Bigfoot – spore sighted…
Thursday, March 22nd, 2007
I notice with enthusiasm, that the Talis Platform Bigfoot API documentation has been released.
Must clear my schedule… now, where’s my text editor…
I notice with enthusiasm, that the Talis Platform Bigfoot API documentation has been released.
Must clear my schedule… now, where’s my text editor…
“As I see it, in the world of the library management system, amidst the turmoil of takeover and merger, the only constant is the fact that experimentation is free.”
That’s what I started to write in this post, but then I thought, actually no it isn’t.
I was originally thinking along these lines after a conversation I had with Richard Wallis from Talis while marching back to the station last thursday. I was aking about the practicalities of creating a Herefordshire specific union catalogue based on the Talis Platform. The upshot was that I could experiment, but then at the point when the service went live, there would probably be a cost. Therefore experimentation is free.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not getting all petulant that I can’t have totally free stuff. It’s just that I realised that in my excitement I was getting carried away on the experimenting part and forgetting the service delivery and maintenance part. Both very important in the planning stages!
But why change my mind and decide that experimentation is not free?
Experimentation – in the web 2.0 world – is not free. The code may be freely available, and the APIs may be openly accessable, and the data may be sitting there waiting to be openly mashed, but, when you think carefully about what is happenning, you see the strings.
Let’s deal with some specifics…
Perhaps I shoud say “experimentation is low cost“. And it is that low cost prototyping that is going to allow us to feel our way towards the solutions that we crave.
Technorati Tags: library2.0, web2.0, talis, library, experiement, cost
Announcing:
New draft of the self-description microformat
I am looking for volunteers
, who would be willing to have a go at marking their existing website collection descriptions using the self-description microformat. Any takers? Leave a comment, or email me and I will be in touch.
If you are not sure what this self-description thing is; it is a way to take an existing description of a collection and use very simple html to mark-up discreet pieces of information. See selfdescription.org for more info.