Save the Date: MW in Boston 27 January 2016

Storytelling: tall tales, or the future of museums?

MW in Boston
27 January 2016 8-10am

Please save the date for a special breakfast with Museums and the Web at the Revere Hotel Jan 27 from 8-10am.

Museum leader Rob Stein will challenge us to reconsider the way we think about the content we produce and its role in ensuring the relevance, sustainability, and impact of museums today and into the future. Local experts on cultural storytelling, crowdsourcing, and digital content delivery will respond to Rob’s provocation, and we hope you’ll join the conversation as well!

A link to register for FREE will be given next week, but seats will be limited and provided on a first-come, first-served basis.

8:00am Program begins with networking, breakfast, and welcome from our sponsors at izi.TRAVEL

8:30am Keynote by Rob Stein with response by invited experts Sandy Goldberg, Halsey Burgund and Titus Bicknell.

9:30-10: Discussion and closing remarks

Questions? Email us.
Follow the event and join the conversation on Twitter #MWBoston

THIS EVENT IS MADE POSSIBLE BY THE GENEROUS SUPPORT OF OUR SPONSOR, izi.TRAVEL

KZZKPCne

Resources on Cooper Hewitt’s Pen project and interview of Seb Chan added to MW Showcase

The Museums and the Web Showcase is a new home for documentation of exemplary digital projects and learnings from MW Deep Dives and other events held outside of our annual conferences.

We’ve added resources on Cooper Hewitt’s Pen project, and took the opportunity to ask a few questions of Seb Chan before he left his role as Director of Digital and Emerging Media at the Smithsonian Cooper Hewitt. He is now Chief Experience Officer at ACMI in Melbourne. Feel free to add questions and leave comments below the interview, or contact us at info@museumsandtheweb.com

 

MWXX draft program announced

The 20th Annual Conference of Museums and the Web will be held April 6-9, 2016 in Los Angeles, California at the Biltmore Hotel. 

The MWXX draft program has been published and features speakers from around the world, presenting their latest work and research findings. Proposals were peer-reviewed by an International Program Committee in a very competitive process.

The preliminary program includes confirmed presentations in blue/black and tentative presentations in grey. Please check the program frequently for updates.

We are still accepting proposals for demos, lighting talks, and exhibitor briefings until Dec 31, 2015. If your initial proposal was not included in the draft program published on Dec 1, feel free to resubmit your topic if it also suits one of these other formats. Please submit your proposals here.

#MWXX Call for Proposals reopened for 1 week only!

Bowing to popular demand, we have reopened the call for proposals for MW’s 2016 conference in LA for one week only, so you can once again submit your paper, demonstration, forum, workshop and other session ideas until 11:59pm at the International Dateline on 15 October, 2015: http://mw2016.museumsandtheweb.com/call-for-proposals/

We look forward to your proposals and are grateful for you help in spreading the word!

Smithsonian Hackathon Prize Gaming Challenge

Smithsonian Hackathon Prize Gaming Challenge

September 26 – 27, 2015

8:00 AM Saturday – 7:00 PM Sunday

Event Location: Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, 10th street & Constitution Ave NW, Washington DC 20560

Register: http://go.si.edu/site/Calendar/2125831160?view=Detail&id=100941

Are you inspired by nature? Are you a gamer? Can you design or hack? This hackathon is meant for you.

We are calling on all bio-inspired game developers to help us solve a challenge. We camera-trap wildlife. Actually, our venturesome citizen scientists deploy remote sensing cameras for us at thousands of forested locations. They collect and tag millions of photos and capture images of wildlife undisturbed by people. Our researchers use the data to untangle the interactions between wildlife species, the effects of human activities on wildlife and to gain a better understanding of wildlife communities. We think a creative and fun game using camera-trapped images of wildlife could spark interest in youths and help anyone identify wildlife anywhere in the world. Challenge details will be given at the event, after all, this is a competition! The winning team will receive $5,000 for delivery of a web ready game, which the Smithsonian will integrate into the eMammal website. More information will be sent to each team that registers for the event. Registration is free.

This Prize Challenge Hackathon is sponsored by eMammal with support from a Smithsonian Youth Access Grant. eMammal is a collaboration between Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History and National Zoo, and the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. We are dedicated to inspiring curiosity, driving discovery, sharing knowledge about the natural world, and saving wildlife.

Discover art, history and nature of Australia with your friends and family during MWA2015

Coming to Australia for MWA2015? Bring your friends and family with you and discover Melbourne and Hobart by attending our special Tours throughout the cultural highlights of these amazing cities! Complete details are available on the conference website.

