Welcome everyone to my presentation: out there, connecting people, places and stories. This presentation is about how mobile technology can enhance the connection between people, places and stories outside to the museum itself. My name is KK, and I work as a concept developer at waag society.
Dick van Dijk, Kristel Kerstens, and Frank Kresin, Out There, Connecting People, Places and Stories - Presentation Transcript
Out there: Connecting people, places and stories Kristel Kerstens
Waag Society
An Amsterdam based medialab
Develops technology for social innovation
within four domains
Culture
Education
Public Domain
Healthcare
www.waag.org
Focus
How to use “out there” to enhance t he museum’s connection to its visitors?
Location-based projects
Creating a historical sensation
Fostering a personal reflection Stimulating a cultural exchange
FREQUENCY 1550
Creating a historical sensation
FREQUENCY 1550
Creating a historical sensation
What Mobile city game When Pilot 2005 Summer 2007 Where Amsterdam Who Students aged 12 to 14 Website www.frequentie1550.nl
RITUALS
Fostering personal reflection
RITUALS
Fostering personal reflection
What GPS route When Summer 2008 Where Amsterdam Who General, older audience Partner Erfgoed Nederland Website www.waag.org/rituals
CITY RAGAS
Stimulating cultural exchange
CITY RAGAS
Stimulating cultural exchange
What Visual cultural exchange game When October 2008 Where Amsterdam and Delhi Who Visitors Amsterdam- India Festival Partner Sarai - Delhi Website www.cityragas.nl
Evaluation
The physical environment is a great setting to enhance the museum’s connection with its visitors
Gaming and theatre/performance art trigger user participation
Open system for content exchange
Need for f urther research on integration of museum’s collection with “out there”
Dick van Dijk, Waag Society, The Netherlands
Kristel Kerstens, Waag Society, The Netherlands
Frank Kresin, Waag Society, The Netherlands
http://www.waag.org/project/rituelen
How can museums employ new media to enhance their visitors' experience and their collections' accessibility? With the Internet moving into the public domain through wireless connections, broadband mobile telephony, and location-aware technology, museums are no longer bound by their physical limits (the building), but can use all relevant spaces, be it the city, the country or the public domain.
Technology enables audiences to access, produce, and share media everywhere and at all times, and museums are quite far on in digitizing large parts of their collections. The combination of 24-hour on-line audience availability and rich digitised cultural musem content brings ample opportunities to create new cultural experiences.
In this context, Waag Society recently developed a number of projects in which users are guided by mobile technology. The paper gives an overview of these projects and argues that the physical non-institutional environment is a great setting for appreciating cultural content and inducing active user participation.
Session: Location-Aware Services [Technology] less
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