The benefit for Public Libraries is that by their very nature Wiki's are a community resource offering an inclusive environment, as does the Library itself. They could be useful for debates, team projects, sharing resources, research collections, book reviews, Bookclubs, community projects and so on.
When discussing Wiki it is almost necessary to mention Wikipedia - the largest and greatest encyclopedia ever compiled. Mind you, the Wikipedia is not error free - but then nor is the Encylopedia Britannica. In fact, in 1964, a physicist called Dr Harvey Einbinder read the Britannica from cover to cover and found enough mistakes to fill a 390-page book, The Myth of the Britannica. Nonetheless, thanks in part to Wikipedia, the satisfaction of curiosity has never been so easy to fulfil.
In this Information Age (or should that be the Age of Information Overload?) it would be reasonable to quote Thomas Edison - "We don't know a millionth of one per cent about anything". And it is no wonder when you consider that back in 1987 it was calculated that a year's worth of daily editions of The New York Times contained more information than a man or woman in the 17th century was likely to encounter in an entire lifetime. And this was long before Google, Wikipedia, Facebook and YouTube.
Love the images you have found. The amount of information out there really makes the mind boggle. Getting to the stuff you need or want to know is what it is all about and by using some of the web 2.0 tools we have been looking at can make it a bit easier.
ReplyDeleteGreat post - and really well researched. Great point about the errors between Britannica and Wikipedia! I read a report which found that on average there are the same number of errors in both formats- except that the Wiki errors were corrected a lot quicker than the EB ones.
ReplyDeleteLove the toilet as a computer chair.
ReplyDeleteyour blogs are very interesting and again great images
ReplyDeleteI hadn't thought about using a Wiki for a bookclub - good idea
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