What Uses for New Digital Technologies?

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What if Web 2.0 Really Does Change Everything? : 

What if Web 2.0 Really Does Change Everything? Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK UKOLN is supported by: This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 licence (but note caveat) Acceptable Use Policy Recording of this talk, taking photos, discussing the content using Twitter, blogs, etc. is permitted providing distractions to others is minimised. Resources bookmarked using ‘ucisa-cisg-2009’ tag http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/conferences/ucisa-cisg-2009/ Email: b.kelly@ukoln.ac.uk Twitter: http://twitter.com/briankelly/ Blog: http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/

My Previous UCISA Talks : 

2 My Previous UCISA Talks UCISA 2004 Management Conference Plenary talk on “What Can Internet Technologies Offer?” when I introduced a set of technologies now known as Web 2.0 UCISA 2006 Management Conference Plenary talk on “IT Services: Help or Hindrance?” when I argued that IT Services needed to engage with Web 2.0 otherwise they might find themselves marginalised UCISA 2008 Management Conference Pre-recorded video contribution to talk on “Digital Natives Run by Digital Immigrants: IT Services are Dead, Long Live IT Services 2.0!” when I argued that IT Services need to reinvent themselves

Today’s Talk … : 

3 Today’s Talk … Development of views over time: IT Services needed to understand Web 2.0 and not dismiss it as a ‘trendy marketing term’ [2004] IT Services needed to engage with Web 2.0 services (IT Services as visitors) [2006] IT Services needed to embrace Web 2.0 services (IT Services as residents) [2008] I now feel that: Institutions need to embrace Web 2.0 & rethink their roles (HEIs as residents) Technologies Engaging withtechnologies Departmental cultural change Institutional cultural change

Beyond IT and the Techies (1) : 

4 Beyond IT and the Techies (1) Need to consider implications of the “The Edgeless University” report: “The forces now confronting higher education have been called 'a perfect storm’. They are serious challenges. [HEIs] can no longer depend on ever-increasing allocation of funds” “This seminar feels a bit like sitting with a group of record industry executives in 1999” Conclusions: Universities need to respond by reaching out – they are becoming ’edgeless’ A renewed commitment to openness Experimentation and investment New tools to support teaching

Beyond IT and the Techies(2) : 

5 Beyond IT and the Techies(2) A need to consider: Implications of the “Higher Education in a Web 2.0 World” report What ‘network as a platform’ / Cloud computing means to IT Service departments and the institution How Universities should respond How IT Service departments can make use of the Social Web

Overhaul of Universities : 

Overhaul of Universities As public funding becomes more scarce, universities will be encouraged to focus on what they do best There will be a consumer revolution for students with each course labelled with key facts … universities have enjoyed a "benign financial climate" in recent years … this high level of public funding cannot continue 6 Or will Conservative plans be more relevant to the sector?

Opportunities & Challenges : 

7 Opportunities & Challenges

UCISA CISG Culture? : 

UCISA CISG Culture? Note it would be useful to ask you & your users for their thoughts on MIS departments – and how this may differ from academic support, developers, JISC, … 8 Control Manage Data Quality Institution Security Slow-moving Law Data protection Copyright Procedures Policies Departmental Prince 2

What You’re Not? : 

What You’re Not? And please don’t be ‘always beta’ and innovative with payroll systems & pensions! 9 Innovative Flexible Risk-taking User-focussed Egotistical Individual Agile Development

Slide 10: 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/pwz/2096587340/sizes/o Management Information Systems http://www.flickr.com/photos/pwz/2096587340/sizes/o

Slide 11: 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/pwz/2096587340/sizes/o Management Information Systems http://www.flickr.com/photos/pwz/2096587340/sizes/o “Security” “Business Processes” “Risk analysis” “Our needs” “Data Protection” Taken from slide by Wildish & Howell, UCISA CISG 2008

Don’t really work together… : 

Not co-located (Web sits with Marketing) Protective MIS – take ‘custodians of data’ role v. seriously Do Web Teams naturally think “how can we extend our project to create business efficiencies”? Do MIS teams think about the end user or concentrate on business process? Don’t really work together… Talk on “Why can’t I use your data? Can web services and CIS work together in harmony when it comes to the web?” by Alison Wildish & John Howell, UCISA CISG 2008 Note focus on cultural differences within the institution

Slide 13: 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/quelsaa/2080736454/sizes/o/ http://www.flickr.com/photos/quelsaa/2080736454/sizes/o/ Taken from slide by Wildish & Howell, UCISA CISG 2008

