Archives & Flickr: Still our favorite for sharing photos, or have we moved on to newer platforms?

Via the brilliant Roger Ebert on Twitter, I just saw this article from Gizmodo: “How Yahoo Killed Flickr and Lost the Internet.” It’s a fascinating read about what happened after Yahoo acquired Flickr. (Warning: it contains quite a few curse words. You have been warned.)

Reading it made me wonder how things are going over at the Flickr Commons. Are there are any participants in that who can comment on whether resources seemed to have been pulled from that service? Is it looking like the future is stable? (Remember, you can comment anonymously if you feel you need to.)

And if Flickr isn’t the cool shiny toy it once was (and it certainly is not), are archives moving to something else to share images? Pinterest is addicting, and I love what the Archives of American Art is doing there, but it doesn’t have all the features of Flickr. Is Flickr still the go-to site for archives to share images, or have we moved on to something else? Facebook, perhaps? Or do you use both?

 

Posted in Flickr | 3 Comments

Signatures needed for online petition to save Canada’s National Archival Development Program

I’m sure by now everyone is aware of the horrific budget cuts suffered by libraries and archives in Canada. If you’re not, there’s a good summary available here . If you want to do something to help, you can:

  • Sign the online petition at change.org:  Note signatures from outside of Canada are welcome as well.
  • Keep up with the news on Twitter by following: @CCA_Archives, @ArchivistsTrek, and the hashtag #NADP
  • You can like the Canadian Council of Archives on Facebook to receive updates on what’s happening
  • If you’re a Canadian citizen, you don’t need me to tell you to email your MP and send a message to the Minister for Canadian Heritage, the Honourable James Moore ["The promotion of our culture...is at the heart of what I do every day"]

If anyone has any other suggestions or sources of information to share, please post a comment. Thanks.

UPDATE: You can also follow Archivists On to Ottawa Trek on Tumblr for updates and news stories.

Posted in Advocacy | Leave a comment

Applications for QR codes in archival settings?

This week I’ve been participating as a guest in Kim Anderson’s online course, “Archival Outreach: Programs and Services,” offered through the School of Information Studies
at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. The class has been using A Different Kind of Web as one of their core texts, so it’s great for me to see how the book works in the classroom. (Short answer: apparently very well.)

In the discussion board, Susan Garwood mentioned attending the AAM meeting recently and hearing a lot about the use of QR codes. So I asked her about how she thought they could be used in archival settings, and here’s her answer:

We’ve been exploring all ranges of archival outreach including exhibits so, although traditionally a museum function, QR codes can help augment archives outreach in an exhibition as well.  Another area could be on a take away piece.  A brochure or bookmark that might link to the archives on Facebook, a map to the institution, or the museum’s website or blog.  Or perhaps on the outside of the archives (below the hours sign that might link to a contact form).  Within an exhibit, as you know, you can’t put a full transcription of a document within the exhibit and a QR code could link to that.  Anywhere that visitors interact with a document or artifact. I suppose, however, it could be an internal management tool.  I’ve heard of some artifacts being barcoded and having a reader allows you to scan the object and see its documentation which might be helpful in collection retrieval and management within the storage space.

Some of those applications sound very promising. I’ve been skeptical about QR codes, so I thought I would throw it open to the readers. Have any of you used QR codes or know another repository that is using them? What has the response been?

UPDATE: It has been called to my attention that I neglected to cite an important resource in the discussion on QR codes in archives, so here, with my apologies for the omission is: “Put a QR code on it!” Thanks, Rebecca!

Posted in Outreach, Technology for archives | 10 Comments

How You Can Help Launch a Digital Preservation Q&A Site

I’ve been asked to pass along this information to help get more archivists involved in this effort to launch a digital preservation Q&A site.

If you want to learn more, please read this informative blog post from Trevor Owens:
http://www.trevorowens.org/2012/04/how-you-can-help-launch-a-digital-preservation-qa-site/

The proposal itself is here:
http://area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/39787/digital-preservation

It’s a great idea, so I hope if you have what they are looking for that you’ll participate and help get this off the ground.

Posted in Crowdsourcing, Electronic records | Leave a comment

New Archivists without Borders U.S. Chapter

I’m happy to forward this along. Please follow them on Twitter, like them on Facebook, and read and comment on their proposal. Thank you to the organizers, listed below, for your good work on this important effort.

