VALA2002 Session 13 Feighan

VALA2002
vala peer reviewed

Gee, I didn’t think it was going to be that much: a report on the issues and implications of technically sustainable and affordable bandwidth for Australian libraries

VALA2002 CONCURRENT SESSION 13: e-nabling Infrastructures
Friday 8 February 2002, 14:00 – 14:30
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2002-proceedings/vala2002-session-13-feighan

David Feighan and Peter Schmidt

VICNET, Vic

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala2002

Abstract

This paper explores the dilemma of increased bandwidth requirements and costs in the light of stagnant or decreasing library budgets, and how one group of Australian libraries have attempted to resolve this problem by shared networking and consortia purchasing. Increasingly, library services are dependent on Internet bandwidth to deliver information services, and the bandwidth required for, as well as the cost to deliver, these on-line services is increasing. As the delivery of on-line services has become a core library business, speed and reliability have become increasingly important, as has the recurring cost of bandwidth, but library funding does not always recognise these facts. The Internet industry has become more complex and offers greater choice for delivery (terrestrial, atmospheric, satellite) as well as offering a wide array of cost structures, but these offerings are not necessarily the best solution for the libraries involved. Pricing and technical options often have hidden costs and though they may suit current needs, increased usage makes the costs prohibitive. This paper draws on practical experience in delivering sustainable cost-competitive bandwidth solutions to libraries and looks at how collaborative solutions can offer benefits to the participating libraries.

 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.

 

Williamson Award 2016

The 2016 Robert D. Williamson Award went to Mal Booth, from University of Technology, Sydney.

The 2016 Williamson Award recipient does not have a traditional library career, but has invested the past 20 years making a significant difference in a number of library and cultural settings.

He first worked in the sector in 1996 as the Head of the People Management and Development Team in one of Australia’s major cultural institutions. He became Head of the Institution’s Research Centre in 2001 with a focus on digitising fragile and high-use records in one of Australia’s largest and most culturally significant specialist collections.

MalBooth300

In 2006 he curated an exhibition which featured the innovative use of archival and library collections and forged strong relationships with overseas institutions for loans and promotion of the material. This exhibition attracted 250,000 visitors and remains one of the most successful temporary exhibitions of its kind.

He is a pioneer in the adoption and use of social media and new technologies, and instrumental in setting up the Institution’s blog, enabling staff to discuss their interests and stories and strengthening relationships with the public.

He is a trailblazer in the development of podcasts in Australian cultural institutions, where he was instrumental in the implementation and effective use of Twitter, Facebook and Flickr. This enabled access to the Institution and its collections through social media, and encouraged more visitations to exhibitions, public programs and the website.

Arguably, his greatest legacy at this institution is his work in digitising collections and making them available online. Digital preservation and access online continues today on the foundations of the work he established.

He has been recognized by his peers as an idea’s person and someone who has challenged many library sacred cows. As early as 2010 he started introducing Design Thinking methodologies at his University Library to co-create library services and empower staff at all levels in planning for the future.

Over the last few years his work has focused on being an advocate for openness and new models of scholarly publishing, and on pushing boundaries in Library design – moving beyond spaces and technology, and seeing the library as connecting people, culture and knowledge.

He is well known for generously sharing his thoughts about the role of libraries in society, and about the challenges we face, acknowledging that we have power as a profession to change things for the better. His blog is always thought-provoking and he is a highly sought-after speaker at international conferences.

He is an inspiration to many in the profession and well-respected even if he only occasionally wears a tie.

It is with great pleasure that the VALA Committee has unanimously endorsed Mal Booth as the 2016 Robert D. Williamson Award recipient.

 


VALA2016 Conference App

Introducing the VALA2016 Conference App

VALA2016 App Website Banner 1000x200 new

Welcome to our (largely) paperless Conference, thanks to Zerista, the official smartphone app for VALA2016.

Free to all VALA2016 delegates, the app is networking information tool available for iPhone, Android and mobile web.

Monday 1 February Update

All properly registered delegates (registration includes your unique email address) received an email at 9.30am AEDT, inviting them to access the VALA2016 conference app.

Haven’t received an invitation? Check that your registration included your unique email address (not an administrator or generic that is shared by others); if you need to update your email address, or are having other difficulties accessing the conference app, please contact the VALA2016 Conference Office on T +61 3 9645 6311 or E vala@wsm.com.au.

