basement of the McKeldin Library  
and I got there at 12:30 and there was standing room onlyI could  
only guess it was a diverse crowd of students, professors and others  
like me from looking around at the ages and listening to the  
discussions.  I enjoyed listening to the speakers.

What did I learn?  It was definitely helpful if you were in the market 

to buy an e-book reader -- kindle seems to be the choice.  It was also 

helpful to hear the various factors to consider when purchasing an e- 
reader.

Would I buy one after hearing the speakers?  MaybeAnd would I buy 

one after being able to read and touch various models?  Probably  
not...for the most part, the readers are big and heavy and if I'm  
travelling with a laptop and iphoneI would probably rather take a 

couple of print books with me!  (I occasionally read e-books on my  
iphone using the BN free software.)

Only a few minutes were spent at the end talking about writing e-books 

-- I'd love to hear more on that topic at a future session.

Lesley

Lesley Ellen Harris
lesley at copyrightlaws.com 
www.copyrightanswers.blogspot.com 



On Nov 5, 2009, at 1:53 PM, Amalyah Keshet [akeshet at imj.org.il] wrote:

Podcast available at:
http://mith.umd.edu/programs/digitaldialogue/mp3/dd_2009_11_03.mp3 



?: ??mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu]  
??? Amalyah Keshet  [akeshet at imj.org.il] 
??: ? ? 29 ??? 2009 08:07
: 'Museum Computer Network Listserv'
??: [MCN-L] FW:  11/3 at U. Maryland: The Great Ebook  
Throwdown

For anyone within range of University of Maryland, College Park, who  
wants to warm up for our MCN 2009 session in Portland, More for  
Less:the e-Book Revolution and Mobile Evolution.:
[Nov. 14 at 10:45. Don't miss it. ]

---

A MITH Digital Dialogue
Tuesday, November 3, 12:30-1:45
MITH Conference Room, Mckeldin Library B0135

?The Great Ebook Throwdown? with Ben Bederson, Nick Chen, and Matt  
Kirschenbaum

Ebooks are suddenly everywhere again. Kindle, Nook, iPhone, Android .
. . after 2000 years, the codex is getting an upgrade. But what kind  
of electronic books and electronic reading devices do we really want?
This roundtable discussion led by Ben Bederson, Nick Chen, and Matt  
Kirschenbaum will feature as many electronic reading and electronic  
book devices as we can lay our hands on, including some prototypes  
being developed here at the University of Maryland. We'll hold them  
up, pass them around, turn them on, talk some trash, and, in the  
process, maybe gain just a little bit of insight into what we all want 

from our electronic book readers. Attendees are encouraged to bring  
along electronic book and reading devices of their own.

Benjamin B. Bederson is an Associate Professor of Computer Science and 

the previous director of the Human-Computer Interaction Lab at the  
Institute for Advanced Computer Studies and iSchool at the University 

of Maryland. His research is on mobile device interfaces, information 

visualization, interaction strategies, digital libraries, and  
accessibility issues such as voting system usability.   He is also co-

founder and Chief Scientist of Zumobi, a startup offering a mobile  
content platform based on that research.

Nicholas Chen is a doctoral candidate in the department of Computer  
Science at the University of Maryland and is affiliated with the Human 

Computer Interaction Lab 

[MCN-L] GeoCities RIP

2009-11-04 Thread Perian Sully
Proof that even CSS can be used for evil...

(ow. I have a headache now)

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Morgan, Matt
Sent: Saturday, October 31, 2009 7:12 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] GeoCities RIP

I got a kick out of this translation of an eyeball-searing geocities
page into beautiful CSS:

http://csszengarden.com/?cssfile=http://www.brucelawson.co.uk/zen/sample
.css



[MCN-L] Content credit lines within institutional websites

2009-10-01 Thread Perian Sully
Hi all:
 
I have a bit of a philosophical question. I'm in the process of migrating our 
institutional website and I'm noticing that a lot of content areas, 
particularly those that are best described as online exhibitions, have a credit 
line within the description: Exhibition is a project conceived by so-and-so at 
the Magnes.
 
It's common practice for a project such as an exhibition to have a credit to 
the curator, and having a name to the project increases personal connections 
between the public and staff. But I'm finding myself grousing about it for two 
reasons: 1) Currently, there is only one person creating such online 
exhibitions, resulting in a single person's name being reflected all over the 
site which results in 2) only that one person getting any credit for work done 
by the institution or at least the public perception that that single person is 
the only one who creates content. Personally, I'd feel a bit weird about 
attaching my name to every Tweet, uploads to YouTube, the online collections 
database, or whatever other project I happen to be working on (though my 
projects tend to be more on the meta-scale, instead of curated and forcused 
research efforts). We do have names assigned to individual blog entries, but 
the blog is pretty egalitarian and we have multiple staff posting to it.
 
Has anyone else run into this problem and, if so, how have you assigned a 
credit to online exhibition descriptions?
 
Perian



[MCN-L] Use policies in museums

2009-09-17 Thread Perian Sully
Are we sure that MFA Houston is the bad cop? Perhaps the Robert Frank
estate (or their representatives) complained to MFA Houston who then had
to send a CD to your friend.

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Chuck Patch
Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2009 8:09 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] Use policies in museums

This doesn't relate to anything specific, but as a long-time observer
without deep legal knowledge or economic understanding of the
licensing / copyright disputes among content creators, museums,
publishers etc. I'd be interested in hearing reactions to the
following situation. (Blame this post on Amalyah - I sent it to her
first and she suggested I post it to the list and so, with the
somewhat entertaining potential of throwing more fuel on the Ken Hamma
- museum copyright - paranoia fire, I will).

A friend of mine who writes a photography blog was recently instructed
to take down some videos from the MFA Houston that he had posted --
with credit and, I believe, links back to the museum site. I couldn't
help thinking that this seems to work against the best interests of
the institution. While it's true, as he admits, that he technically
infringed the copyright of the museum and probably should at least
have sought permission to post them on his (no doubt) money-losing
blog, I'm having trouble understanding how this act did anything other
than drive traffic and increase interest in the museum and the videos
themselves. Would this be a situation where a CC license would have
been more appropriate (and cheaper for the institution?) What do you
think?

Here's the post in which he presents the current situation:

http://2point8.whileseated.org/2009/09/11/takedown/

Chuck Patch
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[MCN-L] VA launches one million objects on line

2009-09-15 Thread Perian Sully
Dear Gail:

My merry band of costume historians use the VA's website regularly, and
they were very excited by this release. I haven't had a chance to browse
through, but I noticed that one of the limitations that was present on
the old site is still present in this iteration (or appears to be).

Basically, we tend to do large search groups within a narrow era. For
example, when looking for costumes from the late-18th century, it's easy
to specify the date range, but we often have to search separately
dress, gown, textile, shoes, pet-en-lair, chemise, grande
habit, caracao, etc. when really a broader category search within
that date range would be helpful.

Does your database backend have an option for field groups, subject, or
category searches, so that a range of items can be retrieved in one
swoop?

Really, really looking forward to fishing through your collections
again.

Best,

~Perian

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Gail Durbin
Sent: Monday, September 14, 2009 10:41 AM
To: mcn-l at mcn.edu
Subject: [MCN-L] VA launches one million objects on line

Some of you may have seen this on Twitter but if not this is just to let
you know that the VA has launched a Beta version of Search the
Collections where we have moved from 55,000 object records on line to
over a million. The temporary address is www.vam.ac.uk/cis-online .
There is still a way to go but we would welcome comments and ways to
improve what we have there now.

The technical work for this has been done by Richard Morgan, the VA web
technical manager, and his team and he will be able to answer any of the
more technical questions. Mark Hook on the content side has worked with
the designers, The Other Media, on the user interface. Our Collections
records staff under Heather Caven have done a lot of work preparing the
records to go live. The project has been about using what we already had
so the project draws text from our collections information system and
images from the digital asset management system and aims to make the
presentation and functionality as user friendly as possible. We have
tried to make sure visitors see the best records first. And as
information is added to our records so the site will get better.

