Posts Tagged ‘Web 2.0’

The March of Time: Hello, Windows 7; Goodbye, GeoCities

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Windows 7 is out, and getting good reviews. Even the reviews that go looking for faults don’t seem to be finding that many.

A cynic would say to just give it time; Vista also got some good early reviews. But perhaps Microsoft learned from Vista. When all else fails, falling flat on your face can be instructive; it works for the rest of us.

Anyway, it is not as easy to hate Microsoft as it used to be. Apple has gone from cult to hot, Windows Mobile lags, and Google is everyone’s next world conqueror.

But Windows is not going away. Probably it will run on my next desktop, and there’s a good chance it will be running on yours. Perhaps everything will eventually get beamed up into the cloud, but a lot of people will still want or need a powerful local machine and an operating system to run it.

For most of us, for the next few years, that will mean Windows 7. I don’t need to think about it till I upgrade my machine, but if you deal with desktop computing at the enterprise level you need to start thinking about it now.

Meanwhile, GeoCities closed its doors, providing an occasion for sentimental commentary about this ancestor of Web 2.0. The Web, as it turns out, is not forever after all. Many people might be just as happy that their old GeoCities homepage, abandoned ‘under construction’ years ago, has finally disappeared. If they even remember they ever had it.

Just remember that one day your Facebook page may also be half forgotten, then disappear.

Talking in the Library

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

Public libraries were the original cloud resource, where generations of kids went for books they could not afford to store locally (i.e. buy), and even more than that, for books they would never have known existed if it weren’t for the library shelves. In spite of dire warnings that public libraries would go the way of the giant auroch, if my local branch is anything to go by they are very much alive.

The public library world, says Zeth Lietzau, was an early adopter of the Web 2.0 idea, starting back in 2004. In U.S. Public Libraries and Web 2.0 – What’s Really Happening? (alas, not available free online), he looks at how well they are doing.

The picture is mixed. This should be no surprise. Big public libraries have done a pretty good job of putting their catalogs online (Open Public Access Catalogs, OPACSs, in the jargon of the trade), and some are experimenting with nifty Amazon style user recommendations and reviews. The thousands of small public libraries are lagging. The one Web 2.0 area where they are more competitive is blogs – though too many public library blogs, says the author, have a single entry dated 2006.

In the same issue of Computers in Libraries, Paula Webb and Muriel Nero examine OPACS in the Clouds. Their focus is academic libraries, but the catalog access services they cover, such as LibraryThing, will find a place in public libraries as well. Complete with those nifty bells and whistles, which can do more than just entertain. Especially intriguing is the role of tags in forming ‘folksonomies,’ linkages among topics that grow up from users, connecting ideas in different ways from standard cataloging taxonomies.

As someone who grew up around libraries, and pays a weekly visit to my local branch, it’s good to see public libraries staying on top of the information world.