Hobart Deep Dive
October 3 – October 4

Join us on a tour of Hobart’s prime cultural attractions: the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery and the Museum of Old and New Art (MONA).
We will spend time meeting key staff, including TMAG’s newly appointed director Janet Carding, for presentations and discussions as well as plenty of time to take in the exhibitions.
There will be time on Saturday morning to take in Salamanca Market and dinner on Saturday evening will be at an iconic Hobart restaurant.
Tour requires 15 people to run and is limited to 30.

Register Now

Free Walking Tours around Melbourne’s cultural attractions
October 5, 10am – 4pm

Tour 1 – Melbourne’s Important Stories
Melbourne Museum, Royal Exhibition Building and State Library of Victoria

Spend the morning discovering the ways in which Museum Victoria has been employing new technologies to tell important stories and enhance understanding and a sense of belonging.
In the afternoon stroll with your Museum Victoria guide past the World Heritage Listed Royal Exhibition Building to the State Library of Victoria, one of the keepers of Victoria’s history – and home to millions of stories. Get to know the treasures and curiosities of the incredible collection, and hear tales from the community and from inside the Library.

Tour 2 – Melbourne’s Many People
Immigration Museum and National Gallery of Victoria (NGV Australia)

Visit the Immigration Museum, in one of Melbourne’s most important 19th-century public buildings to explore how our cultural heritage, languages, beliefs and family connections influence our perceptions. Stroll with your Museum Victoria guide to the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV Australia) at Federation Square.  Here, at the home of Australian art, your tour will focus on contemporary art, including moving image and digital media.

Tour 3 – Royal Botanic Gardens, National Herbarium and Art Centre Melbourne

Escorted by your Melbourne guide, the morning starts with a tram trip and a stroll to the National Herbarium of Victoria in the Royal Botanic Gardens where you will be treated to a tour of the Herbarium specimen collection and library and a display of items from the State Botanical Collection including significant artwork, books and herbarium specimens.
In the afternoon go behind-the-scenes at Australia’s largest performing arts centre, Art Centre Melbourne, and the home of world-class music, dance, theatre and opera companies. Wander through vast underground theatres and see highlights from the fascinating Performing Arts Collection.

Tour 4 – Australian Institute of Archaeology

Participants in the tour will be able to examine the archaeological library and a noteworthy museum collection comprising Near Eastern artefacts and replicas of the Australian Institute of Archaeology and artefact collection together with the instruments and procedures used to reconstruct fragmentary artefacts and those used to produce 2D and virtual 3D images of artefacts.

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Early Registration for MWA2015 ends in 3 days on July 31st. Take advantage of the early fee and sign up for the tours!
Please note that at least one person in your party must be registered for the Conference to join the free walking tours.

See also Sessions and workshops.

Register now.

MWA2015 will be held in Melbourne, Australia at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre October 5-8.

Call for Proposals open for Museums and the Web Asia 2015 #MWA2015

Today Museums and the Web, the largest international conference for digital innovation in the cultural sector, opened its call for proposals for its first Australian conference. Following successful Asian conferences in recent years in Hong Kong and South Korea, the conference will convene October 5-8, 2015 in Melbourne, named in 2014 as the world’s most liveable city for the fourth year in a row. Melbourne is a city with a rich cultural heritage, vibrant theatre and performing arts scene, excellent food with flavours to tempt every taste, and fascinating wildlife and natural history.

Technologists and innovators from museums, galleries, libraries, archives and related cultural heritage organizations are invited to propose their exemplary projects and leading-edge research for presentation in the MW2015 conference program from April 15 to May 15, 2015 at http://mwa2015.museumsandtheweb.com/call-for-proposals/ With a particular focus on cultural and scientific practices in Australia and the Asian region, this conference will provide a unique forum for attendees to debate the latest trends and discuss how digital technologies impact the work of cultural and educational institutions.

In addition to the conference program, innovative commercial products will be showcased in the exhibit hall; vendors and suppliers to the cultural and technology sectors are invited to express their interest in participating at http://mwa2015.museumsandtheweb.com/exhibiting/ The conference will also include social events at some of Melbourne’s premiere cultural organisations, and pre- and post-conference trips to other Australian cities.

The MW2015 call for proposals welcomes sessions and papers on all aspects of museum, gallery, library and archive practice with an emphasis on technology and innovation. The conference program, to be announced July 1, 2015, will include formal papers, workshops, demonstrations, lightning talks and forums for professional debate and collaboration. The conference program is selected by an international program committee, led by co-chairs Rich Cherry and Nancy Proctor who are joined by Tim Hart and Ely Wallis from Museums Victoria for the MWA2015 meeting.

About Museums and the Web

Museums and the Web is an annual conference featuring advanced research and exemplary applications of digital practice for cultural, natural and scientific heritage, and MW Asia 2015 is its third meeting in Australasia. Formed by leading professionals from around the world, our community has been meeting since 1997 and is the largest international gathering of cultural innovators in the world. The products of our meetings and conversations – the MW proceedingsBest of the Web archives and community news forum – are an unparalleled resource for museum workers, technologists, students and researchers that grows every year.