We are working on making the browse function smoother, introducing text
mining, making the mapping function work more accurately and adding some
less conventional options to the browse. There will be an API and we
hope to add an element of crowd sourcing. In the longer term there will
be saved searches, lightboxes and more linking, among other things, but
some of these items will have to wait until we have completed our more
general website redesign in the Autumn of 2010. For now it feels like we
have made a major digital leap forward which is good for visitors and
provides a foundation for many other web facilities.

Gail Durbin
Head of VA Online



__
Telling Tales: Fantasy and Fear in Contemporary Design
Until 18 October 2009 at VA South Kensington
Admission Free

Wonderland - Fairytales, Myths and Legends from Around the World 
26 September 2009 - 10 January 2010 at the VA Museum of Childhood
Admission free

Keep in touch - visit www.vam.ac.uk and sign up for our regular
e-newsletter

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[MCN-L] Microsoft ordered to stop selling Word

2009-08-17 Thread Perian Sully
It already has on my computer, apparently. Haven't been able to get the
darn thing to work right in months!

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Ethan Gruber
Sent: Sunday, August 16, 2009 9:11 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Microsoft ordered to stop selling Word

Now if only a judge could order Microsoft from distributing Internet
Explorer, the world would be a better place!

On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 12:20 PM, Amalyah Keshet [akeshet at imj.org.il] 
akeshet at imj.org.il wrote:

 In case you were dozing off in front of your word processing program,
 here's a little kick in the head:

 

 A Judge on Tuesday ordered Microsoft to stop selling its popular Word
 document creation application in the United States in 60 days, after
 finding that the software contains technology that violates a patent
held by
 a third party.



http://www.informationweek.com/news/software/enterpriseapps/showArticle.
jhtml?articleID=219200383




...


 Amalyah Keshet
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[MCN-L] Web page about how to use collections online

2009-08-11 Thread Perian Sully
Many thanks to everyone who replied to my query about help pages and
guides for navigating collection information. Your examples are very
helpful! I don't have any control over the UI, so some explanation is
necessary. But you've all given me lots to think about when we are able
to design a different UI.

Best,

~Perian


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Perian Sully
Sent: Monday, August 10, 2009 1:59 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] Web page about how to use collections online


Dear fellow MCNers - 

 

I'm in the process of writing a How-To for our new collection online
site
and I was wondering if anyone had written an extensive set of
instructions
for how to use it? Ours has a lot of fields and options, so it's not
quite
as simple as entering a search term into a box. I'd like to see how
others
have framed their instructions, so I don't miss anything or
overly-confuse
anyone

 

Please feel free to reply to me offlist with a link to your
instructions.
Many thanks in advance!

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 

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[MCN-L] Website and Digital Communications Coordinator job at Contemporary Jewish Museum, SF

2009-08-11 Thread Perian Sully
Came across this today and figured someone might be interested:
http://thecjm.org/index.php?option=com_contenttask=viewview=articleid
=203

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] More seats now available! Free Strategic Social Media Seminar for the Cultural Sector featuring Sebastian Chan @ SFMOMA

2009-08-11 Thread Perian Sully
Due to popular demand, more seats have been made available for this free
seminar. We're working on securing a way to film and distribute the
seminar online, but at this time, there is no webcast available. If you
are able to provide webcasting or know someone who can, please let us
know!

 

Social Collections, New Metrics, Maps and Other Australian Oddities

 

A Free Strategic Social Media Seminar for the Cultural Sector featuring
SEBASTIAN CHAN

 

August 28th, 2009 - 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM PHYLLIS WATTIS THEATER at SF
MOMA, San Francisco

 

In a free flowing day of provocative presentation and QAs, Sebastian
Chan will take participants through a range of proven projects and
experimental prototypes. These will raise questions about the role of
collections and collection data in the digital age; new ways of engaging
with communities; and experiments for using mobile technologies in
galleries and out in the world around us. It will also address issues
around how to better measure digital initiatives and also address
philosophies of open access and emerging business models around open
content.

 

More information and RSVP (required) at www.theatrebayarea.org/digital

 

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 



[MCN-L] Web page about how to use collections online

2009-08-10 Thread Perian Sully
Dear fellow MCNers - 

 

I'm in the process of writing a How-To for our new collection online
site and I was wondering if anyone had written an extensive set of
instructions for how to use it? Ours has a lot of fields and options, so
it's not quite as simple as entering a search term into a box. I'd like
to see how others have framed their instructions, so I don't miss
anything or overly-confuse anyone

 

Please feel free to reply to me offlist with a link to your
instructions. Many thanks in advance!

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] Attachments sent in email

2009-08-07 Thread Perian Sully
We don't have specific rules, but anything larger than 10 Mb we  
suggest Yousendit. Really large stuff I upload to an FTP site on our  
webhost



On Aug 7, 2009, at 1:56 PM, Sweeting III, Floyd sweeting at frick.org  
wrote:

 I'm curious as to what size limits you have on sending attachments.  
 As a
 rule, we use Yousendit to send image files, but recently someone on
 staff insisted on sending a 15 MB file as an email attachment and
 refused to consider Yousendit,  it really turned out to be  
 complicated.
 Many other businesses do not accept files larger than 10. Any  
 experience
 or policies to share about this issue?

 Floyd Sweeting III  Head, Information Technology and New Media
 THE FRICK COLLECTION 1 East 70th Street New York, NY 10021
 Tel: 212-547-6889  Fax: 212-879-2091 www.frick.org
 http://www.frick.org/




 *** 
 *** 
 *** 
 
 The information transmitted is intended only for the person or  
 entity to
 which it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged
 material.  Any review, retransmission, dissemination or other use  
 of, or
 taking of any action in reliance upon, this information by persons or
 entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited.   If you  
 received
 this in error, please contact the sender and delete the material  
 from any
 computer.
 *** 
 *** 
 *** 
 


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[MCN-L] inventory photos or no?

2009-07-29 Thread Perian Sully
Hi all:

 

In the interest of streamlining our collections inventory (down from 3-4
years to 6 months - EEK!), we're cutting back on taking more formal
studio shots of objects and simply doing brief snapshots.

 

We're also just about to release our database online, and we only have
about 2000 images available of the museum objects (out of 14,000 records
and growing). I'm trying to decide if I should release these low-quality
snapshots to the public or not.

 

Pros:

Image assets are always good

Helps researchers and us

We already have crappy photos publically available, so this wouldn't
change much

 

Cons:

Potential for rights  reproduction requests for objects safely tucked
in a box and irretrievable

Not the best photos in the world and many are useless for research use
(no marks, inscriptions, etc., except in the description)

 

I'm leaning toward the pros outweighing the cons, but I'm wondering if
someone else has dealt with this issue and how? Is it better to just
leave them off the site altogether?

 

Thanks in advance,

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] NPG and Wikipedia (IP, website security)

2009-07-13 Thread Perian Sully
Wow. I have to admit that I'm of two minds about this. On the one hand,
I'm utterly appalled that someone would circumvent NPG's security
measures, when they were clearly in place to protect their assets while
providing access. That, to me, should be actionable.

On the other, I rather wish that NPG would have provided the world with
decent-quality (if not necessarily reproduction-quality) images of those
works. Zoomify is great, but the quality provided by those thumbnails
isn't helpful for a number of purposes. I really like the VA's approach
and have tried to apply that philosophy here at the Magnes, to a degree.

Really curious about the opinions of your experts out there.

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Kenneth Hamma
Sent: Monday, July 13, 2009 9:58 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] NPG and Wikipedia (IP, website security)

Excellent sleuthing!  You're right.  The Bridgeman-Corel decision that  
went against Bridgeman was never appealed for fear that the appeal  
would also go against Bridgeman and result in a much wider application  
of the case law even in the US beyond the district in which the case  
was brought.

