Hi Michael!
Personally, I think that one of the things that the MediaWiki
software could really do with is an easy "tagging and rating" system,
not for Wikipedia, but for other Wiki projects where people want to be
able to put collections data online and let visitors add keywords and
star rankings without needing to delve into manually editing markup.
Serious Wikipedians could still edit categories, passers-by could add
tags as suggestions. Perhaps the tags and star ratings section could be
ruled off from the bottom of a Wiki page in its own little footnote
section. It'd be cool. You could even have a tag cloud based on how many
people have added particular tags to the page, and perhaps even a little
comments section where people could comment about the exhibit (as
opposed to a Wiki article's talk page, which is only usually supposed to
be reserved for discussions about the page itself). If readers don't
want to be bothered by the "social" end-section, they could have the
option of browsing with it collapsed or disabled.
Retrofitting these features to MediaWiki doesn't //sound// like a huge
job, but I guess that MW's development is more focused on features that
are likely to be useful to Wikipedia, rather than to galleries and museums.
Maybe someone might get a grant to write an extension.
Eric
On 07/07/2011 09:28, Michael Peel wrote:
> This may be a little off-topic, but there are examples of museums/archives that have used Wikimedia Commons to tag some of their images - e.g. the Bundesarchiv images at:
> http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Images_from_the_German_Federal_Archive
> have been heavily categorised by Wikimedians into categories for the people, places, etc. in the photographs, as well as having their captions corrected* and translated.
>
> It's obviously of fundamental importance for Wikimedia Commons and Wikipedia to have categorized images, so that the appropriate images can easily be found by people reading the Wikipedia articles - I'm less sure how useful it is to the museums, though, where thus far more focus has been put on the description corrections rather than categorisation/tagging.
>
> * See http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Bundesarchiv/Error_reports
>
> Thanks,
> Mike Peel
> Wikimedia UK - http://www.wikimedia.org.uk/
>
> On 7 Jul 2011, at 09:07, Paul Groves wrote:
>
>> Hi Linda,
>>
>> This is also something we're investigating at the moment, however I think if
>> user-tagging is to be implemented and done successfully for museum
>> collections sites (and accepted by curators...), it needs to be done in a
>> thought-through and integrated way and not just as something bolted-on
>> without thought. The PCF example Andy gave is a good example of the former
>> approach, another example which I believe has been a success is that of
>> Brooklyn Museum: http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/tags/
>>
>> Also, not a recent one, but as the Power House museum (
>> http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/collection/database/browsekeywords.php )
>> have been supporting user-tagging for years, they probably have some
>> interesting metrics on this.
>>
>> Hope this helps! I'm very interested in this area too, so would be keen to
>> swap any information of sites or research that one can learn from.
>>
>> regards
>>
>> Paul
>>
>> On Wed, Jul 6, 2011 at 8:59 PM, Andy Mabbett<[log in to unmask]>wrote:
>>
>>> Hello Linda ;-)
>>>
>>> One recent example is this:
>>>
>>> http://tagger.thepcf.org.uk/
>>>
>>> from the Public Catalogue Foundation.
>>>
>>> On 6 July 2011 18:21, Linda Ellis<[log in to unmask]>
>>> wrote:
>>>> Just trying to pick people's brains....
>>>>
>>>> Does anybody have any recent good examples of museums / galleries
>>> implementing user tagging?
>>>> Would also be interested in whether people think user tagging can be
>>> useful or not.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Andy Mabbett
>>> @pigsonthewing
>>> http://pigsonthewing.org.uk
>>>
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>>
>>
>> --
>> Paul Groves
>> Project Manager
>> Eastern Art Online: Yousef Jameel Centre for Islamic and Asian Art
>>
>> Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology
>> University of Oxford
>> Beaumont Street
>> Oxford OX1 2PH
>>
>> W: jameelcentre.ashmolean.org
>>
>> E: [log in to unmask]
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>>
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>>
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>> Information: T: +44(0)1865 278 000 / W: www.ashmolean.org
>>
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>>
>> ……………………………………………………………
>>
>> ‘The most stunning loan exhibition ever to have come from Greece’
>> Financial Times
>>
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>> Sunday Telegraph
>>
>> Heracles to Alexander the Great
>>
>> Treasures from the Royal Capital of Macedon, a Hellenic Kingdom in the Age
>> of Democracy
>>
>> Until 29 August 2011 | Tickets £8/£6
>>
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