Presentation for the Society of American Archivists 2015 Annual Meeting, session 306: "Seeding Engagement: Web Archiving Outreach Strategies and Opportunities."
Building Web Archiving Technology, Togethernullhandle
This document discusses opportunities for the web archiving community to collaborate on building tools and standards together. It notes that most web archiving is currently done by a small number of large centralized organizations, but there is potential for more distributed and collaborative efforts. The document proposes several areas for collaboration, such as developing common APIs, modularizing archiving workflows into smaller components, creating community forums, and establishing shared standards and definitions. The goal is to strengthen web archiving by encouraging more participation and cooperation across different archives and organizations.
This document outlines a presentation on Web 2.0 and Library 2.0, including an introduction to both topics, examples of Web 2.0 technologies like wikis, blogs and social networking sites that libraries can utilize, and steps for introducing change in a library. It concludes by noting that Web 2.0 allows librarians to continue their core functions of bringing order to information and making it readily available.
This document discusses how libraries are using the open source content management system Drupal. Drupal provides a flexible architecture that allows libraries to support different types of content on their websites and create custom modules. It also enables libraries to build intranets with modules for events, forms, and taxonomies. Additionally, Drupal functions as a social networking tool with features like groups, feeds, and chat. Libraries have implemented Drupal for digital collections, merging catalogs with websites, and other innovative projects. Drupal provides a platform for libraries to adapt technologies to their needs.
Publishing 2 0 For Oslo Final Version With NotesJonathan Clark
The document discusses the concepts of Web 2.0 and how it relates to publishing and libraries. It explores how social media allows for greater connection and sharing of content among users. Web 2.0 features like blogs, wikis, tags, and RSS feeds allow information to circulate more freely. This shifting information ecosystem has implications for how publishers and libraries engage with users in the future. The document aims to explain what Web 2.0 means and its potential impact areas.
This document discusses ways to assist "boondock" or rural areas without active local Wikipedia communities form meetup groups through online resources. It proposes sharing curated templates and best practices used by large groups like Wikimedia NYC. These include setting up a state meetup page and event pages, using tools like Meetup.com and Eventbrite for registration. The document also describes helping form a initial Wikipedia meetup group in Nebraska through these methods.
Avoiding Zombies in Archival Replay Using ServiceWorkerSawood Alam
Live-leakage (zombie resource) is an issue in archival replay of web pages. This work proposes a mechanism to avoid such live-leakage using ServiceWorker. This work was presented in WADL 2017 on June 22 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Building Web Archiving Technology, Togethernullhandle
This document discusses opportunities for the web archiving community to collaborate on building tools and standards together. It notes that most web archiving is currently done by a small number of large centralized organizations, but there is potential for more distributed and collaborative efforts. The document proposes several areas for collaboration, such as developing common APIs, modularizing archiving workflows into smaller components, creating community forums, and establishing shared standards and definitions. The goal is to strengthen web archiving by encouraging more participation and cooperation across different archives and organizations.
This document outlines a presentation on Web 2.0 and Library 2.0, including an introduction to both topics, examples of Web 2.0 technologies like wikis, blogs and social networking sites that libraries can utilize, and steps for introducing change in a library. It concludes by noting that Web 2.0 allows librarians to continue their core functions of bringing order to information and making it readily available.
This document discusses how libraries are using the open source content management system Drupal. Drupal provides a flexible architecture that allows libraries to support different types of content on their websites and create custom modules. It also enables libraries to build intranets with modules for events, forms, and taxonomies. Additionally, Drupal functions as a social networking tool with features like groups, feeds, and chat. Libraries have implemented Drupal for digital collections, merging catalogs with websites, and other innovative projects. Drupal provides a platform for libraries to adapt technologies to their needs.
Publishing 2 0 For Oslo Final Version With NotesJonathan Clark
The document discusses the concepts of Web 2.0 and how it relates to publishing and libraries. It explores how social media allows for greater connection and sharing of content among users. Web 2.0 features like blogs, wikis, tags, and RSS feeds allow information to circulate more freely. This shifting information ecosystem has implications for how publishers and libraries engage with users in the future. The document aims to explain what Web 2.0 means and its potential impact areas.
This document discusses ways to assist "boondock" or rural areas without active local Wikipedia communities form meetup groups through online resources. It proposes sharing curated templates and best practices used by large groups like Wikimedia NYC. These include setting up a state meetup page and event pages, using tools like Meetup.com and Eventbrite for registration. The document also describes helping form a initial Wikipedia meetup group in Nebraska through these methods.