Leaving the DMCA's prohibition on circumventing digital protections  
aside for the moment, might this be the sound of the other shoe  
dropping?  The NPG have certainly teed this up in a way that will be  
difficult to ignore - in law or public policy.

ken

Kenneth Hamma

+1 310 270 8008
khamma at me.com

368 Patel Place
Palm Springs CA 92264

On Jul 13, 2009, at 9:36 AM, Deborah Wythe wrote:


 Interesting dustup. A Wikipedia person went in a backdoor on the NPG  
 site and scraped fullsize images and posted them on Wikipedia as  
 public domain. NPG brought
 in the lawyers to argue that in Britain the 2-D non-copyrightable  
 precedent
 hasn't been argued.






http://www.peoplepoints.co.nz/2009/07/wikimedia-commons-national-portrai
t.html

 http://londonist.com/2009/07/national_portrait_gallery_to_sue_wi.php

 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Dcoetzee/NPG_legal_threat

 Website security:
 From the NPG cease  desist letter:
 As you know, the images from our client's website that you have  
 copied were
 made available from our client's website using Zoomify software.  
 As you know,
 Zoomify is an application that is used to publish photographic  
 images in such a
 way that an entire high resolution image is never made available to  
 a user
 although high-resolution extracts or tiles are made available one- 
 at-a-time.
 Our client used the Zoomify technology to protect our client's  
 copyright in the
 high resolution images.



 NPG's policy/price sheet for web use:
 http://www.npg.org.uk/business/images/use-on-web.php

 Deborah Wythe
 Brooklyn Museum
 deborahwythe at hotmail.com

 Insert movie times and more without leaving Hotmail(r).  See how.
 _
 Bing(tm) brings you health information from trusted sources. Try it
now.

http://www.bing.com/search?q=pet+allergyform=MHEINApubl=WLHMTAGcrea=T
XT_MHEINA_Health_Health_PetAllergy_1x1
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[MCN-L] Tax ID Number Online?

2009-07-03 Thread Perian Sully
Our Tax ID number is on our website and has been for some time. We've never 
come across a problem.

~Perian


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu on behalf of Kaia Landon
Sent: Thu 7/2/2009 6:52 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Tax ID Number Online?
 
Stan,

This is becoming increasingly common, and is strongly recommended by many
camps, including Guidestar.

Basically, it boils down to this:
a) the tax ID number is publicly available anyway, so putting it on your
website is only making it easier for your patrons to find, not needlessly
exposing it to possible phishing scams (for any non-profit, Guidestar will
pull this right up)
b) making it easily available on your website is the transparent thing to
do, and can make it easier for would-be donors to find more information
about your organization
c) some organizations or businesses you might do business with will need it,
so this could save them (and you) a phone call.

I'm not sure there is a major downside, although we have not done this yet
(due to other things we're working on at the moment, not any particular
horror at putting it up).

Kaia Landon
Assistant Director and Curator of Collections
Mesa Historical Museum



On Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 6:27 PM, Stan Orchard stanorchard at mac.com wrote:

 I received an email from a recent visitor and thought I'd ask in here
 if anyone has done this. S/he was asking if we could publish our tax
 ID number because...

 Flexible Spending Account reimbursement requires us to include in our
 paperwork.

 I'd never heard of that before. Have you? This person clearly ID'd so
 it wasn't some kind of phishing expedition. Is this common among
 museum Web sites?

 --
 Stan Orchard
 Web Publisher
 Pacific Science Center - Seattle
 http://google.com/profiles/stanorchard
 --

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[MCN-L] Reminder! AAM Conference MT Endorsement deadline is July 10!

2009-06-29 Thread Perian Sully
Greetings!

 

Now is the time again that we organize session presentations for the AAM
2010 Los Angels May 23-27. The deadline for Media and Technology SPC
endorsement is July 10, two weeks from now! 

 

2010 has as its theme: Museums Without Borders 

 

We encourage you to search for new answers and/or discussions to the
following ideas,

 

* Technology and the Small Museum (all areas) 

* International Perspectives: Cross Regions and Borders (all areas) 

* Technology Management Through Tough Economic 

* Leadership, Sustainability, Accountability 

* Initiating Change: How to Adopt New Technologies Without Fear 

* Connecting the Dots: Re-Design, Re-Purpose, and Re-Use / Digital
Assets 

* Best Models, Best Practices, Innovative Uses and Practical
Implications 

* Exhibit Design and Development (Online/Onsite) 

* Alternative Interactive Devices / Alternative Interfaces 

* Educational Programs and Professional Development (Online/Onsite) 

* What's Next in Web 2.0 or Web 3.0 

* Social Participation / Social Networking / Public Curation 

* Communication, Collaboration, and Sharing Resources  

* System Integration, Preservation, and Convergence 

* Building Diverse Communities / Diversity of Participation / Thought
and Action 

* New Ideas, New Approaches /  Future Trends in Museum Media 
Technology 

* Ideas for Technology Tutorials ... 

 

What can you do?

For those who attended at Philadelphia, look over your notes and think
back for a moment. Send me your comments as to what were the outstanding
topics or individual speakers that you saw. What were the issues that
you would like to see addressed again, in greater detail, or perhaps
differently? Even if you didn't attend, take a moment to review the same
questions: what information or topics need to be explored in a forum
where so many diverse associates gather?  What should we, as a
committee, be looking at as our important, central concerns?

 

If you are interested in organizing a session, please drop me a note
first. This is not an empty solicitation, you will be responded to, and
this is a direct path to having your voice heard...join in!

 

AGAIN! DEADLINE FOR MT SPC ENDORSEMENT (complete proposal) is July 10,
2009.

 

As AAM is continuing its 'green steps' in the session proposal process,
the entire submission process will now be online only.  Anyone can
submit a proposal, you don't have to be a member of AAM.  Just follow
the Session Proposal Guideline at
http://www.aam-us.org/am10/sessionpropos.cfm

 

To submit a proposal, click on Submit a Proposal and follow the steps.
The online form does not have spell check or formatting options and
there are size limits to most description fields. We suggest that you
type your proposal in Word, run spell check and make any formatting
changes (like bold, italics or underlines) there.  You can then copy and
paste in to the appropriate section of the proposal form.

 

Again, thanks to you all for being a part of this committee. I look
forward to our further conversations.

 

My best,

Herminia

Program Chair, Media and Technology Committee

 

Email: hdin at uaa.alaska.edu

 


**

See your website for 2009 MUSE winners and other great informational
links:

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org/muse/index.html

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org/


**




[MCN-L] Sitemap generators?

2009-06-29 Thread Perian Sully
I've a question for you web folks:

 

I need to generate a sitemap for our website (unbelievably, we don't
have one yet). The site is currently just running HTML with a Wordpress
blog attached to it. The free sitemap generator I've downloaded is
getting all of the pages, including the blog. So I'm wondering if
there's a better utility I could be using (preferably free), which would
allow me to define exactly which pages I want included in the sitemap,
and then save the options for use later.

 

I do have Dreamweaver 8 which I'm using to work on the site, but I
haven't quite figured out how/if I can use it to generate an HTML
output.

 

Any pointers would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] Mac vs. PC

2009-06-24 Thread Perian Sully
Dear Drury:

We have a mix of machines here, including two 24 iMacs we used for
digitization work. They connect up to a Windows Exchange server, as well
as another Windows SQL server.

As far as I can tell, they work well with the Exchange server, but I do
have a lot of problems with them not fully recognizing the permissions
on the SQL server. There are, however, some hacks and fixes available,
(although I prefer threatening the iMacs with a hammer...) which we do
apply when problems crop up.

~P

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Drury Wellford
Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 9:23 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] Mac vs. PC

Help!  The Museum of the Confederacy is seeking advice from fellow
museum professionals.

We are starting a digitization project, and are beginning by scanning
over 6000 original photographs we have in our collection.  We are
looking at buying a 24 iMac, but are now addressing concerns about
whether Mac software will be compatible with the museum's PC-based
server, and whether we will be able to integrate Mac image files with
our PC-based Collections databases.  We plan to store the images on an
external hard drive as well, but again are wondering how difficult it
will be to retrieve the images and use them on PC software.

Any suggestions?

