Web/Tech

May 06, 2008

Goldwater Library Wi-Fi Hot Spot

Futurewifi

Great News! the Library now has free Wi-Fi! Feel free to bring your laptops and surf the web in our Reading Room.

Wifi What is Wi-Fi?

via PCWorld:

Wi-Fi, or wireless fidelity, is a technology that allows PCs to communicate with each other or access the Internet via radio communication rather than wires. Originally developed for laptops, Wi-Fi now incorporates devices such as mobile phones, PDAs and games consoles (including PSP and Xbox 360). You can use Wi-Fi in your home with a broadband Internet connection and a wireless router. Alternatively, when you’re out and about you may encounter Wi-Fi hotspots. These range from a single room – say a coffee shop or airport lounge – to large areas of overlapping hotspots, such as a Wi-Fi enabled city centres. You’ll sometimes see Wi-Fi referred to as a number, 802.11, which relates to the frequency the technology operates on. Most current Wi-Fi devices use 802.11g, which offers a typical data transfer rate of 25 Mbits-per-second and a range of around 30 metres. 802.11n, though, typically performs at a much more impressive 200 Mbits-per-second and has a range of 50m.

Wifitshirt1
To find out more information please visit www.wi-fi.org

April 10, 2008

Web 2.0: Ross Day and Erika Hauser Podcast

Rdeh

< March 28, 2008, Ross Day and Erika Hauser (Goldwater Library) in the newly installed Oceanic wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

via Sarah Falls @ ARLIS/NA at Altitude (The official blog of the ARLIS/NA 36th annual conference in Denver, Colorado May 1-5, 2008). This podcast runs best with iTunes. It can also be streamed from Ourmedia.

Interview 1: Ross Day and Erika Hauser
Sarah Falls

On March 28, 2008, I sat down with Ross Day and Erika Hauser of the Goldwater Library at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. We discussed their outreach efforts with web 2.0 technologies through such sites as Flickr, Wikipedia and with blogging.

To listen to the interview, click here (mp3 format)  Interview #1

Sites to visit for the Goldwater Library:

Library blog: http://goldwaterlibrary.typepad.com/

Flickr site: http://www.flickr.com/people/goldwaterlibrary/

Wikipedia Entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Goldwater_Library

Library wiki: http://goldwaterlibrary.wikidot.com/er-introduction

You can also click on the top bar of the audio player below:

                   

February 29, 2008

Highlights from our flickr pool

Skull vessel
Peru; Nasca-Wari (?)
6th-7th century
ceramic, slip
Anonymous Loan, 1981
L.1981.153.2

Since summer 2007 the Goldwater Library has hosted a flickr pool of photographs taken in the AAOA galleries: individual objects, the installation, and even some tourist shots. (Read our blog post about the rollout here.) While the library occasionally salts the pool with photographs shot by our staff -- behind-the-scenes photographs of the installation of the El Anatsui piece, for example --, by far the lion's share of the photographs are taken by visitors to the museum.

Periodically in this space we will post one of these photographs, sometimes without comment, as a 'staff pick'.

The pool is a sampling of how our visitors 'see' the objects, and what they find compelling enough to photograph. Many of our 'signature' pieces appear several times, each from a different photographer and each at slightly different angle. It is also instructive to see what less familiar objects nevertheless succeed in capturing the visitor's attention.

The images run the gamut from fuzzy cellphone capture to creatively Photoshopped adaptation; the commentary, from shamefully misidentified to scholarly exegesis.

To get these photographs the library staff regularly browses flickr for photographs tagged with the museum's name. We invite the flickr member to add each photograph we discover to our pool. The response to our invitations has been swift, extensive, and heartening. We now have over 500 600 contributions. The reopening of the Pacific galleries brought a particular surge of photography.

Your responses and suggestions for the flickr pool are always welcome.

February 22, 2008

Met Museum joins ArtShare on Facebook

Little_facebook_logo Mmalogo_2This month The Metropolitan Museum of Art added its first art objects to the popular ArtShare application on Facebook.

Screen_shot_artshare_2_3 ArtShare was developed last November at Brooklyn Museum. The application allows Facebook members to select art objects from participating museums and have them appear on their Facebook Profile page. Each time the profile is loaded a different work displays at random from the selections. Each entry (sample at right) features an image and accompanying catalog information.

Recently the Met joined with four other museums -- Indianapolis Museum of Art, Powerhouse Museum, Victoria and Albert Museum, and the Walters Art Museum -- to offer Facebook highlights from their respective collections. At this writing twenty-six MMA objects are available. (One each appears from Africa, the Pacific, and Precolumbian America.)

An additional feature allows Facebook members to upload their own art work and share it with other Facebook members.

February 01, 2008

Wendy Seltzer on Mukurtu Contextual Archiving

028_28_w400_cropped
My earlier post on this development sparked a lively discussion on the icommons list. Here is a great post on the topic by Wendy Seltzer
:

reblogged via WendySeltzer.org, 1/11/08
:

Mukurtu Contextual Archiving: digital "restrictions" done right

Filed under: culture, commons — wseltzer @ 10:37 am

I'm accustomed to thinking of digital restrictions in the U.S. intellectual property context. We’re told that DRM use restrictions are trade-offs for getting material in digital form, but generally, the trade is a bad one for the public.

The Mukurtu Wumpurrarni-kari archive Kimberly Christen helped the Australian Warumungu community in Tennant Creek to construct puts digital restrictions in a very different light. 

As Kim described when I met her at a conference over the summer, the Warumungu have a set of protocols around objects and representations of people that restrict access to physical objects and photographs. Only elders may see or authorize viewing of sacred objects; other objects may be restricted by family or gender. Images of the deceased shouldn't be viewed, and photographs are often physically effaced. When the Warumungu archive objects or images, they want to implement the same sort of restrictions.

They wanted an archive that was built around Warumungu protocols for accessing and distributing materials (in many forms). One of the first mandates was that everyone had to have a password so that they could only see materials that they were meant to see based on their family/country/community status.

Kim's response was to help construct a digital archive with access controls — ACLs based not on copyright but on the various elements of a person's community status. Your identity sets your view-port into the archive; the computer will show only items you have permission to see. The community can thus give objects context in the online archive similar to that which situates them offline. As an object’s status changes, the database can be updated to reflect new rights or restrictions.

Yet the Mukurtu's form of "DRM" is fragile.  Users are encouraged to print images or burn CDs, which have no controls built-in.

People can also print images or burn CDs and thus allow the images to circulate more widely to others who live on outstations or in other areas. In fact, one of the top priorities in Mukurtu's development was that it needed to allow people to take things with them, printing and burning were necessary to ensure circulation of the materials.

Unlike copyright-DRM systems, which fall back to the most restrictive state when exporting or communicating with "unsigned" devices (such as blocking all copying and breaking or lowering playback resolution on high-definition monitors), this one defaults to granting access.  It's up to the people using the system to determine how new and unknown situations should be handled.

Because the Murkurtu protocol-restrictions support community norms, rather than oppose them, the system can trust its users to take objects with them. If a member of the community chooses to show a picture to someone the machine would not have, his or her interpretation prevails — the machine doesn’t presume to capture or trump the nuance of the social protocol. Social protocols can be reviewed or broken, and so the human choice to comply gives them strength as community ties.

One of the lessons of the recording industry lawsuits and growing shift from DRM'd music is that community norms don't support current copyright law. Rather than fight copyright norms with bad code, we should learn from the Warumungu and build code (and law) to support social practice.

Further good news: Kim says she and Craig Dietrich will be releasing the archive's code as Free Software.

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