Who Comes to MW?

All kinds of people from around the world come to Museums and the Web. You will find webmasters, educators, curators, librarians, designers, managers, directors, scholars, consultants, programmers, analysts, publishers and developers from museums, galleries, libraries, science centers, and archives – as well as the companies, foundations and governments that support them – at Museums and the Web every year.

For more information see http://mwa2015.museumsandtheweb.com or contact Hiroko Kusano (US) info@museumsandtheweb.com Ely Wallis (AUS) EWallis@museum.vic.gov.au

Get your MW2015 presentation game on!

Get expert advice on making a killer conference presentation at MW2015 and beyond! Check out the new webinar on making your presentations more accessible and meaningful for all audiences by Ting Siu. On the MW Guidelines for Presenters page you can also access tips on presenting with impact from pros Peter Samis, Dana Mitroff-Silvers, and Amy Heibel https://connect.johnshopkins.edu/p8oaebepd0m/ as well as Mike Edson and Susan Chun https://connect.johnshopkins.edu/p4ktuk2ea12/

 

MW2015 Regular registration closes January 31st

Join us in Chicago for the 19th annual Museums and the Web conference: April 8-11, 2015 at The Palmer House 17 East Monroe Street,  Chicago,  IL,  60603,  USA.

Regular registration closes January 31st

Register to attend MW2015 | Register to exhibit at MW2015 | Book a room at the conference hotel

Museums and the Web is an annual conference featuring advanced research and exemplary applications of digital practice for cultural, natural and scientific heritage. Formed by leading professionals from around the world, our community has been meeting since 1997. The products of our meetings and conversations – the MW proceedingsBest of the Web archives and discussion Forum – are an unparalleled resource for museum workers, technologists, students and researchers that grows every year.

Who Comes to MW?

All kinds of people from around the world come to Museums and the Web. You will find webmasters, educators, curators, librarians, designers, managers, directors, scholars, consultants, programmers, analysts, publishers and developers from museums, galleries, libraries, science centers, and archives – as well as the companies, foundations and governments that support them – at Museums and the Web every year.

The MW Program

MW offers a range of professional learning opportunities, from plenary sessions to un-conference sessions, from formal papers to informal networking, from museum project demonstrations to commercial exhibits, from professional debates to lightning talks, from how-to sessions to crit rooms and the Best of the Web awards.

Prior to the conference, there are full-day and half-day workshops and a day of pre-conference tours.

Social events include receptions each evening, and lots of refreshment breaks provide plenty of time to meet and talk with colleagues.

We look Forward to seeing you in Chicago.

Nancy and Rich
MW2014 program co-chairs

#NetNeutrality at AAM2014: the museum technology community strategizes our response to the proposed FCC rules

At the MW “Ask the Expert” pavilion at AAM2014, a passionate group of museum technology leaders gathered to discuss our common response to the FCC’s proposed rules to allow discrimination by Internet Service Providers among the content they deliver – creating “fast lanes” for those online content publishers who can pay, and a “dirt road” for everyone else – including museums.

We have four months – the FCC’s public comment period – to make ourselves heard. Here are the ideas for next steps that were discussed:

  • We need to craft a message that individuals can easily send to the FCC, their representatives, etc. and a letter that museum directors and organizations can use to add their voices to a common cause. Leverage existing movements and petitions as well, and provide succinct background info to enable participants to get up to speed on the issue.
  • Can museums coordinate a day of action in which their websites go dark or otherwise emulate the impact of the proposed rules on the quality of public access to cultural content online?
  • MW and other websites can be encouraged to add info and links to actions people can take in support of the protest.

How can you help? What are your ideas? Let us know here!

#NetNeutrality at AAM2014: the museum technology community strategizes our response to the proposed FCC rules

At the MW “Ask the Expert” pavilion at AAM2014, a passionate group of museum technology leaders gathered to discuss our common response to the FCC’s proposed rules to allow discrimination by Internet Service Providers among the content they deliver – creating “fast lanes” for those online content publishers who can pay, and a “dirt road” for everyone else – including museums.

We have four months – the FCC’s public comment period – to make ourselves heard. Here are the ideas for next steps that were discussed:

  • We need to craft a message that individuals can easily send to the FCC, their representatives, etc. and a letter that museum directors and organizations can use to add their voices to a common cause. Leverage existing movements and petitions as well, and provide succinct background info to enable participants to get up to speed on the issue.
  • Can museums coordinate a day of action in which their websites go dark or otherwise emulate the impact of the proposed rules on the quality of public access to cultural content online?
  • MW and other websites can be encouraged to add info and links to actions people can take in support of the protest.

How can you help? What are your ideas? Let us know here!