Avoiding Zombies in Archival Replay Using ServiceWorkerSawood Alam
Live-leakage (zombie resource) is an issue in archival replay of web pages. This work proposes a mechanism to avoid such live-leakage using ServiceWorker. This work was presented in WADL 2017 on June 22 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The document discusses how the New York State Senate used Drupal to create a new public website to increase transparency, efficiency, and public participation. Key goals were to modernize technology, provide constituent services like news updates and casework tools, and share information through features like legislative data and video streams. Drupal was chosen as the content management system due to its wide use, features for stakeholder needs, and developer community support. The new site launched in 2011 and saw increased citizen engagement through interactive features.
Human Scale Web Collecting for Individuals and Institutions (Webrecorder Work...Anna Perricci
This is the main slide deck for a workshop at iPRES 2018 on human scale web collecting. A primary focus of the presentation was the use of Webrecorder.io, a free, open source web archiving tool available to all.
The document introduces Web 2.0 and its key concepts like social networking, folksonomy, RSS feeds, blogs, wikis, and discusses how these interactive and user-centered technologies can be applied for learning and enterprise uses. Examples are provided for social tagging, RSS feeds, blogs, and wikis. Additional resources on free culture, creative commons, and open archives are also listed for further exploration of Web 2.0 applications and technologies.
Who Will Archive the Archives? Thoughts About the Future of Web ArchivingMichael Nelson
The document discusses the challenges of archiving the web at scale. It notes that while much of the web has been archived, temporal drift and gaps remain issues. Memento provides a framework for accessing content across multiple archives. To fully archive the web, more copies stored in diverse archives are needed due to the risk of any single archive becoming unavailable.
The document discusses the evolution of the internet from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0. Web 1.0 was characterized by one-way communication through corporate websites and personal homepages. Web 2.0 is driven by user participation through social media, blogs, RSS feeds, wikis, social bookmarking, and file sharing sites which allow collaboration and sharing between users. Key technologies of Web 2.0 include social networks, blogs, RSS, and technologies that empower users and encourage participation and reuse on the internet.
The document discusses Steffen Staab's presentation on "The Web We Want" at the WebSci '17 conference. It covers several topics related to making the web more inclusive, healthy, and useful. For social inclusion, it describes the MAMEM project which aims to measure how accessible the web is for people with disabilities. For a healthy web, it discusses using techniques from social network analysis to identify harmful roles and behaviors. For a useful semantic web, it presents principles for interlinking data sets in ways that meaningfully extend entity descriptions and connectivity. The overall goal is to engineer and measure how well the web achieves important values like inclusion, health, and usefulness.
Web 2.0 In a Nutshell: A Librarian Guide to the World of Web 2.0teaguese
This document provides an overview of key concepts related to Web 2.0 technologies including blogs, RSS, wikis, and social networking. It discusses how these tools can be used for collaboration, information sharing, and networking. Examples are given of how libraries are implementing blogs, RSS feeds, and wikis on their websites and intranets.
Going social: the librarians bag of tricksBonaria Biancu
The document discusses the transition of libraries to Library 2.0 by embracing social media and web 2.0 technologies and principles. Key points include engaging users through social computing applications like blogs, wikis and podcasts; harnessing user participation and collaboration; and meeting users online through channels they use regularly like social networking sites and repositories. The goal for librarians is to have conversations with users through many platforms, gather and organize information for them, and share and remix content to better serve users in online spaces.
This document discusses how to build archivable websites that can be preserved by web archives. It recommends following web standards and accessibility guidelines, using stable URLs, semantic URLs, and limiting external assets. Tools for archiving websites include Heritrix, Wget, and HTTrack. The Internet Archive's Wayback Machine allows examining how a site appears in archives. The document encourages assessing a site's archivability using tools like Archive Ready.
From Seed to Harvest: Web Archiving Program Considerations for SULnullhandle
Presentation given at Stanford University Libraries as part of candidacy for the Web Archiving Service Manager position on web archiving program considerations and elements.
Collection Development for Selective Web Archivingnullhandle
The document discusses factors to consider when developing a collection policy for selective web archiving. It notes the large and growing amount of digital content and outlines challenges like limited resources. It recommends focusing on at-risk and unique third-party content that complements existing collections, is valuable to researchers, and addresses specific research needs. Observance of other archives' collection policies and access restrictions is also advised to avoid duplication of efforts and legal issues.
