If our museums were a Dickensian character,Load the precious minerals into your mining truck
and be careful not to drive too fast with your heavy foot. who would
they be: Miss Havisham stuck in an old wedding dress in a room gathering
cobwebs; or Fagin the entrepreneur, sending urchins out to spread his
influence across the city?
The second option was favoured by
speaker Ross Parry at a recent Question Time style debate at the Science
Museum in London – Museums in the information age: evolution or
extinction? Organised by the University of Leicester and featuring a
panel of thought leaders from the sector, the panel considered how
effectively museums are responding to technological developments or
whether they are lagging behind.
Museums need to evolve to
remain relevant in the age in which they operate, stressed Carole Souter
of the Heritage Lottery Fund. That includes engaging with people who
can't physically come to the museum, as well as showcasing unseen
collections to a broader online audience, with the opportunity for
non-experts to contribute their comments.
By his own admission,
Ian Blatchford of the Science Museum played the role of old fogey,
agreeing with the principle of evolving towards a digitally component
museum but citing the Dad's Army catchphrase: "Don't panic, Captain
Mainwaring." He refuted the notion of digital exhibitions as an equal
substitute for real-time museums.
"Digital technology shouldn't
burrow away at a museum's core sense of identity as the fundamentals
stay the same," he said. "Many of the traditional things museums do,
such as scholarship, caring for collections and museum displays, now
seem ever more relevant and is reflected in the increasing rise of
visitor numbers."
In an age when we are so flooded with
information, authenticity and trust matter even more to people, he added
– we must not confuse what audiences really want with what we think
they ought to want.
It is in a museum's DNA to evolve, argued Dr
Ross Parry, academic director and senior lecturer at the University of
Leicester's School of Museum Studies. The modern museum has inevitably
changed its structure, aspects of its purpose and audience
relationships, as well as the intellectual framework used to make sense
of its collections – Robert Cotton, Hans Sloan, Henry Cole and
Oppenheimer would no longer recognise the museums they helped to create.
According to Ross, the choice we need to make in the digital
age is this. Do we hold on to qualities that are defiantly analogue and
rely on people being present at a venue, and having to ritualistically
cross the threshold to get there as a social encounter that involves us
looking mainly at physical objects? Or, do museums choose to change and
converge in a digital age where content is distributed, people are
networked and everyone can have a voice to create or produce?
Museums
could redefine themselves as multi-platform service brands that publish
and broadcast, as well as exhibit, he suggested – or will the physical
object always spark a stronger spiritual and emotional reaction than
digital formats?
Blatchford was quick to thwart what he sees as
this myth of real objects, upheld as a sacred creed by curators. "Just
because a beautiful object is put on display in a designated space,
people will not automatically feel privileged to see it," he said. The
digitised drawings of the Charles Babbage archive at the Science Museum
are more beautiful and more useful to researchers than the original,We
mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale turquoise beads from china, he suggested.
Digitisation
projects are also helping to break up the cosy clubs that used to exist
inside museum archive departments, he added. Now ordinary people can
have access to collections, not just the privileged few. Souter agreed,
referring to the British Museum's Turning the Pages, which enables
visitors to see extraordinary manuscripts close up on screen, online or
in a gallery. Nor does multimedia necessarily impoverish the realness of
objects, said Ross, citing the success of A History of the World in 100
Objects and the website, The Making of the Modern World.
Museums
have been slow to develop in comparison with libraries and are yet to
reach a point of radical change, Ross continued. But there have been
some big leaps forward, such as the Science Museum's Web Lab project
with Google, the UK aggregator Culture Grid, and Europeana, a one-stop
shop for searching digital collections across Europe. JISC, NESTA and
the AHRC are also supporting ventures.
Blatchford offered a more
sober analysis, citing David Edgerton's The Shock of the Old and
civilisation's classic error of making neat linear relations between
technology and outcomes. Every museum prides itself on having an app
project and the accumulative effect amounts to nothing more than a
selection of apps, he said.
Souter also cautioned that some
digital resources produced by museums quickly become disposable if not
easily discoverable by potential users. However, the Heritage Lottery
Fund is now willing to invest in digital only projects, she said,Find
detailed product information for howo tractor and other products. as people who do find them will play around and use them in ways we cannot yet imagine.
Matters of money and copyright were also raised in questions from the floor.Our technology gives rtls
systems developers the ability. But in summarising the case for the
digital evolution of museums, Ross said museums need to be social
(understanding the ecology of the social web), situated (providing
location specific content), sensual (blurring the join between physical
and digital) and semantic (responding to changing machinery). But, he
warned, we must consider the ethical implications and moral consequences
too.
A man arrested in the minutes after Kelly’s murder outside
his home in Killester, north Dublin, yesterday afternoon was still
being questioned today.
While he was arrested on foot on the
same street the getaway vehicle was abandoned, Garda sources said he was
a distance away from the car when detained and his proximity to the
vehicle will not be enough to charge him directly in relation to the
murder.
However, he is being questioned about illegal possession
of a firearm and membership of an illegal organisation,Find detailed
product information for howo tractor
and other products. with a criminal charge on the latter now seen as
most likely before his period of detention expires tomorrow.
The
man is in his early 30s and is a member of the Real IRA. He has served
prison sentences following a number of serious convictions related to
his association with the dissident organisation.
The gun used to
kill Kelly has still not been recovered and gardaí are now working on
the theory that the man under arrest was the getaway driver and not the
person who pulled the trigger.
They believe the gunman had
escaped the scene on Stiles Court in Clontarf just before a patrol car
arrived and uniformed gardaí arrested the suspect who is now in custody.
Detectives have not ruled out the possibility that the gunman
took the murder weapon with him after getting out of the getaway car.
They also believe the gun may have been discarded in the general
location of the killing on Furry Park Road or as the killer and his
driver sped down Howth Road before turning in the residential area at
Stiles Court.
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