Reblog: FCC Commissioners Raise Serious Doubts about Chairman’s Pay-for-Priority Internet Plan

Public scrutiny and pressure are paying off! Both FCC commissioners Clyburn and Rosenworcel made statements today questioning the new rules proposed by Chair Tom Wheeler:

  • Rosenworcel: http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2014/db0507/DOC-326963A1.pdf
  • Clyburn: http://www.fcc.gov/blog/preserving-ever-free-and-open-internet

Below is Freepress.net’s statement today May 7, 2014 in response.

If you can get to the National Mall, please join the occupation at the FCC through May 15, and follow the movement on Twitter:  

As Evan Greer from Fight For The Future said to the Guardian today, “…it affects everyone’s life and people are not going to just stand by and let this happen.”

Net Neutrality
Photo of the “firewall” at the FCC from @ JohnZangas https://twitter.com/johnzangas/status/464107778831687680 7 May 2014

 

WASHINGTON — In a series of statements on Wednesday, two Democratic FCC commissioners expressed serious doubts about proceeding with Chairman Tom Wheeler’s new “open Internet” rules.

In a statement at a meeting of the Chief Officers of State Libraries, Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel called on Chairman Wheeler and her fellow commissioners to “delay our consideration of his rules by a least a month. I believe that rushing headlong into a rulemaking next week fails to respect the public response to his proposal.”

In a blog post at the FCC website, Commissioner Mignon Clyburn wrote that “tens of thousands of consumers, companies, entrepreneurs, investors, schools, educators, healthcare providers and others have reached out to ask me to keep the Internet free and open.”

Clyburn also listed her preference for prohibiting pay-for-priority arrangements and re-asserting the agency’s authority to protect an open Internet.

In addition on Wednesday, nearly 150 Internet companies sent a letter to the FCC’s five commissioners urging them to create rules that protect internet users against blocking, discrimination and paid prioritization.

OccupyFree Press CEO and President Craig Aaron made the following statement:

“The cracks are beginning to show in Chairman Wheeler’s plan that would undermine Net Neutrality. The more people learn about this proposal,  the more skeptical they become. That list of skeptics now includes two Democratic commissioners who have taken the unusual step of questioning the Democratic chairman’s approach.

“We’re encouraged that both Commissioners Clyburn and Rosenworcel are responding to the millions of emails and thousands of phone calls from people demanding real Net Neutrality. It’s time the agency took the most sensible next step and reclassified Internet service providers as common carriers. That’s the only reasonable way to ensure an open Internet for everyone.”

Get your organization to sign Free Press’s Letter to the FCC and the President: Scrap These Rules

Free Press, organizers of the SavetheInternet.com coalition, have authored the letter below calling for the President and the FCC to reject the new Internet rules proposed by FCC Chairman, Tom Wheeler. It has been signed by a long list of organizations so far, from the ACLU and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, to the United Church of Christ and The Nation, to NTEN, reddit and Howard University. Museums and the Web has added its signature as well.

Will your museum or organization help us preserve fair and equal access to the content that cultural organizations and others like us make available online?

Sign as a representative of your organization (with permission, of course) | Visit the FreePress.net site to take action as an individual

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, D.C. 20500The Honorable Tom Wheeler, Chairman
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street SW
Washington, D.C. 20554

May 7, 2014

Dear President Obama and Chairman Wheeler:

We are writing to express our support for a truly free and open Internet. We strongly urge the Federal Communications Commission to reconsider and abandon efforts to adopt rules that would harm — rather than preserve — Net Neutrality.

The open Internet is a forum for free speech, innovation, civic engagement and the exercise of our basic rights. The Internet achieved this status because it was created on a platform governed by the principle of nondiscrimination.

In 2010, the FCC attempted to incorporate this principle into its open Internet rules. Those rules were thrown out earlier this year, leaving Internet users in limbo while the FCC decided its next move.

Now, instead of restoring this important principle of nondiscrimination, the Commission intends to make things even worse. It would reportedly propose rules that would enable phone and cable Internet service providers (ISPs) to discriminate both technically and financially against fledgling online companies, independent media outlets, nonprofit organizations and anyone else with a website. These policies would create troubling incentives for ISPs to create “artificial scarcity” to extract new sources of revenue. The result will be a two-tiered Internet: A fast lane for those willing or able to pay for it, and a dirt road for the rest of us.

This is discrimination pure and simple. It is the opposite of a free and open Internet.

President Obama, in 2007 you told the world, “I am a strong supporter of Net Neutrality,” rightfully asserting “that one of the best things about the Internet … is that there is this incredible equality there.”

And Chairman Wheeler, last fall you wrote that “[o]ne of the signal achievements of this latest great information revolution — our network revolution — is how the results of its diffused control and increased autonomy produce ‘innovation without permission.’”