Lots More LOCKSS for Web Archiving: Boons from the LOCKSS Software Re-Archite...nullhandle
The LOCKSS software is being re-architected to reduce costs, integrate components, and prepare for the evolving web. The new components include tools for bibliographic metadata extraction, publisher heuristics, discovery via metadata, format migration on access, and an audit and repair protocol. The roadmap includes Dockerization, improved access via OpenWayback, and format migration and search web services by the end of 2018. The goal is more community involvement through open development on GitHub.
Exploring Aggregation of Personal, Private, and Institutional Web ArchivesMat Kelly
Mat Kelly presented a framework for aggregating personal, private, and institutional web archives while maintaining access control. The framework includes separate timemaps for different types of captures that could be aggregated while restricting access to private captures. Kelly sought input on use cases around access control for private web archives and mechanisms for protecting archived web pages. The presentation explored challenges in replaying private archives alongside public ones from institutions and how the framework could address these issues.
The document provides an overview of browser-based digital preservation including:
- The current state of digital preservation which relies on web crawlers and archives like the Internet Archive. However, this approach is insufficient for preserving pages that are not popular, behind authentication, or use complex JavaScript.
- The requirements for new software to directly capture and preserve web pages from within the browser in order to address the limitations of current archival approaches.
- A proposed system called "WARCreate" that would leverage the Chrome extension API to capture web pages and resources and generate WARC files for preservation while maintaining the original browsing context.
The document discusses designing websites to be preservable by web archivists. It provides tips such as using durable data formats, stable URLs, metadata embedding, and following web standards to help archiving technologies fully capture and replay the site. The document recommends seeing how a site validates, looks when archived, and generating sitemaps as ways to check if it meets priorities of being fully capturable, having its experience replayable over time, and remaining coherent as archives are preserved.
Lots of LOCKSS Keeping Stuff Safe: The Future of the LOCKSS Programnullhandle
The document discusses the future of the LOCKSS (Lots of Copies Keep Stuff Safe) program. It outlines plans to evolve the LOCKSS software and organizational structure to better support web archiving and distributed digital preservation. Key points include rearchitecting LOCKSS as a set of modular web services, expanding existing LOCKSS networks, and exploring how LOCKSS could play a greater role in distributed preservation beyond local institutions. The overall vision is to make LOCKSS technology more sustainable, scalable and accessible to diverse communities for long-term access to digital content.
This document discusses various Web 2.0 technologies and how libraries can utilize them, including blogs, RSS feeds, wikis, instant messaging, and Flickr. Blogs can be used to promote the library and create dialogue. RSS feeds can notify patrons of events and updates. Wikis allow for collaborative sharing of information among library staff and patrons. Instant messaging can facilitate reference services. Flickr and other sites allow libraries to share photos and images. The document provides examples of libraries using these technologies and best practices for implementation in libraries.
This document discusses various Web 2.0 technologies and how libraries can utilize them, including blogs, RSS feeds, wikis, instant messaging, and Flickr. Blogs can be used to promote the library and create dialogue. RSS feeds can notify patrons of events and updates. Wikis allow for collaborative sharing of information among library staff and patrons. Instant messaging can facilitate reference services. Flickr and other sites allow libraries to share photos and images. The document provides examples of libraries using these technologies and best practices for implementation in libraries.
This document discusses the need to measure various aspects of web archiving programs to better manage and assess them. It identifies several key metrics that could be measured, such as the volume of websites captured and preserved, usage of archived web content, costs associated with web archiving, and factors related to quality, buy-in, loss of content, and policy impacts. The document also notes challenges in measurement and capturing metrics that do not always have quantifiable measures.
The document discusses how the New York State Senate used Drupal to create a new public website to increase transparency, efficiency, and public participation. Key goals were to modernize technology, provide constituent services like news updates and casework tools, and share information through features like legislative data and video streams. Drupal was chosen as the content management system due to its wide use, features for stakeholder needs, and developer community support. The new site launched in 2011 and saw increased citizen engagement through interactive features.
Human Scale Web Collecting for Individuals and Institutions (Webrecorder Work...Anna Perricci
This is the main slide deck for a workshop at iPRES 2018 on human scale web collecting. A primary focus of the presentation was the use of Webrecorder.io, a free, open source web archiving tool available to all.