Thanks a lot, and sorry if this question is a repeat of one that has
been asked of the listserv a million times before.

Drury Wellford

Ann Drury Wellford
Photo Services Manager
The Museum of the Confederacy
1201 East Clay Street
Richmond, VA  23219
Phone: (804) 649-1861 x17
Fax: (804) 644-7150
www.moc.org
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[MCN-L] Visitor Theatre / Remote Movie Selection

2009-06-17 Thread Perian Sully
nope, no touch screen - it was right on the wall!

At home, I have a 46 (or something. It's Big.) LCD television I have hooked up 
to my computer. I also have a wireless mouse and keyboard so I can use that for 
media viewing. Same idea, only with a TV instead of a projector.


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu on behalf of David Lynx
Sent: Wed 6/17/2009 1:59 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Visitor Theatre / Remote Movie Selection
 
I could do this with a mac mini..  I guess it would have to be near the
screen.  Was this put on a touch screen?

I am hoping to have something that was remote to a screen on the wall
(without running cords). But I might now be able to do this.


On 6/17/09 1:41 PM, Perian Sully psully at magnes.org wrote:

 We did this in our Projections gallery. Instead of a TV, we used a projector,
 but the effect would be the same. Instead of setting up a television, we used
 an iMac Mini and loaded the videos onto that. Set up some permissions to allow
 folks to browse the video content but not much else. We would turn it on in
 the morning and load the video list onto the screen, so that all of the
 options would be obvious.
 
 A small remote and list of instructions were available to the public. We also
 set up a wireless keyboard and mouse for when we wanted to do internet-based
 demonstrations in that gallery.
 
 ~Perian


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[MCN-L] MediaWiki help

2009-06-11 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:

 

I'm wrestling with trying to figure out the best way to organize our
MediaWiki installation and make the pages findable by our users
(currently, a total of 15 people - our staff). We're using the wiki for
helping us develop and outline our workflows, but a lot of users are
having trouble finding the pages, or knowing the full scope of
information available on the wiki.

 

SO. I want to have a list of all of the pages currently created, with a
link in the sidebar. I finally figured out how to modify the sidebar,
but I can't figure out what link I would use to point to an index
showing all of the pages currently created. Is this automatically
generated by MediaWiki or something I need to create manually and update
as each page is created?

 

Based on the bits of information I've been able to find about this, I'm
also thinking I will need to define some Categories. But I'm not sure
how to start going about that. Do I need to install a plugin to allow us
to add Category Tags, or is it a settings thing? Likewise, would the
Portal:Categories page be automatically generated?

 

I don't have the language to even know how to search for answers so
maybe one of you has already done this... Thanks once again in advance
for your help.

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] MediaWiki help

2009-06-11 Thread Perian Sully
Ok, and as often happens as soon as I ask a question, I stumble across a
search term that gets me the answer!

So, to answer my own question (and to help anyone else who is trying to
organize their own wiki), here's what I had to do:

Look at all of the pages in Special:AllPages and then, within the text
of each page, insert [[Category:NAME]] to create the category tag. To
view all of the categories, go to Special:Categories

And yes, they're all automatically generated. Thank goodness!

~P


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Perian Sully
Sent: Thursday, June 11, 2009 3:28 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] MediaWiki help

Hi everyone:

 

I'm wrestling with trying to figure out the best way to organize our
MediaWiki installation and make the pages findable by our users
(currently, a total of 15 people - our staff). We're using the wiki for
helping us develop and outline our workflows, but a lot of users are
having trouble finding the pages, or knowing the full scope of
information available on the wiki.

 

SO. I want to have a list of all of the pages currently created, with a
link in the sidebar. I finally figured out how to modify the sidebar,
but I can't figure out what link I would use to point to an index
showing all of the pages currently created. Is this automatically
generated by MediaWiki or something I need to create manually and update
as each page is created?

 

Based on the bits of information I've been able to find about this, I'm
also thinking I will need to define some Categories. But I'm not sure
how to start going about that. Do I need to install a plugin to allow us
to add Category Tags, or is it a settings thing? Likewise, would the
Portal:Categories page be automatically generated?

 

I don't have the language to even know how to search for answers so
maybe one of you has already done this... Thanks once again in advance
for your help.

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 

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[MCN-L] Virtualization

2009-05-26 Thread Perian Sully
Apologies in advance for the very basic question, but I've seen a lot of
discussion about virtualization lately, but I don't have a whole lot of
background information.

Does anyone have any particular references/ a nutshell answer that
outline 1) what virtualization is, and 2) what the pros and cons are?
I'd love to get caught up to the conversation!

~P

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA




[MCN-L] Who manages your social media presence?

2009-05-26 Thread Perian Sully
I manage the Twitter/blog/YouTube presence, with some input on both Facebook 
and Flickr. Facebook is managed by the Development and Marketing department 
while our Director of Collections and Research does the most work on Flickr.

Most of the staff has access to provide input or content to any of these media.

as to interfacing with PR/Marketing... heh. not well? Since I also do the 
updates to the website, when website updates are forwarded to me, I try to 
update all of the sites at once. We're trying to streamline the process, but 
there is a lot of training required of key staff before it will work smoothly.

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of 
Melissa Kinkley
Sent: Tuesday, May 19, 2009 11:40 AM
To: mcn-l at mcn.edu
Subject: [MCN-L] Who manages your social media presence?

Dear all,
In your museum, does your PR/Marketing staff manage your presence on flickr,
youtube, facebook, your blogs, etc. or someone else? If you have one, how
does your New Media team interface with PR/Marketing?

Thanks,
Melissa


Melissa H. Kinkley
Manager of New Media  Family Interpretation

Smart Museum of Art
University of Chicago?
5550 S. Greenwood Ave.
Chicago, IL 60637
ph. 773.702.2362
fax 773.702.3121

http://smartmuseum.uchicago.edu



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[MCN-L] Portland

2009-05-11 Thread Perian Sully
I had the pleasure of going to another convention in Portland a couple
of years ago and I can't express how lovely and wonderful the city is.
Powell's Books is a must-go (leave room in your suitcase. Seriously).
There are great eats all over the place and the nightlife is active.

Can't wait for MCN this year!

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Diane M. Zorich
Sent: Monday, May 11, 2009 4:46 AM
To: mcn-l at toronto.mediatrope.com
Subject: [MCN-L] Portland

FYI --

Given that the MCN 2009 conference is in Portland, those planning to 
attend might want to check out this Sunday's Travel section of the NY 
Times, which features frugal Portland (http://travel.nytimes.com/).

Some interesting highlights:  free (and good) beer at a local store 
(to encourage shopping) and the best steaks in town are apparently at 
a strip joint (I won't make the obvious pun here)  Also, some 
good tips for those seeking a more sedate experience.


Diane




-- 
Diane M. Zorich
113 Gallup Road
Princeton, NJ 08542 USA
Voice: 609-252-1606
Email:  dzorich at mindspring.com
or dianezorich at comcast.net
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[MCN-L] Looking for a New Webblast/Email/Metrics Service

2009-05-11 Thread Perian Sully
From our Development Director. Anyone have any suggestions? We will be
migrating our website to Drupal soon, and I would think that some sort
of integrated email marketing tool with metrics functionality would be
of particular use here. Thoughts about that would also be helpful.

Thanks!


I am looking to switch our service, for the primary reason that I am
concerned that our db has grown stale.. we are still using the tools I
set in place five years ago, and I am worried that there may be those
who are not getting mail just cuz the app, known address format are OLD,
etc...

Also, I want a better look-and-feel and an easier back-end user
interface to hand all this over to Faith, with an eye on her doing
reports of opens and clicks, users and interests, etc.

There's actually a lot of functionality, in terms of tracking with
Topica and I do not want to lose that moving forward (not being
leveraged well enough now).

can you please blast a question to your peeps, about bulk email services
and tools with an eye on metrics and reports?  Also, I want to start
list sharing with other local and national orgs. to build the list.
Anything you can get re: issues and case scenarios'd be greatly
appreciated.


Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA



[MCN-L] image sizes

2009-05-06 Thread Perian Sully
I wonder if anyone from the VA is here? They also offer free, full,
high-resolution downloads for many of their works. They're incredibly
useful for my own textile research, and it has become a beloved resource
for my costuming community. But I'd be really curious to hear how their
fee requests have picked up.

Here at the Magnes, we keep wrangling back and forth about it. At the
moment, the archival materials are at around 3000 pixels, while the
objects are anywhere from 500 to 1000px. The 500px size (along with
watermarks) was an early decision, but in the past few months, I've
begun processing them up to 1000px. I may also leave some at 3000px,
assuming there are details (text, especially) which require zooming in
to study. It's inconsistent and I need to rethink a lot of this before
we go online.

A strange thing has happened this year, however, which is giving me
pause. In past years (note that our materials, up until very recently,
have never been available online), we have generated around
$4000-6000/year in reproduction fees, most of that from one famous
painting we have in our collection. In late 2008, we began publishing
our materials on Flickr, in relatively high image sizes. We also started
releasing information about our collections in ways that were easily
findable by researchers. In March of this year, my boss commented that
we had already generated somewhere in the order of $10,000 in fees -
just in the first three months of 2009!

We have had some complaints that our fees are too high (they are
relatively high on paper, but we do negotiate), and we're retooling it
as we learn better. But we've definitely noticed that the financial
benefits are outweighing the risks thus far.

~P

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Kenneth Hamma
Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 8:26 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] image sizes

Will,

Moving beyond this is happening in lots of places already.  Look, for  
example, at the image availability for prints in the British Museum:  
e.g., http://tinyurl.com/cu9the

According to staff at the British Museum, this has proven very  
popular, way beyond the point that they could have any hope of  
enforcing the use limitations - if they had ever intended to do so for  
images of public domain works.

ken

Kenneth Hamma

+1 310 270 8008
khamma at me.com

368 Patel Place
Palm Springs CA 92264

On May 5, 2009, at 8:10 AM, Real, Will wrote:

 Matt, you are probably right, but 500 was what other people here (e.g.
 Publications staff) were comfortable with. A postcard-sized inkjet  
 print
 we made from a 600 pixel image was surprisingly good, good enough to
 scare people. I hope someday we can move beyond this stalemate and
 provide more useful images to the public, with or without tools such  
 as
 Zoomify.

 Will

 -Original Message-
 From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu] On Behalf  
 Of
 Morgan, Matt
 Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 10:48 AM
 To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
 Subject: Re: [MCN-L] image sizes

 I'm aware of the discussion, but what's the limit before you hit
 commercially viable? Surely more than 500px.

 On 5/5/09 10:39 AM, Real, Will RealW at CarnegieMuseums.Org wrote:

 Hi Matt,

 The reason is simple: the museum does not want people to be able to  
 use
 the large images to produce commercially viable prints. There was a
 thread on this list awhile back about that issue, and it seems our
 museum is not alone in taking this approach. We seem to think that  
 there
 is some money to be made off the images and if anyone is going to make
 it, it should be us.

 With Zoomify or jpeg2000 we can offer up the full size image without
 loading it all at once. If someone really wants to they will still be
 able to download all of the high-res tiles and reassemble them, but it
 would be a lot more difficult.

 Another reason is that some images are published on the web with
 permission from the copyright owners. The permission form specifies  
 the
 online image size. We'd have to maintain at least two different  
 maximum
 file sizes online depending on copyright. Not impossible of course,  
 just
 kind of a pain!

 Will

 -Original Message-
 From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu] On Behalf  
 Of
 Morgan, Matt
 Sent: Tuesday, May 05, 2009 9:57 AM
 To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
 Subject: Re: [MCN-L] image sizes

 Will, why wait for zoom before providing the large images? I think  
 there
 are a lot of good arguments for very big images online now:

 1) modern browsers handle resizing well
 2) scrolling (when an image is too big for the window) is at least as
 easy for users as zooming, and shows them as much of the picture as  
 will
 fit in the window (rather than arbitrarily limiting to a zoom pane)
 3

[MCN-L] ‏‏RE: image sizes

2009-05-06 Thread Perian Sully
I think it's mostly use fees and production fees. Not so much in the way of 
rush fees, which is surprising (and a big source of revenue last year). There's 
a bit of a snowball effect happening where we've found that offering up images 
from one area or collection is causing publishers to ask about related 
materials. We do charge for that research time.

On our website, we have switched our licensing from Copyright to a CC 
noncommercial-attribution-share alike license. We also clarify that researchers 
and educators wishing to use our images for their own personal use or in the 
classroom don't need to ask us permission to take the images, but it's nice to 
hear from them anyway and see how our assets are being used. This is how we 
learned that one of our Flickr projects, Jews in China, is actively being used 
by a classroom for study.

Basically, we knew that we wanted to make sure researchers had full access, but 
we knew we didn't have the time (or, really, the inclination) to police our 
assets aggressively. Nor did we ever consider reproduction fees a significant 
source of revenue. Of the two, researcher use is far more important than 
retaining strict control over the materials. So we decided to just trust our 
audience to be responsible. So far, *knock on wood* the results are pretty 
positive.

~P

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu] On Behalf Of 
Amalyah Keshet [akes...@imj.org.il]
Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 10:19 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] ??RE: image sizes

$10,000 in what kind of fees?

Amalyah


?: ??mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu] ??? Bruce Wyman 
[bwyman at denverartmuseum.org]
??: ? ? 06 ??? 2009 20:00
: Museum Computer Network Listserv
??: Re: [MCN-L] image sizes

In late 2008, we began publishing
our materials on Flickr, in relatively high image sizes. We also started
releasing information about our collections in ways that were easily
findable by researchers. In March of this year, my boss commented that
we had already generated somewhere in the order of $10,000 in fees -
just in the first three months of 2009!

That's awesome.

I agree with others here that the museum stranglehold on clinging to
the desperate dreams of deep licensing revenue doesn't bear out in
cost-analysis for *most* museums.

Ken's also spot on to reference creative commons licensing and
whoever else pointed out that Cory Doctorow's observation that he's
selling more through cc licensing his work.

There was a recent study which I can't find at the moment that people
who most frequently shared music online were also the most frequent
purchasers. It stands out as being a european observation, so I'm
sure will instantly dismiss it here in America, but it was an
interesting reference point. It seems that pretty consistently the
real world is showing us the having a fairly open commons pays off
financially (and philosophically).

I'd rather spend time on creating stuff to help users rather than
restrict them.

-bw.
--
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Bruce Wyman, Director of Technology
Denver Art Museum  /  100 W 14th Ave. Pkwy, Denver, CO 80204
office: 720.913.0159  /  fax: 720.913.0002
bwyman at denverartmuseum.org
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[MCN-L] Digital Preservation and Nuclear Holocaust: An Animation

2009-05-06 Thread Perian Sully
Oh, the things that pop up on Twitter (I think Richard Urban was the
first to tweet this...)

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbBa6Oam7-w

 

A cute animation about the (very) basics of digital preservation.

 

Enjoy!

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] Report comparing open source content management systems

2009-03-31 Thread Perian Sully
Via Twitter, I found a report comparing opensource CMS Drupal, Joomla,
Wordpress, and Plone:
http://www.idealware.org/blog/2009/03/new-report-comparing-wordpress-joo
mla.html

 

Free registration is required, but it seems like a handy guide.

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] Need a list of DAMS options

2009-03-20 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:

 

Sorry if this is a redundant question, but we're sticking our toe into
DAMS territory soon and I'm being asked to outline all of the various
options.

 

I am currently aware of:

Commercial DAMS:

Extensis

Luna Insight

me

 

Open Source DAMS:

OpenEdit

ResourceSpace

Razuna

(Omeka  Wordpress)

 

I'm specifically looking for the range of products available, along with
reviews. We're trying to figure out how to get the DAMS to talk to our
CIS (IDEA at ALM, which uses MS SQL and does have some sort of API
available with it, so it should be do-able), but we'll likely need to
get a programmer to do that for us.