We, Too, Have Social Interests : 

We, Too, Have Social Interests 14 @cloggingchris

We, Too, Have Social Interests : 

We, Too, Have Social Interests Rapper sword dancing 15 @briankelly

It’s About The Individual! : 

16 It’s About The Individual! How do you relate to a world in which the focus of the Social Web is the individual. Challenges posed: ‘It’s my space’ ‘Sustainability Privacy Editorial control Branding …

Web 2.0 : 

17 Web2MemeMap, Tim O’Reilly, 2005 Characteristics Of Web 2.0 Network as platform Benefits of scale Always beta Clean URIs Remix and mash-ups Syndication (RSS) Architecture of participation Blogs & wikis Social networking Social tagging Trust and openness Web 2.0 A non-technical perspective on Web 2.0 It’s not just about the technological aspects, it’s about rethinking ownership and use of services and content You know this

If Web 2.0 Changes Everything : 

If Web 2.0 Changes Everything The role of universities in a Web 2.0 world? “… if Web 2.0 changes everything, I see no reason why that doesn't apply as much to professional bodies and universities as it does to high street bookshops” Andy Powell, Eduserv “There is a little doubt in my mind that Web 2.0 will eventually change everything in respect of university education … what makes the current situation different is the emergence of communication & collaboration tools that easily & transparently transcend the organisation. The Web 2.0 university will be one therefore that consumes, collaborates and communicates - some are better placed to build such a model, others not.” David Harrison, Cardiff University 18

What Might Web 2.0 Change? : 

What Might Web 2.0 Change? This is not your father’s recession – and Web 2.0 isn’t your father’s new IT development. But if Web 2.0 changes everything, what are the driving forces? Network as a platform Reluctance to spend / invest Social dimension to learning & research Out-sourced digital identity New modes of learning / research Reluctance to travel Always beta Culture of openness 19

The 1 – 9 – 90 Challenge : 

20 The 1 – 9 – 90 Challenge Participation Inequality: Encouraging More Users to Contribute In most online communities, 90% of users are lurkers who never contribute, 9% of users contribute a little, and 1% of users account for almost all the action. (Jakob Neilson, Oct 2006) Potential Benefits: Globalisation Cross-fertilisation Unexpected benefits Maximising impact Potential Dangers: Globalisation Mono-culture Unexpected dangers Loss of impact Remember that Social Web services improve as the numbers of users increase

A Question : 

21 A Question “How Can Institutions Develop Innovative and Affordable Tools to Engage Increasingly Sophisticated Audiences” (JISC Digitisation Conf 2007) Some thoughts: In some areas they shouldn’t attempt to compete with market place successes (e.g. Google) If some cases institutions may be indifferent to the service provider (e.g. Microsoft or Google Docs) There are real needs to: Answer the question “Why develop?” Be realistic if development work is funded Be user-focussed (and this isn’t necessarily easy) Be prepared to write off investment if users don’t want what we’ve developed

Being Realistic : 

22 Being Realistic Options in light of the credit crunch: Let’s build up an empire now which will be embarrassing to close down Let’s use issues of ownership, stability, privacy, … to stifle discussion of 3rd party solutions Let’s explore a blended approach (a 3rd way?)

The pilot was a success … : 

The pilot was a success … Following a very successful pilot project the JANET Collaborate prototype site will shortly be retired.  … This retirement has come about as a result of difficulties in maintaining the prototype beyond its intended lifetime. We are now looking at how to add the functionality into the JANET service portfolio in order to provide an improved feature set based on the requirements gathered in the pilot.   We understand that some fans of the prototype site may be disappointed by this news. We apologise for this and at the same time thank all the users of the prototype for their strong, enthusiastic support during the pilot. 23

Managed External Services : 

Managed External Services We’re seeing greater take-up of email in the cloud 24 Cloud computing - Hope or Hype?, From A Distance blog, 4 Nov 2009, Chris Sexton Discussions about managed cloud services now mainstream

Unmanaged External Services : 

Unmanaged External Services My UK Web Focus blog, hosted on Wordpress.com 25

Unmanaged External Services : 

Unmanaged External Services IT Service director blogs on 3rd party service! 26 And allows unmoderated 3rd party content to be published

Use of Cloud Services : 

Use of Cloud Services Use of services in the cloud: We are committed professionals We want to support innovation We can demonstrate best practices 27

Towards A Model : 

Towards A Model David Harrison & Joe Nichols have been developing a model for how services within a University need to re-evaluate their role and function 28

Slide 29: 

The Modern Working Environment central services MLE VLE World Wide

Slide 30: 

The Modern Working Environment World Wide central services MRE VRE

Slide 33: 

External third-party services Central services Virtual Research Environment Managed Research Environment My Working Environment University Who can access the data?