System Requirements

Please note that to download the VALA conference app, your phone or device will require a minimum of Apple iOS 8 or Android 4.0. If your device doesn’t support either of these operating systems, use the browser on your device to access the same information at https://vala2016.zerista.com.

app picture

Downloading the App

All delegates received an email pre-conference with an invitation to download the official conference app. If you have not downloaded your app pre-conference, simply visit the Registration & Information Desk located in Concourse Area 3, opposite Door 6 of the Melbourne Exhibition Centre to retrieve your login details to download the app.

Once you have downloaded the app, connect with other registered VALA2016 attendees during and after the Conference. Joining the community will allow you to:

  • Update your personal profile to add your headshot and bio
  • Add pictures, videos, your blog and feed plus more to your page so that other attendees know more about you
  • Maximise your time at VALA2016 by scheduling conference sessions, social functions, and meetings
  • Browse attendees to pinpoint who you want to meet at VALA2016 (and where!)
  • Use the filter by section on the exhibitors tab to find companies you’re interested in
  • Make notes, start conversations and join chatter groups

Play The Game!

Valadvantage logo

  • Log in to the VALA game and play for prizes and bragging rights – check the leaderboard in the app to see how many points you have!

 

VALA2016 Session 15 Tiffen

VALA2016 Conference logo
vala invited paper reviewed
Belinda Tiffen
Belinda Tiffen

Moving Beyond Search … Towards Discovery

VALA2016 CONCURRENT SESSION 15: Discover IT
Thursday 11 February 2016, 11:25 –  11:55
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2016-proceedings/vala2016-session-15-tiffen

Belinda Tiffen

University of Technology Sydney, NSW

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala16 #s38

Read the paper, view the video of the presentation on the VALA2016 GigTV channel and view the presentation slides here:

Abstract

In 2014 UTS Library opened the first underground and RFID-enabled automated storage and retrieval system in Australia. The shift of about 500,000 low-use print materials from open stacks necessitated a major change in our approach to collection discovery. Older systems predicated towards efficient known-item searching would not meet our clients’ requirements for browsing and serendipitous discovery as an important part of their research, learning and sense-making activities. UTS Library has therefore commenced on an iterative and human-centred design process to develop discovery systems and to provide other initiatives which meet the needs of our clients and enable rich, contextual information discovery and retrieval. In this paper we will outline some of these systems and initiatives and demonstrate some prototypes we have been developing.

 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.

 

VALA2016 Plenary 3 Charles

VALA2016 Conference logo
vala keynote speaker
Valentine Charles
Valentine Charles

Building a Framework for Semantic Cultural Heritage Data

VALA2016 PLENARY SESSION 3
Wednesday 10 February 2016, 9:00 – 10:15
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2016-proceedings/vala2016-plenary-3-charles

Valentine Charles

Europeana Foundation

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala16 #p3

View the video of the presentation on the VALA2016 GigTV channel and presentation slides here:

Abstract

The creation of Europeana, the digital library for Europe raised a key question: how to integrate and exchange multilingual and cross-domain data? The challenge was to develop an advanced data model, re-using components of the most recent web technology while preserving domain specificities.  Now, five years later, the Europeana Data Model is the core model of Europeana and is used by several other cultural aggregators, such as the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) and the German Digital Library.  The library community has a key role in defining the future of the model. Its involvement will enable the connection of library data with other cultural heritage data in a seamless, semantic and interoperable environment.

 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.

 

 

VALA2016 Plenary 4 Ford

VALA2016 Conference logo
vala keynote speaker logo
Kevin Ford
Kevin Ford

There’s An Ambiguous Road Sign that Reads ‘bibframe’ and a Fork in the Road. Do You Take It?