The document introduces Web 2.0 and its key concepts like social networking, folksonomy, RSS feeds, blogs, wikis, and discusses how these interactive and user-centered technologies can be applied for learning and enterprise uses. Examples are provided for social tagging, RSS feeds, blogs, and wikis. Additional resources on free culture, creative commons, and open archives are also listed for further exploration of Web 2.0 applications and technologies.
Who Will Archive the Archives? Thoughts About the Future of Web ArchivingMichael Nelson
The document discusses the challenges of archiving the web at scale. It notes that while much of the web has been archived, temporal drift and gaps remain issues. Memento provides a framework for accessing content across multiple archives. To fully archive the web, more copies stored in diverse archives are needed due to the risk of any single archive becoming unavailable.
The document discusses the evolution of the internet from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0. Web 1.0 was characterized by one-way communication through corporate websites and personal homepages. Web 2.0 is driven by user participation through social media, blogs, RSS feeds, wikis, social bookmarking, and file sharing sites which allow collaboration and sharing between users. Key technologies of Web 2.0 include social networks, blogs, RSS, and technologies that empower users and encourage participation and reuse on the internet.
The document discusses Steffen Staab's presentation on "The Web We Want" at the WebSci '17 conference. It covers several topics related to making the web more inclusive, healthy, and useful. For social inclusion, it describes the MAMEM project which aims to measure how accessible the web is for people with disabilities. For a healthy web, it discusses using techniques from social network analysis to identify harmful roles and behaviors. For a useful semantic web, it presents principles for interlinking data sets in ways that meaningfully extend entity descriptions and connectivity. The overall goal is to engineer and measure how well the web achieves important values like inclusion, health, and usefulness.
Web 2.0 In a Nutshell: A Librarian Guide to the World of Web 2.0teaguese
This document provides an overview of key concepts related to Web 2.0 technologies including blogs, RSS, wikis, and social networking. It discusses how these tools can be used for collaboration, information sharing, and networking. Examples are given of how libraries are implementing blogs, RSS feeds, and wikis on their websites and intranets.
Going social: the librarians bag of tricksBonaria Biancu
The document discusses the transition of libraries to Library 2.0 by embracing social media and web 2.0 technologies and principles. Key points include engaging users through social computing applications like blogs, wikis and podcasts; harnessing user participation and collaboration; and meeting users online through channels they use regularly like social networking sites and repositories. The goal for librarians is to have conversations with users through many platforms, gather and organize information for them, and share and remix content to better serve users in online spaces.
This document discusses how to build archivable websites that can be preserved by web archives. It recommends following web standards and accessibility guidelines, using stable URLs, semantic URLs, and limiting external assets. Tools for archiving websites include Heritrix, Wget, and HTTrack. The Internet Archive's Wayback Machine allows examining how a site appears in archives. The document encourages assessing a site's archivability using tools like Archive Ready.
From Seed to Harvest: Web Archiving Program Considerations for SULnullhandle
Presentation given at Stanford University Libraries as part of candidacy for the Web Archiving Service Manager position on web archiving program considerations and elements.
Collection Development for Selective Web Archivingnullhandle
The document discusses factors to consider when developing a collection policy for selective web archiving. It notes the large and growing amount of digital content and outlines challenges like limited resources. It recommends focusing on at-risk and unique third-party content that complements existing collections, is valuable to researchers, and addresses specific research needs. Observance of other archives' collection policies and access restrictions is also advised to avoid duplication of efforts and legal issues.
Lots More LOCKSS for Web Archiving: Boons from the LOCKSS Software Re-Archite...nullhandle
The LOCKSS software is being re-architected to reduce costs, integrate components, and prepare for the evolving web. The new components include tools for bibliographic metadata extraction, publisher heuristics, discovery via metadata, format migration on access, and an audit and repair protocol. The roadmap includes Dockerization, improved access via OpenWayback, and format migration and search web services by the end of 2018. The goal is more community involvement through open development on GitHub.
Exploring Aggregation of Personal, Private, and Institutional Web ArchivesMat Kelly
Mat Kelly presented a framework for aggregating personal, private, and institutional web archives while maintaining access control. The framework includes separate timemaps for different types of captures that could be aggregated while restricting access to private captures. Kelly sought input on use cases around access control for private web archives and mechanisms for protecting archived web pages. The presentation explored challenges in replaying private archives alongside public ones from institutions and how the framework could address these issues.