Dear fellow archivist,

It is with great excitement that we announce the release of the first half of the proposal to form a U.S. Chapter of Archivists without Borders. This portion of the proposal, which includes Background and Mission Statement, will be open for comment until May 31, 2012. You can find the full text to these sections on our website: http://awbuschapter.wordpress.com/. To contribute your comments on these two sections, please use the comments feature on our website. We are currently working with Archives without Borders International to draft the remainder of the proposal. Please be patient as we work diligently to push these additional sections out for your input.

As members of the archival community who have expressed interest in the vision Archivists without Borders promotes, your contribution is vital. The comments you make will shape the direction of this organization. We welcome your ideas for the organization’s potential, criticisms of the wording, alerts to unanticipated implications, and questions about how we currently envision this chapter functioning.

We are also pleased to announce that you can now follow AwB-US on Twitter (@AWB_US) and on Facebook:http://tinyurl.com/8x4y3nv.

Please let us know if you have any questions.

Best regards,

AWB-US Core Working Group

Joel Blanco-Rivera
Erin Faulder
Jasmine Jones
Mario H. Ramirez
Amanda Strauss
Adam Zimmerli

Posted in Advocacy | 1 Comment

Campaign for Spontaneous Scholarships for SAA12 will begin in June

This is just a quick note to let you know that I am planning on following up on last year’s successful Spontaneous Scholarships campaign again this year to help pay people for the cost of registration for the SAA Annual Meeting in San Diego ($319 for regular SAA members, $139 for students).

The tentative schedule is that I will kick off the campaign on June 1, both by putting up the post asking for donations and starting to accept requests for funding. The process for applicants will be the same–all you need to do is send in your name and indicate if you will be registering as a student or regular SAA member. Anyone who needs some assistance with funding is welcome to apply. The deadline for applicants will be June 29, at which point I will see how much money we have and begin drawing names out of a hat, and keep going until we run out of money. Lucky winners will be notified on or about June 30/July 1, so that you will have time to register before the early bird deadline (July 6). Once I receive confirmation that you’ve registered, I’ll mail you a check to cover your registration for the meeting.

I’m happy to start taking donations now, if people want to start sending them in by mail. One reason I’m starting a little early this year is to encourage people to send in checks, which are not subject to PayPal transaction fees so more money goes directly to our colleagues. If you want to send in a check, please email me at info@archivesnext.com and I’ll provide you with my mailing address. (Or if you’re an SAA member you can just look me up in the member database. I’m listed.) On June 1 I’ll put up the post with a PayPal link, so if you’d rather do that, just wait for June. (Remember that since this is an informal effort your donation is NOT tax deductible. All you will get is a warm fuzzy feeling knowing you helped some of your colleagues and my everlasting gratitude. Last year I did not post a list of the people who donated. If you think that would be a good idea this year, let me know.)

So expect to hear more about this in June. I’ll be trying to find every avenue I can think of in which to ask for donations, and I’m always happy to have people helping me to get the word out. We did very well last year in large part because one donor was mind-bogglingly generous, but we can’t count on that again this year. Every small donations helps. I don’t know how many people will be asking for funding–San Diego might not be as big a draw as Chicago was, but I’d like to be able to fund as many people as possible.

Last year in 2 weeks we had 94 generous people donate and made 26 people very happy. This year since the first number will be bigger I hope the other two will be also.

Posted in Conferences, Fun stuff, Society of American Archivists (SAA) | 7 Comments

Links from MAC talk on participatory archives

If you were among the lucky (?) people in the audience today, here, as promised, are the links to the sites I mentioned in my talk. If you are one of the millions of people who were not there, these are the sites I mentioned as examples of participatory archives. I know there are a great many others, so I apologize if  I left out one of your favorites. I’m happy that there is an overabundance of riches when it comes to choosing examples on this topic. (At least examples that meet the criteria I use.) I’ll probably be posting my slides to SlideShare soon, or I may post them here on the blog so I can add the explanatory text that would help make some of them comprehensible. (Here’s a post about the talk I gave on this topic at the 2011 SAA Annual Meeting.)