VALA2016 PLENARY SESSION 4
Wednesday 10 February 2016, 16:20 – 17:30
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2016-proceedings/vala2016-plenary-4-ford
ORCID ID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9066-2408

Kevin Ford

AVPreserve

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala16 #p4

View the video of the presentation on the VALA2016 GigTV channel and presentation slides here:

Abstract

The Bibframe ontology contains minimally 3 forks, independent projects begun with a copy of an existing project and no assumption that changes in the new fork can be merged with its root. What produced this fragmentation? Are differences reconcilable? If so, by what means? If not, what are the alternatives? Is Bibframe’s stricture to produce a single RDF model causing more problems than it solves? This talk will explore these questions, discussing how this fragmented reality emerged when the primary – if not singular – objective is to create a data model and format the library community could embrace with the same fidelity MARC has enjoyed for nearly 50 years.

 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.

 

 

VALA2016 Plenary 5 Proctor

VALA2016 Conference logo
vala keynote speaker logo
Nancy Proctor
Nancy Proctor

The Museum as Start-up

VALA2016 PLENARY SESSION 5
Thursday 11 February 2016, 9:00 – 10:15
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2016-proceedings/vala2016-plenary-5-proctor

Nancy Proctor

Baltimore Museum of Art

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala16 #p5

View the video of the presentation on the VALA2016 GigTV channel and presentation slides here:

Abstract

The museum business model is broken: overly dependent on the largess of a dying breed of philanthropists and unable to demonstrate impact and social value to younger, civic-minded audiences, museums risk sinking into irrelevance as well as bankruptcy. With unique constraints that would daunt the most bullish of investors, museums cannot be run like typical consumer-serving businesses. But in this discussion of the future and sustainability of the museum model, Nancy Proctor will ask how museums might reboot in the “era of the citizen” as “lean start-ups”: agile, iterative, and entrepreneurial in nature.

 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.

 

 

VALA2016 Plenary 6 Lauritsen

VALA2016 Conference logo
vala keynote speaker logo
Karen Lauritsen
Karen Lauritsen

Inspiring Creative Partnerships Through Improv

VALA2016 PLENARY SESSION 6
Thursday 11 February 2016, 16:20 – 17:30
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2016-proceedings/vala2016-plenary-6-lauritsen

Karen Lauritsen

Orfalea College of Business, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala16 #p6

View the video of the presentation on the VALA2016 GigTV channel and presentation slides here:

Abstract

It’s easy to miss opportunities in the moment when you’re obsessing about the future. In libraries, just as in life, the future is mysterious. Effective improvisers know how to focus on the now, and we’re all improvisers by nature of being human. If we inspire improvisation and play among ourselves and our users, libraries can be agile, entrepreneurial organizations that drive powerful partnerships. But to do so means we must listen deeply, be empathetic and embrace the unknown.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.

 

 

VALA2016 Plenary 1 Lankes

VALA2016 Conference logo
vala keynote speaker
Amanda Lawrence
David Lankes

Librarianship: Saving The World One Community At A Time

VALA2016 PLENARY SESSION 1
Tuesday 9 February 2016, 9:00 – 10:15
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2016-proceedings/vala2016-plenary-1-lankes

David Lankes

Syracuse University

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala16 #p1

View the video of the presentation on the VALA2016 GigTV channel here:

Abstract

We live in uncertain times of war, protest, terrorism, economic austerity, ecological disasters, and mass surveillance. What can librarians do to help communities in such turbulent times? Lankes will discuss how a proactive librarianship can build an alternative path to the growing “security versus freedom” narrative. Librarianship can shine in times of crisis, but it requires a focus on improving society over informing customers.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.

 

 

VALA2016 Plenary 2 Rainie

VALA2016 Conference logo
vala keynote speaker
Lee Rainie
Lee Rainie

The Puzzles Librarians Need to Solve

VALA2016 PLENARY SESSION 2
Tuesday 9 February 2016, 16:20 – 17:30
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2016-proceedings/vala2016-plenary-2-rainie

Lee Rainie

Pew Research Centre

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala16 #p2

View the video of the presentation on the VALA2016 GigTV channel and presentation slides here:

Abstract

In order to thrive in the future, librarians will need to be great forecasters and innovators. There are key puzzles they need to figure out. Among them: What’s the future of personal enrichment and entertainment? What’s the future of people’s pathways to knowledge and reference expertise? What’s the future of public technology and community anchor institutions? What’s the future of learning “spaces”? What’s the future of attention and its structural holes? Lee Rainie of the Pew Research Center will describe how his organization’s research provides guideposts for librarians along three dimensions of library activity: the people, the place, and the platform.

 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.