The document provides an overview of browser-based digital preservation including:
- The current state of digital preservation which relies on web crawlers and archives like the Internet Archive. However, this approach is insufficient for preserving pages that are not popular, behind authentication, or use complex JavaScript.
- The requirements for new software to directly capture and preserve web pages from within the browser in order to address the limitations of current archival approaches.
- A proposed system called "WARCreate" that would leverage the Chrome extension API to capture web pages and resources and generate WARC files for preservation while maintaining the original browsing context.
The document discusses designing websites to be preservable by web archivists. It provides tips such as using durable data formats, stable URLs, metadata embedding, and following web standards to help archiving technologies fully capture and replay the site. The document recommends seeing how a site validates, looks when archived, and generating sitemaps as ways to check if it meets priorities of being fully capturable, having its experience replayable over time, and remaining coherent as archives are preserved.
Lots of LOCKSS Keeping Stuff Safe: The Future of the LOCKSS Programnullhandle
The document discusses the future of the LOCKSS (Lots of Copies Keep Stuff Safe) program. It outlines plans to evolve the LOCKSS software and organizational structure to better support web archiving and distributed digital preservation. Key points include rearchitecting LOCKSS as a set of modular web services, expanding existing LOCKSS networks, and exploring how LOCKSS could play a greater role in distributed preservation beyond local institutions. The overall vision is to make LOCKSS technology more sustainable, scalable and accessible to diverse communities for long-term access to digital content.
This document discusses various Web 2.0 technologies and how libraries can utilize them, including blogs, RSS feeds, wikis, instant messaging, and Flickr. Blogs can be used to promote the library and create dialogue. RSS feeds can notify patrons of events and updates. Wikis allow for collaborative sharing of information among library staff and patrons. Instant messaging can facilitate reference services. Flickr and other sites allow libraries to share photos and images. The document provides examples of libraries using these technologies and best practices for implementation in libraries.
This document discusses various Web 2.0 technologies and how libraries can utilize them, including blogs, RSS feeds, wikis, instant messaging, and Flickr. Blogs can be used to promote the library and create dialogue. RSS feeds can notify patrons of events and updates. Wikis allow for collaborative sharing of information among library staff and patrons. Instant messaging can facilitate reference services. Flickr and other sites allow libraries to share photos and images. The document provides examples of libraries using these technologies and best practices for implementation in libraries.
This document discusses the need to measure various aspects of web archiving programs to better manage and assess them. It identifies several key metrics that could be measured, such as the volume of websites captured and preserved, usage of archived web content, costs associated with web archiving, and factors related to quality, buy-in, loss of content, and policy impacts. The document also notes challenges in measurement and capturing metrics that do not always have quantifiable measures.
NCompass Live - Nov. 25, 2015.
http://nlc.nebraska.gov/ncompasslive/
Are you curious about the brave new world of post-MARC cataloging? Are you wondering what this BIBFRAME, Linked Data mumbo-jumbo you keep hearing about is, anyway? Attend this session to see demonstrations of a variety of tools to see how they each do their best to answer the question of what cataloging without MARC will be like, and what they can do in terms of transforming our catalogs' legacy MARC data. Tools covered will include: RDA in Many Metadata Formats (RIMMF), BIBFRAME Editors (from the Library of Congress and Zepheira), and OpenRefine.
Presenter: Emily Nimsakont, Head of Cataloging & Resource Management, Schmid Law Library, University of Nebraska College of Law.
This presentation was provided by Corey Davis of the University of Victoria during the NISO Virtual Conference, Convergence: The Web and Publishing Onto The Web, held on May 17, 2017
Interoperability and Technical Collaboration for Web and Social Media Archivingnullhandle
The document discusses interoperability and technical collaboration for web and social media archiving. It describes Heritrix, an archival crawler for web archiving, and newer approaches like headless browsers and archiving proxies that can execute JavaScript and support more capture tools. It also discusses leveraging APIs to reliably collect higher-fidelity social media data and aligning social media harvesting with web archiving. Key questions raised include how to build technical architectures and community frameworks to facilitate broad participation in web and social archiving, increase distributed capacity, and make archiving more inclusive.