 

Thanks in advance for your help. Feel free to reply to me offlist. I'll
be setting up a Google Docs to organize the information, and I'd be
happy to share that list once it's available.

 

~Perian

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] Twitter - Follow?

2009-03-13 Thread Perian Sully
I also don't follow everyone who follows us. I look for the following:

- People (general public) with an interest in history, museums, culture,
Jewish content, and sometimes technology. I follow a lot of folks here
from MCN and elsewhere using the Magnes feed (@magnes), instead of my
personal one - mostly because I don't use my personal one very often. 
- Museums, archives, libraries, and various cultural centers
- Certain news feeds that relate to our content

I do NOT follow:
- spammers
- individuals who post nothing but really mundane thoughts (the I'm in
the bathroom, making a sandwich for dinner sorts)
- individuals who are following 20,000 people
- people who lock their posts (I come across some museums or cultural
centers who do this. WHY???)
- people whose content or interests have nothing to do with ours (they
might have a fascinating set of posts, but I don't need to read about
the minutia of hedgetrimming or aquarium maintenance on my institutional
feed).
- people or institutions who only post marketing materials

When it comes to following individuals, I like knowing what our public
might be thinking about, and so try to direct my tweets to coincide with
their interests. But there are only so many hours in the day, and so I
can't afford to be exceptionally liberal with who I choose to follow.

~P


Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA



On Mar 13, 2009, at 3/13/0912:50 PM, Christina DePaolo wrote:

 Hi,
 I set up a twitter feed for SAM recently @iheartSAM. I am loving  
 tweeting for SAM, but there are still a couple of things that I am  
 fuzzy about. I am following everyone who is following us, but it is  
 a bit overwhelming.  How do you chose who to follow? Looking at  
 museum's feeds I see a variety of solutions.

 I am curious about those of you who don't follow everyone, but  
 follow a targeted group of individuals and institutions. This looks  
 like a good option for a somewhat targeted dialogue/community.  How  
 do you decide which individuals to follow? Not so concerned about  
 institutions because that is easy to do/resolve.

 Thank you. Christina


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[MCN-L] IP SIG: Copying DVDs to personal computer -- RealNetworks sued by movie studios

2009-03-10 Thread Perian Sully
Good luck with that. After trying to figure out how to rip a DVD to AVI
last week (our own video), I learned that there're plenty of free
solutions out there.

~P

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Amalyah Keshet [akeshet at imj.org.il]
Sent: Tuesday, March 10, 2009 4:02 AM
To: 'mcn-l at mcn.edu'
Subject: [MCN-L] IP SIG: Copying DVDs to personal computer --
RealNetworks sued by movie studios

Movie industry's shortsighted fight

Bob Barr

Tuesday, March 10, 2009
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/03/09/ED051680HG.D
TL

...
 There is now unfolding in a federal court in San Francisco a lawsuit
in which several major Hollywood movie studios are suing RealNetworks -
a relatively small but successful company that develops and markets
Internet communications technology - in an effort to prevent the company
from selling a software product that simply enables consumers to copy
their DVDs to their personal computers. If the studios are successful in
this Goliath-against-David legal action, Edison's lesson in hard work
will have been effectively reduced to, genius is one percent
inspiration, 99 percent permission. ...
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[MCN-L] social network CMS?

2009-03-09 Thread Perian Sully
Hmm. I've seen it done using Wordpress, which can be hosted with
Wordpress.com and then integrate with all of the other tools out there. 

And, of course, I'm now blanking on the three institutions I've seen
doing this, but Google came up with this interesting thread about
libraries using WP for their sites:
http://meredith.wolfwater.com/wordpress/2008/05/27/wordpress-for-library
-websites/

~P

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Stan Orchard
Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2009 8:41 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] social network CMS?

This question has sorta come up before in different ways, but thought  
I'd ask again. Does anyone use one of the social network-type sites as  
a content management system? For example, we use Wetpaint for an  
internal wiki for our staff. We also use Wetpaint for a section of our  
site for our Science On Wheels teachers. We've had mixed results with  
both. But what if we moved our entire Web site to something like Ning  
or Wetpaint or some other such site? Alternative is to build our IT  
staff and create, maintain databases, Web servers, networks, etc. That  
means fewer resources (people) for creating content. Budgets being  
what they are, what if we used an outside source for the ENTIRE  
infrastructure and spent money on content creators? We also use Google  
calendars, Feedburner, Twitter, Facebook, Constant Contact, Upcoming.  
Google maps, etc. But the entire Web site? Lots of questions about  
ads, security, reliability, etc. Just wondering if any institutions do  
this?

Stan Orchard
Pacific Science Center
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[MCN-L] MoMA's new site redsign featured in the NYTimes

2009-03-06 Thread Perian Sully
Congratulations, Allegra! The new site looks great, and a fantastic
writeup in the NYTimes:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/05/arts/design/05moma.html

 

Love the article's shout-out to the work Brooklyn Museum and
Indianapolis have made in this area (Rob and the rest of the team at
IMA, I am absolutely amazed at the new deaccession module on the IMA
website. I had to send a link to it to the staff yesterday:
http://www.imamuseum.org/explore/deaccessions )

 

One thing I'm really noticing is how mainstream Web 2.0-enabled /
visitor-driven / content interactive museum websites are becoming. Not
just on our side, but for the public and the press who are sitting up
and taking notice. I know many folks have been saying for a while that
these sorts of applications were going to become as expected by the
public as museum websites were in the 1990's. I'm finding the
progression absolutely fascinating. I hope that the availability of free
or cheap software will help the smaller institutions get on board
sooner, rather than later. Goodness knows that I actively pull pieces of
software from everywhere under the sun as part of our initiative to
deliver our content openly (soon... soon...).

 

Anyway, great job, you all! You're an inspiration J

 

~Perian

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] Share bookmarklets on online collections

2009-03-03 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:

 

Has anyone implemented the use of sharing tools on individual item pages
within their museum's online collections? I want to request a bunch of
share links to del.icio.us, Zotero, Facebook, Twitter, Digg, and Reddit
and I think there are some tools to help do this (code easily embedded
into the page), but I don't recall the names of them right now.

 

Has anyone had any experience with doing this and can provide some
advice? Any other sites I should be able to share on?

 

Thanks in advance!

 

~Perian

 

Perian Sully

Collections Information Manager

Web Programs Strategist

The Magnes

2911 Russell St.

Berkeley, CA 94705

Work: 510-549-6950 x 357

Fax: 510-849-3673

http://www.magnes.org

http://www.musematic.org

http://www.mediaandtechnology.org

 




[MCN-L] question on gallery simulation software

2009-02-26 Thread Perian Sully
Hmm. I'm not an exhibition designer, but would Second Life be a good
platform for this? I have seen it used for gallery mockups (and have
done something similar myself for other purposes), but it does have the
advantage of being fairly easy to learn.

~Perian

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Ilias Kyriazis
Sent: Thursday, February 26, 2009 3:10 PM
To: mcn-l at mcn.edu
Subject: [MCN-L] question on gallery simulation software

Dear all,

I am a PhD student at Indiana University, working this semester with the
Curator of Works on Paper at the University Art Museum on an art
exhibition
project. We have been wondering if there is some specific software out
there
used for exhibition design, to be handy, quite easy to learn, cheap, and
that would not expect some great experience in 3D design. We are mostly
thinking of a template that would simulate the museum gallery, where we
could drag and move things to get some feeling of what the exhibition
gallery would look like with the art works, painted walls, etc.
included.

I have been playing around with Google's SketchUp, but I would be
interested
in any software that you may be using, that could maybe be easier for
curators to use when they lack the availability of an installation
designer,
and they just want to have a gallery simulating interface...

Any feedback would be really appreciated!

thank you in advance,
Ilias Kyriazis

-- 
Ilias Kyriazis, BMus, MLS
Fulbright Alumnus
PhD Student in Information Science
School of Library and Information Science
Indiana University, USA

Art is solving problems that cannot be formulated before they have been
solved. The shaping of the question is part of the answer.
Piet Hein
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[MCN-L] What is a Collections Management System supposed to manage?