Here are the links: Continue reading

Posted in Archives 3.0, Conferences, Crowdsourcing, Flickr, Fun stuff, Government information, Participatory archives, Wikis | 1 Comment

If it’s Thursday, this must be Grand Rapids . ..

I know my travel schedule is nowhere near as hectic as many other people’s but this spring I’ve been on the road quite a bit. A few weeks ago I had the pleasure of giving a keynote address to the Society of North Carolina Archivists in Greensboro. I used the opportunity to expand on the blog post about trends facing archives, and I think it went very well. As I said on Twitter, given the relatively small size of the meeting, I was surprised (although I shouldn’t have been) by the overall high quality and diversity of the sessions. I’m happy to come back to SNCA anytime, y’all!

Last week I was in Cape May, New Jersey for the spring meeting of the Mid-Atlantic Regional Archives Conference (MARAC). MARAC is my local regional association, so for me those meetings are as much about “fellowship”as attending the sessions. Although the lively Twitter discussion that took place during the session intended to discuss archives and the digital humanities was very useful, and I plan to return to the ideas it sparked as soon as things calm down a bit. It was also lovely to meet some new people, including students from Pitt and Maryland, as well as catch up with familiar faces.

But it’s Thursday, and now I’m in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where the adventurous Midwest Archives Conference has invited me to give a plenary address at their annual meeting. I don’t consider myself a “plenary speaker” kind of person, so I’m afraid I won’t bring the “wow factor” that I think a good plenary speaker achieves. But then, I have ridiculously high standards. I’m talking about participatory archives, so there is no doubt I will be enthusiastic and speak quickly. My goals will be for people to 1) laugh, 2) leave with some new ideas, and hopefully 3) leave thinking that this is not only something they should try, but which they could actually do. If I can mange that, I’ll be happy with my performance.

Looking forward to meeting more new people at MAC, but now I have to return to practicing this talk, as the clock rapidly ticks down to the appointed hour . . .

Posted in Shameless self-promotion | Leave a comment

Finally, someone’s planning a PBS show on “Treasures of the Special Collections” and maybe you can be on it

Although why they went with “special collections” and not “archives,” given how popular the latter is and how no one cares about its technical definition, is beyond me. Note the April 20 deadline.

According to the Association of Research Libraries site:

Call for Story Ideas: Public TV Series to Highlight Special Collections

Penn State Public Broadcasting (WPSU) is developing a national public television series called Treasures of the Special Collections—that the producers see as a cross between History Detectives and Antiques Roadshow—to tell stories found in the special collections of research libraries. The producers are currently developing a funding proposal and are seeking help to identify story ideas to be cited in a written description of a hypothetical first season.

Stories could come from a number of angles. They could be researcher driven, e.g., a mysterious artifact’s purpose is revealed; perhaps an author uncovers a piece of information that sheds new light on a famous discovery; or a totally new line of discovery is initiated due to previously unused sources. A story could be curator driven—showing off myriad wonders in a single collection—with artifacts as old as medieval manuscripts or as contemporary and spontaneous as the “Africa Responds to Obama” collection of artifacts/memorabilia at Northwestern University that sprang up in the wake of the 2008 election. There could be a story about how a collection came into being—perhaps a profile of someone even now in the process of donating his or her life’s work or personal collection to a library.

The producers feel that this series holds great potential for increasing awareness and appreciation for special collections and research libraries and our mission—to preserve and protect primary sources and to make them accessible—fostering the notion that it is the use of special collections that makes them special. If you are interested in engaging this project, by April 20 please send brief descriptions of your story ideas (and links to related material) to WPSU producer Kristian Berg (kristian@psu.edu).

Posted in Advocacy, Outreach | Leave a comment

Matthew Kirschenbaum’s DHSI Plenary Lecture: “Digital Humanities Archive Fever”

I have been meaning to write a post about this lecture for some time but haven’t been able to find the time for it. But that shouldn’t stop you from watching it, if you haven’t already. Matt generously posted a list of his projects in the comments on the previous post, and I think his point of view in discussing the intersection of archives and digital humanities will interest readers of this blog. Enjoy, and I’m interested in your reactions too.

DHSI Plenary Lecture: “Digital Humanities Archive Fever” from MITH in MD on Vimeo.

Posted in Archival profession, History & related professions | Leave a comment