This document discusses the concepts of Web 2.0 and Library 2.0. It provides examples of how libraries are adopting Web 2.0 technologies like blogs, wikis, RSS feeds, and engaging users in more participatory ways. Examples mentioned include libraries that have implemented blogs, podcasts, tagging features for catalogues, and virtual libraries in Second Life. The document also discusses who the main users are of these new technologies, namely younger "millennial" generations who have high usage of social software and expect to access services anytime on any device.
Similar to Outreach to Campus Webmasters for a Better Web, and Better Web Archiving (20)
Understanding Legal Use Cases for Web Archivesnullhandle
This document provides an overview of legal use cases for web archive evidence and discusses relevant considerations. It begins with examples of cases where web archive evidence from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine has been used, such as for trademark or copyright infringement. It then examines authentication standards and cases related to authenticating web archive evidence through affidavits, judicial notice, or expert testimony. The document also discusses reliability factors courts have considered, such as the Wayback Machine disclaimer, issues of incompleteness, and temporal coherence of archived pages. Overall, it analyzes the legal context and precedent for how courts have assessed the evidentiary value of web archives.
This document discusses unlocking the LOCKSS system with APIs to make it more interoperable and enable integration with other digital preservation systems. It describes opportunities to integrate polling/repair functionality, repository replication, and access features through APIs. The goal is to reduce costs by leveraging open-source software, aligning with web archiving standards, and enabling external systems to interact with LOCKSS components through a web services architecture. This will help LOCKSS scale and evolve with changes on the web.
Rethinking Web Archiving Quality Assurance for Impact, Scalability, and Susta...nullhandle
Presentation for session 209, "Balancing Quality of Life and Quality Assurance: Best Practices and Tools for Web Archiving QA" at the 2016 Society of American Archivists Annual Meeting.
Why Not Lots of Copies Keep(ing) Software Safe?nullhandle
This document discusses how the LOCKSS (Lots of Copies Keeps Stuff Safe) system, which was originally developed to preserve web archives, could potentially play a role in software preservation. It describes how LOCKSS uses a distributed network of nodes run by different institutions to preserve content, provides examples of Private LOCKSS Networks and Controlled LOCKSS that were created for specific communities and content, and raises questions about how a similar model could work for software preservation.
The document provides an overview of the WASAPI project funded by IMLS to develop data transfer APIs between web archiving repositories. The project involves the Internet Archive, Stanford University, Rutgers University, and the University of North Texas working from 2016 to 2018 to build community, model preservation networks, and develop APIs for Archive-It and LOCKSS to standardize researcher access and exchange of archived data between service providers, repositories, and research workspaces.
A Snapshot of the U.S. Web Archiving Landscape through the 2013 NDSA Survey R...nullhandle
The document summarizes key findings from a 2013 survey of web archiving programs in the United States. It found that most programs are run by universities, are relatively new, and use Archive-It. While programs have matured, concerns remain around growing data volumes, access, and fully capturing priority content types. Opportunities exist in collaborations and developing social media policies, but web archiving priorities and support require further development at many institutions.
Campaign Web Archives to Support Multi-Institutional Researchnullhandle
Presentation for the Society of American Archivists 2014 Annual Meeting, session 502: "Untangling the Web: Diverse Experiences with Access from the Web Archiving Trenches."
Boiling the Ocean, Together: Web Archive Collection Development in a Global C...nullhandle
This document summarizes Nicholas Taylor's presentation on web archive collection development in a global context. It discusses the distributed and selective nature of existing web archiving initiatives and collections. It also examines considerations for developing web archive collections, such as aligning with organizational missions, preserving at-risk content, and anticipating future research uses. Key questions are raised about maintaining awareness of what content already exists, developing collaborative projects, and creating policies and strategies for building unique and valuable web archive collections.
A Survey of Research Prospects for more Manageable Personal Digital Photo Col...nullhandle
Presentation given at Personal Digital Archiving on promising technologies demonstrated in research literature that may ultimately improve annotation and management of personal digital photo collections.
This document summarizes various tools for web archiving, including tools for capturing websites and individual web pages (HTTrack, Heritrix, Wget, WARCreate), replaying archived websites (Wayback Machine, MementoFox), managing workflows (Web Curator Tool, NetarchiveSuite, CINCH), hosted services (Archive-It, Web Archiving Service), and file utilities (HTTrack2Arc, warc-tools, WAT Utilities).