2008-12-03 Thread Perian Sully
Dear Amber:

Here at the Magnes, it's yes to all of the above. I've written
extensively on the topic, and CMS's have grown very, very feature-rich
over the past 40 years. At the Magnes, we have a CMS (IDEA at ALM) which
can also function as a Content Management System, but we don't entirely
use it for that purpose. And, as information manager, I do put a limit
onto the sorts of information the CMS collects. Namely, any information
which has some relation to collection items goes into the CMS. If it has
nothing to do with collecting activities or item care, it goes
elsewhere. For tracking artist and researcher information, it's slightly
different, and we do use the CMS to keep track of researchers who come
through our doors. But then researchers are also looking at specific
objects or collections, so they're linked in that way.

Here's what ours covers:
Basic library, archive, and museum information (object movement,
descriptions, valuations, etc.).
Label texts
Any and all associated media (including dissertations and material found
online relating to the item in question)
Subjects, translations, synonyms, and other sorts of dictionaries
Artist biography and information
Reference materials
User-generated content, such as social tagging or comments about
specific items (we're building that right now)
Exhibition and events info
Loans
Deaccessioned items
Researchers and pulled items
Reports

I'm sure I'm missing a few things, but we have not spent any time
focusing the CMS as a tool for the education department. Instead, it
functions, for us, as a research and collection management tool. In a
meeting yesterday, one of our curators asked if she could scan in all of
her notes about conversations she's had about various topics. I hadn't
quite thought about using the CMS in that way, but it's something we're
mulling over (we did end up telling her that a blog or a wiki might work
better for that, but it was something to think about).

Our system might be a bit of a special case, though. We've spent the
past 8 months custom-tailoring it to be a robust research tool in
addition to core collection management activities. At the most basic
level, CMS should manage collections, and manage them well. Some systems
have a number of extra features which make them functional for managing
other activities, but I have not yet seen them function well as a DAMS,
or as a way to keep track of development and marketing materials. (Of
course, now that I've said that, someone will say that they've gotten
theirs to function that way!)

Ok, a bit long-winded but I hope it answers some of your questions.

~Perian

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Morgan, Amber
Sent: Wednesday, December 03, 2008 7:41 AM
To: mcn-l at mcn.edu
Subject: [MCN-L] What is a Collections Management System supposed to
manage?

We are addressing some concerns regarding our collections management
system.  Something that has become clear is that our staff is not in
agreement as to what a CMS is and what it should do.  

 

We are attempting to address the needs of our education department.  It
would be very helpful to know how other institutions maintain what could
be considered educational content.  If anyone out there would be willing
to answer a few questions, I would be very grateful!  

 

Do you store label copy in your CMS?  

Do you use your CMS to manage detailed information about artists,
events, places, etc?  If so, do you limit it to information specifically
about your collection, or do you also maintain information about related
materials held elsewhere?

Does your institution collect any user-generated content, and if so,
does it go into your CMS?

And finally, if you're feeling up to it - what, in your opinion, is a
collections management system; what should it do and what should it NOT
be expected to do?

 

Many thanks,
Amber

the warhol:
Amber E. Morgan
Associate Registrar
117 Sandusky Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15212
T 412.237.8306
F 412.237.8340
E morgana at warhol.org
W www.warhol.org 

The Andy Warhol Museum
One of the four Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh 

Email newsletter http://members.carnegiemuseums.org/email 
Membership http://members.carnegiemuseums.org/SupportCMP 

 

 

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[MCN-L] Razuna open source DAM

2008-11-15 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone:

I just learned about an open source digital asset management system called 
Razuna. I've been watching the videos and am pretty intrigued by it. My needs 
are fairly modest, but even with increased access to assets by internal staff, 
I'm having a hard time keeping up with some of my asset management. Heaven help 
me when we get our assets up on the web in a month or so! For a number of 
reasons, I don't anticipate getting support for purchasing a commercial DAM, so 
open source might be my only option.

Has anyone used Razuna and have any opinions about it?

Thanks!

http://www.razuna.org

Perian Sully
Collections Information Manager
Web Programs Strategist
The Magnes
Berkeley, CA



[MCN-L] MCN on Twitter and Flickr

2008-11-12 Thread Perian Sully
Hi everyone!

As Richard mentioned earlier, we will be tweeting from MCN2008 in glorious 
Washington DC (at least when we can get out of the hotel basement to where 
there is actual internet connectivity...). Please follow us at 
http://twitter.com/mcn2008

Also, a reminder that there is an MCN2008 Flickr group. I apologize to anyone I 
annoyed by taking a bajillion photos during the Luce Foundation Center tour 
today, but I had a good excuse - to add beautiful photos from the tour to the 
Flickr group at http://www.flickr.com/groups/mcn2008/ (and also to make Richard 
terribly jealous that he's not with us this year). You can also tag your photos 
with mcn2008 and everyone will be able to find them by searching 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/mcn2008/

Looking forward to seeing you all again and meeting new folks!

~Perian



[MCN-L] MCN on Twitter and Flickr

2008-11-12 Thread Perian Sully
Oh yes! Also forgot to mention that you may also add your Flickr photos to the 
Museum Computer Network Flickr group: http://www.flickr.com/groups/mcn/


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu on behalf of Perian Sully
Sent: Wed 11/12/2008 3:11 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] MCN on Twitter and Flickr
 
Hi everyone!

As Richard mentioned earlier, we will be tweeting from MCN2008 in glorious 
Washington DC (at least when we can get out of the hotel basement to where 
there is actual internet connectivity...). Please follow us at 
http://twitter.com/mcn2008

Also, a reminder that there is an MCN2008 Flickr group. I apologize to anyone I 
annoyed by taking a bajillion photos during the Luce Foundation Center tour 
today, but I had a good excuse - to add beautiful photos from the tour to the 
Flickr group at http://www.flickr.com/groups/mcn2008/ (and also to make Richard 
terribly jealous that he's not with us this year). You can also tag your photos 
with mcn2008 and everyone will be able to find them by searching 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/mcn2008/

Looking forward to seeing you all again and meeting new folks!

~Perian
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[MCN-L] free ftp software?

2008-10-15 Thread Perian Sully
I use both of these myself. I am more comfortable with Filezilla and use
it for more traditional FTP sites, but WinSCP's use of SCP means I end
up using it for one other site I connect to on a regular basis (this
site doesn't allow FTP or SFTP)

Perian Sully
Collections Information and Web Programs Manager
Judah L. Magnes Museum

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Elizabeth Bruton
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2008 7:59 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] free ftp software?

I'd recommend WinSCP or Filezilla, both are free, open source FTP
clients.

Filezilla
Pros: Available for Windows, Mac, and Linux
Cons: No synchronize feature; does not support SCP protocol

WinSCP
Pros: Has portable executable version; has synchronize feature; supports
SCP
protocol in addition to SFTP  FTP
Cons: Only available for Windows

Liz

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[MCN-L] Website content analysis / site map - recommendedsoftware?

2008-10-07 Thread Perian Sully
Dear Shyam:

I recently got Microsoft Visio Professional which appears to do what
you're asking to do. You can export to a database or use ODBC and then
import from Excel.

We ended up getting Visio from JourneyEd,
http://journeyed.com/search.asp?SKW=MSCharity  TechSoup also offers it
here:
http://www.techsoup.org/stock/product.asp?catalog_name=TechSoupMaincate
gory_name=Office+Tools+MSproduct_id=LS-2512Cat1=Office+Tools+MSCatCou
nt=1 

Best,

Perian Sully
Collections Information and Web Programs Manager
Judah L. Magnes Museum


-Original Message-
From: Oberoi, Shyam [mailto:shyam.obe...@metmuseum.org] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 07, 2008 10:05 AM
To: Thomas Deliduka
Subject: RE: [MCN-L] Website content analysis / site map - recommended
software?