We wholeheartedly agree with both statements. Internet service providers should not be in the business of picking winners and losers online. But the proposal the FCC is currently considering gives ISPs the power to do exactly that, which is why it must be abandoned. Instead, the Commission must propose and adopt legally sound rules that keep the Internet an open and nondiscriminatory platform for speech and innovation.

Join these and other signatories (official list to be confirmed):

American Civil Liberties Union
Appalshop, Inc
AR
Center for Media Justice
Centre College
ColorOfChange.org
Common Cause
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)
CR Consulting
CREDO Mobile
Daily Kos
Defending Dissent Foundation
Demand Progress
Democracy for America
Diversified Media Enterprises
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Engine Advocacy
FAIR
Fight for the Future
Future of Music Coalition
Glocal
Hackers & Founders
Howard Media Group, Howard University
Just Foreign Policy
Latino Print Network
LatinoRebels.com
Louder
Media Alliance
Media Equity Collaborative
Media Literacy Project
Media Matters for America
Media Mobilizing Project
MoveOn.org Political Action
National Alliance for Media Arts + Culture
National Association Of Latino Independent Producers
National Hispanic Media Coalition
Netroots Foundation
New Moon Girls
NTEN
Occupy Network
OpenMedia.org
Pacific University
Park Center for Independent Media, Ithaca College
Participatory Politics Foundation
PEN American Center
Personal Democracy Media
PopularResistance.org
Progressive Change Campaign Committee
Prometheus Radio Project
reddit
Reel Grrls
RootsAction.org
Savvy System Designs, Inc.
SOA Watch San Francisco
St. Paul Neighborhood Network
Student Net Alliance
SumOfUs
Tarakali Education
The Greenlining Institute
The Harry Potter Alliance
The LAMP (Learning About Multimedia Project)
The Nation
The People’s Press Project
TheUpTake.org
ThoughtWorks
Tin House
Tin House Books
Tin House magazine
Tully Center for Free Speech at Syracuse University
United Church of Christ, OC Inc.
Upwell
Women In Media & News
Women’s Institute for Freedom of the Press
Women’s Media Center
Writer
Writers Guild of America, East
X-Lab

Net Neutrality and the Future of Museums Online

We at Museums and the Web are deeply concerned about the impact of the new Internet regulations proposed by FCC Chairman, Tom Wheeler. The  new rules would allow ISPs to charge a premium for those (wealthy companies) who can afford to pay to deliver their content better and faster to their online audiences. Needless to say, museums, libraries and archives, not to mention artists, writers, scholars, and everyone else publishing digital content online without the financial backing of global conglomerates like ESPN, Disney, Google, Yahoo, Apple, (fill in the blank) would struggle to compete. It’s not hard to imagine a scenario in which the only way museum content gets seen online is if the museum has done a deal with a major online publisher.

Are you and your museum colleagues concerned? Will you and your museum’s director contact local representatives, the FCC and the press to protest? Can you sign this petition and join the “firewall” to picket the FCC in Washington, DC from May 7-15?

The Association for Computers and the Humanities has written this open letter signed by 33 presidents, chairs, founders, leaders, and editors of 27 major, international digital humanities scholarly organizations and platforms. What can museums do to lend their considerable voice and constituency to the movement? We’d like to hear from you and invite all who want to preserve freedom of speech and equal access to the Internet to get involved TODAY, before the FCC’s vote on May 15.

Here are links to online resources and organizations who are leading the protest. Please add more in the comments on this post!

Vintage computer needed for #MW2014!

The work of Jenny Holzer will feature as part of this year’s MWX exhibition being held as part of the MW2014 conference in Baltimore. Recognized as one of the most influential artists of the postmodern generation, Holzer’s work initially came to prominence in the late 1970s through her series of Truisms. These text-based artworks have sustained her multi-facetted practice over the intervening years, from printed posters in public spaces to large-scale LED media installations; as well as one of the earliest net art projects, Please Change Beliefs (1995-98), presented via äda’web, the pioneering website of online art curated by Benjamin Weil and designed by Vivian Selbo.

To compliment the new iteration of Holzer’s Truisms project for MW2014, we are interested in the prospect of re-presenting Please Change Beliefs at the conference using a vintage system (CPU, OS, browser) circa 1995-98.

We are putting this community call-out to anyone who would like to assist us to realize this bit of “media archaeology”. If you have a system you can donate, please let us know!

Time to throw down the oven glove in MW2014’s Mobile Bake-off!

Have you developed a mobile tour authoring platform for museums and cultural organizations?
Would you like to show off its advantages and unique features to hundreds of leading museum technologies and mobile experts?