This document discusses the Wayback Machine, an open source tool used by many institutions to archive and provide access to historical web pages. It describes common limitations of web archives like missing elements from pages and errors with JavaScript. Workarounds are provided like disabling JavaScript. The document also provides strategies for finding pages missing from archives, such as using search engines to find historical URLs when a site URL has changed. It encourages involvement in identifying important websites to archive for future access.
Web and Twitter Archiving at the Library of Congressnullhandle
Presentation given at the Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL) Web Archive Globalization Workshop on web and social media archiving efforts at the Library of Congress.
Where We're Going: Non-Traditional Careers for LIS Graduatesnullhandle
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Usability Testing in Federal Libraries: A Case Studynullhandle
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Understanding User Behavior with Google Analytics.pdfSEO Article Boost
Unlocking the full potential of Google Analytics is crucial for understanding and optimizing your website’s performance. This guide dives deep into the essential aspects of Google Analytics, from analyzing traffic sources to understanding user demographics and tracking user engagement.
Traffic Sources Analysis:
Discover where your website traffic originates. By examining the Acquisition section, you can identify whether visitors come from organic search, paid campaigns, direct visits, social media, or referral links. This knowledge helps in refining marketing strategies and optimizing resource allocation.
User Demographics Insights:
Gain a comprehensive view of your audience by exploring demographic data in the Audience section. Understand age, gender, and interests to tailor your marketing strategies effectively. Leverage this information to create personalized content and improve user engagement and conversion rates.
Tracking User Engagement:
Learn how to measure user interaction with your site through key metrics like bounce rate, average session duration, and pages per session. Enhance user experience by analyzing engagement metrics and implementing strategies to keep visitors engaged.
Conversion Rate Optimization:
Understand the importance of conversion rates and how to track them using Google Analytics. Set up Goals, analyze conversion funnels, segment your audience, and employ A/B testing to optimize your website for higher conversions. Utilize ecommerce tracking and multi-channel funnels for a detailed view of your sales performance and marketing channel contributions.
Custom Reports and Dashboards:
Create custom reports and dashboards to visualize and interpret data relevant to your business goals. Use advanced filters, segments, and visualization options to gain deeper insights. Incorporate custom dimensions and metrics for tailored data analysis. Integrate external data sources to enrich your analytics and make well-informed decisions.
This guide is designed to help you harness the power of Google Analytics for making data-driven decisions that enhance website performance and achieve your digital marketing objectives. Whether you are looking to improve SEO, refine your social media strategy, or boost conversion rates, understanding and utilizing Google Analytics is essential for your success.
Gen Z and the marketplaces - let's translate their needsLaura Szabó
The product workshop focused on exploring the requirements of Generation Z in relation to marketplace dynamics. We delved into their specific needs, examined the specifics in their shopping preferences, and analyzed their preferred methods for accessing information and making purchases within a marketplace. Through the study of real-life cases , we tried to gain valuable insights into enhancing the marketplace experience for Generation Z.
The workshop was held on the DMA Conference in Vienna June 2024.
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Quattordicesimo Meetup di Milano, tenutosi a Milano il 23 Maggio 2024 dalle ore 17:00 alle ore 18:30 in presenza e da remoto.
Abbiamo parlato di come Axpo Italia S.p.A. ha ridotto il technical debt migrando le proprie APIs da Mule 3.9 a Mule 4.4 passando anche da on-premises a CloudHub 1.0.
Instagram has become one of the most popular social media platforms, allowing people to share photos, videos, and stories with their followers. Sometimes, though, you might want to view someone's story without them knowing.
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Outreach to Campus Webmasters for a Better Web, and Better Web Archiving
1. Outreach to Campus Webmasters
for a Better Web, and Better Web
Archiving
Nicholas Taylor
Web Archiving Service Manager
Stanford University Libraries
Archives 2015 Session 306 – Seeding Engagement:
Web Archiving Outreach Opportunities and Strategies
August 21, 2015
2. webmasters don’t care about web archiving
“Le mur de l'indifférence...” by mamasuco under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
4. look for points of alignment
“Alignment” by Miguel Virkkunen Carvalho under CC BY 2.0
5. decentralized Web production
• Stanford Web Services
• Stanford Communications
• tens of distributed
webmasters for
administrative units
• many more individual
content creators
• no central coordination
• centralized services
available (Drupal, AFS) but
diversity of platforms used
“hectormilla.com” by Hector Milla under CC BY-NC 2.0
6. become a free SEO consultant
“SEO Scrabble” by Jonathan Rolande under CC BY 2.0