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Open Objects

'Every age has its orthodoxy and no orthodoxy is ever right.'

Recent Posts

  • Cultures of collective work and crowdsourcing?
  • Notes from the Museum Data Service launch
  • 57 Varieties of Digital History? Towards the future of looking at the past
  • Links for a talk on crowdsourcing at UCL
  • Three prompts for ‘AI in libraries’ from SCONUL in May 2022

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  • Cultures of collective work and crowdsourcing? – Open Objects on National approaches to crowdsourcing / citizen science?
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  • 2011: an overview - mia ridge on Notes on current issues in Digital Humanities
  • 2006: an overview - mia ridge on Catalhoyuk diaries: Settling in

Crowdsourcing Our Cultural Heritage

Curious about crowdsourcing in cultural heritage? My introduction to Crowdsourcing our Cultural Heritage is free online (for now): Crowdsourcing Our Cultural Heritage: Introduction

About this blog

Posts from a cultural heritage technologist on digital humanities, heritage and history, and user experience research and design. A bit of wishful thinking about organisational change thrown in with a few questions and challenges to the cultural heritage sector on audience research, museum interpretation, interactives and collections online.

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Popular Posts

  • A New Year's resolution for start-ups, PRs and journalists writing about museums
  • The rise of interpolated content?
  • Max Anderson, Indianapolis Museum of Art, 'Moving from virtual to visceral'
  • How did 'play' shape the design and experience of creating Serendip-o-matic?
  • New challenges in digital history: sharing women's history on Wikipedia - my talk notes
  • Sharing is caring keynote 'Enriching cultural heritage collections through a Participatory Commons'

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Tag: engineered content

The Value of User-Generated Content

A series of articles from the intranetjournal.com by Paul Chin about the value of user-generated content: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

Posted on 20 June 20074 February 2015Categories UncategorisedTags engineered content, moderation, user-generated contentLeave a comment on The Value of User-Generated Content
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