Posts mit dem Label zukunft werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label zukunft werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Montag, 6. November 2017

Lankes: Expect more! - Conclusion

Lankes, R. David: Expect more : Demanding Better Libraries for Today's Complex World. - 1. Aufl. - 2012. - Online unter https://davidlankes.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/ExpectMoreOpen.pdf

Samstag, 4. Februar 2017

Libraries as Convener, Enabler, Distributor, Advocate, and Archive in the Future Knowledge Economy

Plenary presentation at the 2016 Charleston Conference by James G. Neal, University Librarian Emeritus, Columbia University. Moderated by Anthony Watkinson, CIBER. "By 2026, there will be no information and services industry targeting products to the library marketplace. Content and applications will be directed to the consumer. Open resources for learning, research and recreation, and open source tools supporting innovation, and individual and organizational productivity, will be more prevalant in the global economy. Self-publishing and niche technology development will dominate. Information policy wars will dictate national and global legal and legislative debates. Libraries must be effectively integrated into the new creative environments." [via The Lone Wolf Librarian]

Sonntag, 10. November 2013

Sonntag, 11. November 2012

Anthony Marx: Do we still need a library?

Research libraries have long been considered the intellectual hub of a community, whether it's a university or a city. With the shift to digital content, network-based services, and globalization, research libraries have been challenged to adapt in unprecedented ways. Some even question their ongoing importance.
Drawing on his experience as the former president of Amherst College and the current president and CEO of the New York Public Library, Anthony Marx speculates on the future of research libraries. You'll be surprised by what he has to say.
58:26, engl. Auf der Webseite unter "download" als Video und als Podcast verfügbar!

Mittwoch, 1. August 2012

Video zur Podiumsdiskussion: Zukunft der Informationswissenschaft

Video zur Podiumsdiskussion: Zukunft der Informationswissenschaft (DGI)

Moderation: Wolfgang G. Stock [Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf]
Teilnehmer: Willi Bredemeier [Password], Stefan Gradmann [DGI], Christian Schlögl [Uni Graz], Marlies Ockenfeld [IWP], Hans-Christoph Hobohm [FH Potsdam]

Zu Beginn der Podiumsdiskussion stellte der Moderator zunächst die Themen und Fragen vor, um die es in der Diskussion primär gehen sollte:

Stand der Informationswissenschaft in deutschsprachigen Ländern: Gibt es Unterschiede zu anderen Ländern? Wo liegen unsere Stärken und Schwächen? Welche Hindernisse und Chancen gibt es?

Stand der Informationspraxis in deutschsprachigen Ländern: Was unterscheidet die heutige Informationspraxis von der Dokumentation? Welche Kompetenzen müssen Informationspraktiker beherrschen?

Wie ist das Verhältnis von Informationswissenschaft und Informationspraxis zur Web Science und zu Social Media?

Mehr unter http://blogfarm.phil-fak.uni-duesseldorf.de/dgi2012/podiumsdiskussion-zukunft-der-informationswissenschaft/

[via LIS in Potsdam]

Donnerstag, 2. Februar 2012

Amy Buckland: TEDxLibrariansTO


10:07, engl.
"Amy Buckland is the eScholarship, ePublishing & Digitization Coordinator at McGill University Library, where she is responsible for scholarly communication, publishing initiatives, and making rare items from special collections available to the world through digitization. She loves information almost as much as Fluevog shoes, and thinks academic libraryland is ripe for a revolution. You can find her online at informingthoughts.com and in most social networks as Jambina."

Sonntag, 23. Oktober 2011