Towards a Culture of Openness : 

34 http://www.flickr.com/photos/zebble/6080622/sizes/l Towards a Culture of Openness

To Bring Rewards : 

35 To Bring Rewards http://www.flickr.com/photos/brittanyg/1469478616/sizes/l

Examples : 

Examples Visualisation of MPs expenses claims: Data ’provided’ by Daily Telegraph Exposed on Guardian Platform Digitised by ‘the crowd’ Processed by Web 2.0 services: Yahoo Pipes, Google Spreadsheets, .. Developed by Tony Hirst, OU 36 Shouldn’t publicly-funded data be shared by default?

We’ve Shared (In The Past) : 

We’ve Shared (In The Past) UCISA document sharing archives established in late 1980s Now much easier to share: Documentation Training resources Screencasts … Suggestion made to enhance at UCISA 2009 - but page recently deleted (interesting when a challenge?) 37 http://www.ucisa.ac.uk/groups/tlig/docs/docshare.htm Broken since demise of Mailbase!

If You Don’t … : 

If You Don’t … If you don’t take responsibility others may … 38 Blog post, 3 Nov 2009

If You Don’t … : 

If You Don’t … 39 If you don’t take responsibility others may … Links to Library Web site produced by Owen Stephens Google Custom Search Engine created across these links by Tony Hirst

If You Don’t … : 

If You Don’t … 40 If you don’t take responsibility others may … Links to Library Web site produced by Owen Stephens Google Custom Search Engine created across these links by Tony Hirst Voila! Researcher happy; search service available to others Links unlikely to be maintained

Reusing Data in JISC World : 

Reusing Data in JISC World JISC-funded IE MOSAIC competition: Based on library circulation data from Huddersfield University Library Data anonymised & APIs published Competition provided: New insights into how data could be used 41 The future is bright … but

But : 

But Developments in my thinking: Externally-hosted Web 2.0 services (Google Mail, Flickr, Slideshare, etc.) posed as a threat to encourage IT Services to change … I now feel they can be used to deliver services in our institutions … and so do increasing numbers of institutions Don’t be daft : The services aren’t sustainable – they may go bankrupt tomorrow What about the levels of service, legal issues, data protection, copyright, accessibility, ... These are all legitimate issues to raise 42

Apply Risks Equally : 

43 Apply Risks Equally But let’s apply the risk assessment to the alternatives: What have the UMIST, AHDS, WebCT and Highwaycode.gov.uk Web sites in common?

Apply Risks Equally : 

44 Apply Risks Equally But let’s apply the risk assessment to the alternatives: What have the UMIST, AHDS, WebCT and Highwaycode.gov.uk Web sites in common? They have all been taken over or been merged with other organisations (or will be shortly) and services may have been scrapped or terms & conditions changed There are risks that public sector organisations, JISC-funded services, licensed software vendors, etc. may not be sustainable, may changes T&C, etc. Web 2.0 is nothing new.

Risk Management : 

45 Risk Management JISC infoNet Risk Management infoKit: “In education, as in any other environment, you can’t decide not to take risks: that simply isn’t an option in today’s world. All of us take risks and it’s a question of which risks we take” Examples of people who are likely to be adverse stakeholders: People who fear loss of their jobs People who will require re-training People who may be moved to a different department / team People .. required to commit resources to the project People who fear loss of control over a function or resources People who will have to do their job in a different way People who will have to carry out new or additional functions People who will have to use a new technology

Risk Assessment & Copyright : 

Risk Assessment & Copyright R = A x B x C x D where R is the financial risk; A is the chances that what has been done is infringement; B is the chances that the copyright owner becomes aware of such infringement; C is the chances that having become aware, the owner sues; D is the financial cost (damages, legal fees, opportunity costs in defending the action, plus loss of reputation) for such a legal action. 46 Empowering Users and Institutions: A Risks and Opportunities Framework for Exploiting the Social Web, Kelly & Oppenheim, Cultural Heritage Online, Dec 2009

Towards a Framework : 

47 Towards a Framework “Time To Stop Doing and Start Thinking: A Framework For Exploiting Web 2.0 Services”, Museums & the Web 2009 conference

Conclusions : 

The future is exciting - but we will need to engage in managing our use of the Web 2.0 environment Conclusions Acknowledgments to Michael Edson for the Web Tech Guy and Angry Staff Person