'The Digital Object'
Visualisation, interpretation and sustainability.
UK Museums and the Web 2005,
21st April.
organised by The Museums Computer Group
hosted by The University of Leicester
sponsored by The 24 Hour Museum
cost: £40, £30 to MCG members,
£15 Concessions (students and unwaged). Lunch is included.
registration: will appear on the MCG website shortly.
http://www.museumscomputergroup.org.uk/
Today, amidst the information age, the idea of 'object', 'visit' and (even) 'site' have been transformed. The 'collections' our visitors engage with are just as likely to be digital in format, bringing with them an array of new curatorial challenges as well as audience expectations.
Our community holds one of the richest sources of such information and knowledge available in the world. In communicating this knowledge we need to understand the world of publishing better and consider seriously the permanence of digital material and access to it. At the same time we need to aid understanding of the widest possible audiences by explaining and bringing to life its value to them. A tall order, and all within our limited budgets.
Squaring up to these major changes, and by drawing together a range of practitioners, consultants, scholars, policy makers and industrialists this year's UK Museums and the Web conference focuses attention on to the 'digital object'.
Valuing the digital object
- Perspectives from outside the sector
Chris Yapp, Microsoft.
Publishing the digital object
- Including the International Cultural Portal Survey
Chair: Jon Pratty, 24 Hour Museum.
Accessing the digital object
- Understanding user experience
Chair: Marcus Weisen, MLA.
Defining the digital object
- Net art, digital culture - if its not real, does it have worth?
Chair: Ross Parry, University of Leicester.
Parallel Session a - Learning with the digital object
Chair: Martin Bazley
Parallel Session b - Future technologies and the digital object
- A beginner's guide to the semantic web
Mike Lowndes, Natural History Museum.
Parallel Session c - Ownership over the digital object
- Digital Rights Management and the Lifecycle of a Digital Object
Naomi Korn, Museums Copyright Group.
Managing the digital object
- Best and future practice in digital object management and recording
Chair: Nick Poole, mda.
The reality of the digital object:
- Engaging with the issues facing small museums
Chair: Ian Edelman, Hampshire Museums Service
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