Creating a Culture of Innovation in Your Library and Community (NEST)Heather Braum
A presentation from NEST (NEKLS Fall Retreat for Public Librarians). You’ve watched innovative libraries grow and implement many ideas that you wish you could start in your library. But, you’re not sure where to start, or how to get buy-in, or how to get support. Come to this session for an active and lively discussion on how to find innovative ideas and people, get support, and learn from other libraries’ experiences.
1. Reading exposes you to knowledge discovered by others and expands your mind through access to different perspectives across space and time.
2. No matter how busy you are, making time for reading prevents self-chosen ignorance and allows you to learn from great thinkers of the past.
3. Reading provides enduring enjoyment and is a refuge that can transport you away from your troubles and inhabit many lives through different stories and authors.
Knud Schulz presented on transforming the main library in Aarhus, Denmark into an "Urban Mediaspace" called Dokk1. The key points were:
1. Dokk1 underwent a major transformation process involving staff and citizens to redesign the library space and services around new values of being a public innovation space, lifelong learning, and bringing people together.
2. The transformation process used design thinking principles like prototyping with users and co-creation to develop the new vision, values, design principles, and ways of organizing the space through partnership.
3. The new Dokk1 space emphasizes flexibility, unprogrammed areas, and focusing on user needs through a
Creating a Culture of Innovation in Your Library and Community (NEST)Heather Braum
A presentation from NEST (NEKLS Fall Retreat for Public Librarians). You’ve watched innovative libraries grow and implement many ideas that you wish you could start in your library. But, you’re not sure where to start, or how to get buy-in, or how to get support. Come to this session for an active and lively discussion on how to find innovative ideas and people, get support, and learn from other libraries’ experiences.
1. Reading exposes you to knowledge discovered by others and expands your mind through access to different perspectives across space and time.
2. No matter how busy you are, making time for reading prevents self-chosen ignorance and allows you to learn from great thinkers of the past.
3. Reading provides enduring enjoyment and is a refuge that can transport you away from your troubles and inhabit many lives through different stories and authors.
Knud Schulz presented on transforming the main library in Aarhus, Denmark into an "Urban Mediaspace" called Dokk1. The key points were:
1. Dokk1 underwent a major transformation process involving staff and citizens to redesign the library space and services around new values of being a public innovation space, lifelong learning, and bringing people together.
2. The transformation process used design thinking principles like prototyping with users and co-creation to develop the new vision, values, design principles, and ways of organizing the space through partnership.
3. The new Dokk1 space emphasizes flexibility, unprogrammed areas, and focusing on user needs through a
1. Różowy Pałac Kultury i Nauki Wczoraj, tuż po 20.00 najbardziej rozpoznawalny, a przy tym najbardziej szary budynek w Warszawie zmienił kolor na… różowy. Wszystko związane było z wprowadzeniem na rynek nowego operatora komórkowego – WPmobi. PKiN oświetlono w ramach niestandardowych działań reklamowych podejmowanych przez Wirtualna Polskę w związku z uruchomieniem usługi telefonii komórkowej WPmobi.
2. Dom Wielkiego Brata Uczestnicy programu „Big Brother 4.1”, którego emisja rozpocznie się w Czwórce 2 września o godzinie 20.00, zamieszkają w nowym, wybudowanym na potrzeby programu, domu o powierzchni całkowitej 1100 m.kw.
3. Dom Wielkiego Brata Ich każdy ruch śledzić będzie 35 kamer telewizyjnych pracujących po raz pierwszy w standardzie wysokiej rozdzielczości HD (High Definition).
4. Dom Wielkiego Brata Stworzony na potrzeby „Big Brother 4.1” system rejestracji audiowizualnej wymagał wykorzystania 25 tysięcy metrów kabli przesyłowych. Po raz pierwszy, stworzono możliwość podpatrywania mieszkańców poprzez dostępne przez internet 4 kamery