If so, you’re invited to participate in the MW2014 “Mobile Bake-off.” Using a core of mobile content provided to all participating mobile providers, create a short (5 stop min.) tour of Baltimore’s cultural highlights on your platform and make it available to conference attendees by April 1 for use during the pre-conference tours and throughout MW2014. Then attend the special “Mobile Tasting” session from 10am-12pm on April 4 to demo your tour and the Content Management System and Platform that produced it. Your work will be discussed by a panel of mobile experts with questions and contributions from the audience.

The aim of the “Bake-off” and “Tasting” session is to give museum professionals an opportunity to understand the strengths and affordances of a range of mobile tour authoring platforms available to them, and to enable mobile providers to hear directly from museums about the kinds of experiences and content they want to offer their mobile users.

To join us, simply:

– Register to attend MW2014: http://mw2014.museumsandtheweb.com/registration

– Submit a short description of your intended demo by 28 Feb 2014: http://mw2014.museumsandtheweb.com/submit-proposal

Further details on getting the common demo content and more will then be provided to you directly.

We look forward to mobilizing with you in Baltimore!

Participate in the MW2014 Mobile Bake-off!

There is now a significant number of mobile tour app authoring platforms available in the museum field, each one offering a unique approach to tour creation and content presentation, driven by the distinct creative visions and technical solutions of the providers who created them.

In order to help us appreciate what makes each platform special and compelling within the field, MW2014 will host a “Mobile Bake-off”: an opportunity for museum professionals to experience and evaluate a number of mobile app solutions on a level playing field. Each participating mobile app provider will be given access to the same small body of content about cultural sites in Baltimore with which to create a mobile tour demo, and the same amount of time to create a demo app using that content. The content will be a mix of 5-6 stops about local museums and outdoor points of interest, and will include a range of different kinds of media, such as audio, video, text, slideshows, interactives and others. Attendees of MW2014, beginning with the pre-conference tour groups on April 1, will be encouraged to try the demo tour apps. In a special “Mobile Tasting” session on Friday morning, April 4, each demo app will be presented by its creators, and discussed by a panel of mobile experts with questions and contributions from the audience.

In the Mobile Tasting Session, we will not be naming a “winner” of the Mobile Bake-off or otherwise picking favorites. This is meant to be a friendly and colleagial event to showcase a range of mobile solutions available to museums, and to help museum professionals understand the strengths and affordances of each. At the same time, we hope it will be a useful opportunity for mobile providers to hear directly from museums what kinds of experiences and content they want to offer their mobile users. Our aim is to foster greater understanding of the potential for mobile in museums and encourage use of this powerful technology, while helping raise the quality of mobile offerings across the field.

The collection and provisioning of the content is being sponsored by IZI.travel, and managed by Sandy Goldberg with support from Laurie Stepp.

Please let us know if you’d like to participate in the Mobile Bake-off as a mobile tour provider or tester. This is a new initiative for MW, so one we are particularly grateful to have the community’s thoughts and suggestions on how to make it most useful for mobile providers and museums alike.

Nancy Proctor joins the BMA as first Deputy Director for Digital Experience

Internationally known leader on museums and technology will guide BMA’s digital strategy

BALTIMORE (January 24, 2014)—The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) is pleased to announce the appointment of Nancy Proctor as Deputy Director for Digital Experience.  In this new position, Proctor will provide vision and strategic direction for the role of digital media in achieving the BMA’s mission in the galleries and online. She will also lead the integration of digital experiences throughout the museum’s renovation, which is expected to be completed in 2015.

“The BMA is transforming itself into a new kind of museum for the 21st century,” said BMA Director Doreen Bolger. “With Nancy at the helm of an expanded digital experience, we begin our second century ready to engage and inspire the next generation of visitors in both the physical and virtual worlds.”

Proctor will oversee a team responsible for collaborating across the museum to expand access to the world-renowned collection and produce digital content to reinvigorate the experience in the galleries and online, connecting the BMA with a wider audience from Baltimore and beyond. The team will manage the museum’s website www.artbma.org, social media presence, and emerging technologies, as well as information technology infrastructure that optimizes the staff’s work and supports digital initiatives. Proctor will begin at the BMA on March 3.

An internationally known leader of museum technology strategies, Proctor is co-chair of Museums and the Web, the largest international conference dedicated to digital practice in the cultural sphere (coming to Baltimore April 2-5, 2014). She has pioneered the use of technology to expand visitor engagement with museums since 1995, when she co-founded TheGalleryChannel.com, publishing innovative online exhibitions and virtual tours and the United Kingdom’s first CD-ROM of contemporary art, as well as syndicating the most comprehensive global listing of museums and galleries of the day.