Thomas,

That's exactly what we want to do - and up to this point we've actually
been using DreamWeaver 2004 to do it.  The problem is that we want to
produce reports (or at least output the search results) and our version
of Dreamweaver doesn't seem to have that capability.

If a newer version of DW can do this, we'd definitely be fine with
upgrading

Thanks

Shyam

Shyam Oberoi
Sr. Website Technology Manager
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
-
shyam.oberoi at metmuseum.org
p. 212-650-2303
 

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Thomas Deliduka
Sent: Tuesday, October 07, 2008 9:11 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Website content analysis / site map -
recommendedsoftware?

I could be reading the e-mail wrong, but I would think you would simply
want to scan the source code.  For instance, if you have DreamWeaver or
even a coding application like Eclipse, you load the site up and then
use the search feature to search multiple files for the links you want.

If you don't have access to the source, you may be able to use google's
search using the site:yourwebsite.com prefix to your searches and see
if all those pages are crawled.

Thomas Deliduka
Director of Information Technology
Columbus Museum of Art
480 East Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215
ph 614/629-0345 fax 614/629-0950
thomas.deliduka at cmaohio.org
 
ART SPEAKS. JOIN THE CONVERSATION

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Oberoi, Shyam
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2008 11:11 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] Website content analysis / site map - recommended
software?

Wanted to put out a question to see what software other people might be
using to do content analysis of their websites.  For example, we would
like to be able to scan our entire site to identify all the links that
point to a particular store item (such as Rembrandt, Self-Portrait
Poster), or a particular category of items (such as posters) - these
links can exist in multiple parts of the site: special exhibitions,
permanent collection, timeline, etc

 

Thanks in advance,

 

Shyam

 

Shyam Oberoi

Sr. Website Technology Manager

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

 

 

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[MCN-L] Web vs. 'real world' visitors

2008-10-02 Thread Perian Sully
I hope no one minds if I ask a really basic question - is there a
preferred methodology for collecting the data?

The Magnes is an unusual case in that we don't have a whole lot of foot
traffic and, up until now, have not had much online traffic either. It's
likely to swing heavily to the online visitor in the next couple of
months as we focus our energies there.

There has been much discussion about developing a survey and tracking
audience metrics, but if we can develop something which could be added
to an already existing data pool, so much the better. So is there a
standard set of analytics and questions we should be asking and would
also benefit the rest of the field?

Perian Sully
Collections Information and Web Programs Manager
Judah L. Magnes Museum


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Folsom, Diana
Sent: Tuesday, September 30, 2008 1:13 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Cc: Tim Hart
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Web vs. 'real world' visitors

Tim Hart responded off list.  Here are the messages he sent to Christina
and me. 

To Christina from Tim:
I would be happy to create a survey and publish the data here:
http://www.getty.edu/about/institutional_research/snapshot_visits.html
 
Do you think anyone would fill it out on a regular basis? Monthly?

To Diana from Tim:
First I tried to get people to share data in Los Angeles (local
museums). That didn't work. Then I formed the Public Sector Committee at
the Web Analytics Association (I was a founding co-chair) and that
didn't work. But, not to despair, I'm now leading a project where 12
local museums are participating in an audience intercept study... its
happening as I write. Hopefully this collaboration will be a starting
point for further sharing of audience metrics.
 
Reasons Web data sharing initiatives fail: Most museums don't have
somebody on staff who can handle the extra work. Too many different
analytics technologies (not all data is created the same). Too many
possibilities for analytics implementation variation. Difficulty in
categorizing content (what is education content anyway?). Many
institutions don't see the value in sharing (in spite of what we were
taught in kindergarten). Etc., etc.


Diana 


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Christina DePaolo
Sent: Tuesday, September 30, 2008 10:46 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Cc: Tim Hart
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Web vs. 'real world' visitors

If there was an process for electronically sharing them vs. filling out
a survey or manually sharing stats, then maybe it would easier for us to
do a broader survey. Christina


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Folsom, Diana
Sent: Tuesday, September 30, 2008 10:39 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Cc: Tim Hart
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Web vs. 'real world' visitors

Tim Hart (from the Getty) has been trying to organize us all to share
web data with each other for several years.

I think he might compare the effort to that of trying to herd cats.
(excuse me for putting words in your mouth, Tim!)

http://www.ehow.com/how_2023491_herd-cats.html

Perhaps this is a moment in time when we might feel more inclined to
share our stats in some way...   ??


Diana

Diana Folsom
Manager, Art  Education Systems
Collections Management Dept.
LACMA
5905 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA  90036
voice 323-857-6594
fax 323-857-6213

Check out new material in LACMA's Collections Online
http://CollectionsOnline.lacma.org



-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Montgomery, Renee
Sent: Tuesday, September 30, 2008 8:14 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Web vs. 'real world' visitors

Is someone collating these facts and figures?  I know there are some
older reports but is there a recent update?  Obviously is very helpful
to have comparative stats to help build cases on the homefront.  Thank
you.

Renee Montgomery
Assistant Director
Risk Management and Collection Information Los Angeles County Museum of
Art T 323 857-6059

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Champagne, Joanna
Sent: Monday, September 29, 2008 12:29 PM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Web vs. 'real world' visitors

Hello,

This past fiscal year we had just over 4 million physical visitors (like
the Web some may be repeat, but not as many as the online) to the
National Gallery and 20,800,523 visits to the Web site.

50.8% of our 62 Podcasts were downloaded to iTunes this past FY year the
rest from our site and widget.

We have 559 installs of our Podcast widget.

Hope that helps.

Best,
Joanna


.
Joanna Champagne
Chief of Web and New Media Initiatives
National Gallery of Art
NGA.GOV




On 9/29/08 1:48 PM, Perian

[MCN-L] Web vs. 'real world' visitors

2008-09-29 Thread Perian Sully
Dear Nancy:

Have you seen the IMLS Interconnections report?
http://www.interconnectionsreport.org/

Lots of hard data about some of the questions you're asking. The
slideshow provides a nice summary as well on the report.

Perian Sully
Collections Information and Web Programs Manager
Judah L. Magnes Museum


-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Nancy Proctor
Sent: Monday, September 29, 2008 10:33 AM
To: mcn-l at mcn.edu
Subject: [MCN-L] Web vs. 'real world' visitors

Does anyone have any hard numbers on overall museum trends in numbers of
online visitors versus footfall in the bricks  mortar museums? My
anecdotal
sense from talking to various museum professionals is that online
traffic is
3-10 times the in-person visitorship, but I'd like to be able to cite an
actual study.

It would also be great to know what percentage of museums' online
traffic is
to content that is not resident on their websites, e.g. Podcasts on
iTunes/iTunes U, and videos on YouTube, if anyone has those stats for
your
own museum or others'

...And the next step is to show what great return on investment our
digital
initiatives provide, since we reach many more people online than in
person,
and buildings are relatively expensive to maintain. This is not to
challenge
the primacy and importance of the real world buildings and collections,
but
simply to underscore how much reach digital teams can achieve for
comparatively little money.

Many thanks!
Nancy

Nancy Proctor
Head of New Media Initiatives

Smithsonian American Art Museum (SAAM)
MRC 970 PO Box 37012
Washington DC 20013-7012
USA 

o: +1-202-633-8439
f: +1-202-633-8455
c: +1-301-642-6257

proctorn at si.edu

http://www.americanart.si.edu
http://eyelevel.si.edu/

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[MCN-L] Twitter!

2008-09-19 Thread Perian Sully
I just wanted to write and thank everyone for their input about Twitter.
I went ahead and created a profile for the Magnes
(http://twitter.com/magnes ) and am looking forward to using it a lot
more! I really love that the Luce Center is using it for broadcasting
information about their conservation treatments. That tickles me to no
end.

Also, thanks to Amy for her fantastic list! I'd be very interested in
reading your paper once it's finished.

Of course, now I'm sitting here wondering why it took me two years to
get over the initial aversion to the medium...

Oh well! Better late than never!

Cheers!

Perian Sully
Collections Information and Web Programs Manager
Judah L. Magnes Museum




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