Most recently, Proctor has advanced the global digital presence of the Smithsonian Institution as Head of Mobile Strategy & Initiatives. Her accomplishments include developing their mobile strategy and central mobile platform, spearheading their participation in the Google Art Project, working with fundraising teams and board members on the roll-out of public WiFi, and advising on more than 50 mobile projects, including the Access App, the world’s first open source solution for crowdsourcing mobile content to make museums more accessible to people with disabilities and foreign language speakers.As Head of New Media Initiatives at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Proctor worked with cross-disciplinary teams to introduce the museum’s first mobile experiences. Her other prior experience includes leading new product development for Antenna Audio/ Discovery Communications from 2000 to 2008, introducing multimedia and cell phone tours, podcasts, sign language tours, and virtual and downloadable tours in London, Paris, and Washington, D.C.  Proctor also manages theMuseumMobile.info website, wiki, and podcast series; is digital co-editor of Curator: The Museum Journal; and editor of the 2011 American Alliance of Museums publication Mobile Apps for Museums: The AAM Guide to Planning and Strategy.

“The BMA has an inspiring world-class collection, a talented and dedicated staff, and a visionary director, senior management team, and board of trustees—all essential ingredients to playing a leadership role among innovative cultural organizations,” said Proctor. “I am thrilled by this opportunity and look forward to collaborating with Baltimore’s creative community and connecting more audiences with this great museum.”

Proctor has an M.A. and Ph.D. in art history from the University of Leeds in Great Britain, and a B.A. in art history and classics from the University of North Carolina.  She lives in Silver Spring, Maryland with her husband and daughter. Follow her @NancyProctor.

BMA RENOVATION

The BMA is currently undergoing an unprecedented $28 million phased renovation to revitalize the visitor experience of the museum and its outstanding collections. The project debuted with the acclaimed reopening of Contemporary Wing in November 2012, and continues with plans to reopen the original Merrick Entrance, a new presentation of the outstanding American art collection, and a dramatically renovated East Wing Lobby and Zamoiski Entrance during the Museum’s 100th anniversary in fall 2014. New galleries for the BMA’s African and Asian art collections and a new learning and creativity center will be completed in 2015.

ABOUT THE BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART

The Baltimore Museum of Art is home to an internationally renowned collection of 19th-century, modern, and contemporary art. Founded in 1914 with a single painting, the BMA today has 90,000 works of art—including the largest holding of works by Henri Matisse in the world. The BMA has a long tradition of collecting the art of the day, beginning with the Cone sisters, whose avid acquisitions from living artists signaled the Museum’s commitment to collecting contemporary art. Other outstanding collections include European and American fine and decorative arts, prints and drawings from the 15th century to the present, works by established and emerging contemporary artists, and objects from Africa, Asia, the Ancient Americas, and Pacific Islands. Two beautifully landscaped gardens display an array of 20th-century sculpture that is an oasis in the city. The Museum is located in the heart of Charles Village and adjacent to the main campus of The Johns Hopkins University. The BMA’s building encompasses 210,000 square feet and is distinguished by a grand historic building designed in the 1920s by renowned American architect John Russell Pope. Two beautifully landscaped gardens display an array of 20th-century sculpture that is an oasis in the city. Since 2006, the BMA has eliminated general admission fees so that everyone can enjoy the power of art.

Regular rates for Exhibitors end January 31st, 2014

As the largest international conference devoted to the exploration of art, science, natural and cultural heritage online, Museums and the Web is the place to reach more than 600 educators, curators, librarians, designers, managers, directors, scholars, consultants, programmers, analysts, and developers from museums, galleries, libraries, and science centers. Connect with hundreds of institutions from more than 40 countries that attend every year. Last years diverse group is listed here:MW2013

In addition to our events around the world we have a strong social media presence with more than 34,000 followers on twitter, 11,000 follower on LinkedIn and an extensive email list.

This year we continue to expand starting with MW Florence February 19-21, 2014 in Florence; Italy, MW2014: Museums and the Web 2014, April 2-5, in Baltimore Maryland, USA; a Deep Dive on Email Archiving in Art Museums as well as an event in the fall in Asia. Exhibitors looking to reach museum technologists from around the world are invited to sponsor, advertise, or reserve a space in the exhibit halls at these events.

Most events include exhibitor and advertising opportunities as well. Early bird rates apply for Exhibitors through December 31st, 2013 when you register for Museums and the Web 2014 (Note exhibit spaces are limited and will be provided on a first come, first served basis).

To allow sponsors to take advantage of these diverse events and reach hundreds of interested participants, as well reach our social media audience, we have created anew sponsorship schedule that includes your booth, print and online advertising at multiple events, drink tickets and more

Sponsors and exhibitors may also propose an exhibitor insight session or join a parade.

If you have other ideas about how you want to participate please contact us.

We’re looking forward to seeing you in Baltimore April 2-5, 2014

Nancy and Rich
MWA2013 program co-chairs

Museums and the Web Florence Early Registration Closes Monday Jan 20th!

Early Registration for Museums and the Web Florence Closes Monday January 20th!

Register Here

Museums and the Web Florence is a three-day event conceived by Laura Longo, Stefania Chipa and Ilaria D’Uva
 in collaboration with Museums and the Web. Museums and the Web Florence (MWF2014) is organized by the Musei Civici Fiorentini, in collaboration with the Fondazione per la Ricerca e l’Innovazione dell’Università di Firenze and the PIN Polo Universitario Citt di Prato, with lead sponsorship by D’Uva Workshop.

The theme of the meeting is “Open Museums and Smartcities: Storytelling and Connected Culture.

We are delighted to welcome Cory Doctorow as our honored guest and keynote speaker at Museums and the Web Florence 2014. Author, activist, and co-editor of Boing Boing, Cory has inspired the cultural sector with both his science fiction and his advocacy for open data, Creative Commons, and digital access. Learn more about his prolific work on his blog, Craphound.com

MWF2014 also includes a special pre-conference Mobile Summit on 18 February for mobile providers, developers and experts in the field.

The Program will be posted here.

The language of the conference is English.

Museums and the Web Florence 2014 is open to museum professionals within the public/private sector, and all others who are interested in the topics of our meeting.

See you in Florence!

Call for Proposals: MW Florence 2014

Open Museums and Smart Cities: Storytelling and Connected Culture

Florence 19-21 February 2014

A three-day event conceived by Laura Longo, Stefania Chipa and Ilaria D’Uva
 in collaboration with Museums and the Web. Museums and the Web Florence (MWF2014) is organized by the Musei Civici Fiorentini, in collaboration with the Fondazione per la Ricerca e l’Innovazione dell’Università di Firenze and the PIN Polo Universitario Citt di Prato, with lead sponsorship by D’Uva Workshop.

Proposal deadline: 31 December 2013

The theme of the meeting is “Open Museums and Smartcities: Storytelling and Connected Culture.” We invite presentations and discussions on digital tools, languages and innovations as new forms of access to cultural heritage. Related topics include universal design, social inclusion, accessibility, augmented reality, social media, crowdsourcing, open content, digital collaboration, gaming, and mobile engagement throughout city spaces as well as inside museums.

The language of the conference is English.

Museums and the Web Florence 2014 is open to museum professionals within the public/private sector, and all others who are interested in the topics of our meeting.

Submit your proposal by 31 December 2013 for:

  1. Formal papers: research and analysis in the field presented in a 15 minute presentation + 5,000 word written paper
  2. Demonstrations: videos, hands-on and ‘poster-style’ demonstrations of projects and case studies
  3. Best Practice Parade: 5 minute lightning talks sharing best practices in the field; open to vendors as well as presenters from non-profit organizations

All proposals are peer reviewed by the MWF2014 Program Committee. Written papers (in English: required for formal papers; optional for demonstrations and lightning talks) are due 31 May 2014 and will be published online after the conference in Florence.

See you in Florence!

Draft Museums and the Web Asia 2013 Program online

Featuring Speakers and thought leaders from China, Hong Kong S.A.R., Taiwan, Japan, Indonesia, Korea, and Australia as well as the United States, Switzerland, New Zealand, United Kingdom, Spain, Canada, Finland, Serbia, Italy, Russia, and Denmark, the Museums and the Web Asia Program is created by museum technologists from around the pacific region and beyond.

The 2nd Annual Museums and the Web Asia conference will be held December 9-12, 2013 in Hong Kong, China at the Sheraton Hong Kong Hotel and Towers. MWA2013 will include presentations by leading technologists and museum innovators.

The conference is being held at the Sheraton Hong Kong Hotel & Towers is at the top of Kowloon’s Golden Mile – near the waterfront on the corner of Nathan Road and Salisbury Road – and is an easy walk to the subway and Star Ferry. MWA2013 has negotiated a special rate of 1900 Hong Kong Dollars or ~$245 US Dollars for conference attendees. Make your reservation here.

We’re looking forward to seeing you in in Hong Kong, December 9-12, 2013!

Nancy & Rich
MWA2013 program co-chairs

CMA Deep Dive post trip report live

If you were not able to join us at the Cleveland Museum of Art for an in-depth look at Gallery One and the ArtLens project, don’t despair.  Through the efforts of Susan Chun, who has recently taken on the role of Publisher for Museums and the Web, we will soon be able to share what we learned at the CMA in the form of a short digital publication.

In the meantime we have collected tweets and images from the event in Storify https://storify.com/search?q=mwatcma and Flickr http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=%23mwatcma

Additionally the CMA staff has posted the slideshare files from the workshops. They can be accessed at CMA Deep Dive webpage http://www.museumsandtheweb.com/cma2013/.

We hope to see you in Hong Kong in December http://mwa2013.museumsandtheweb.com/ and/or Baltimore in April http://mw2014.museumsandtheweb.com/ – if not before!

Nancy