Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Week 3

Looking around Flickr and exploring the photos on Mosman's flickr page (you do a great job, Mosman!), I really like the way that Mosman shares its local history photos on Flickr and would like to try something similar at my library.

I will probably need to explore the potential copyright issues and write down some guidelines first, but I think the bottom-up approach at Flickr might be easier than trying to create a stand along Local History image database - and Flickr has the added benefit of being connected to a ready-made and ever growing community (some members of which probably live in this local government area and might be interested in local history photographs but never visit the library!).

On a personal note - I do like the serindipitous nature of online communities, especially Flickr.

I spent my childhood summers in a small valley on the West Coast of the South Island of New Zealand. The community at the mouth of this valley is called Cronadun, but it is far from a holiday destination! One summer the local policeman walked up to our holiday house (a run down ex-miners cottage in the middle of a couple of paddocks) and said hi, simply because he had been searching earlier in the year online for Cronadun (just for curiosities sake, to see what would come up) and came across my personal blog, which mentioned our holidays there and my Mum's flickr page, which had some beautiful photos of the valley. We made a new friend, because a stranger looked up something that he cared about, found some other people who cared about it too - and then realised that they lived next door - in the middle of nowhere!

My Watershed

I imagine that occasionally people might, just out of interest, search for things online (or on flickr) that are in our Local History collection - and if we put them out there, so that they are easy to find, maybe more people will find them (and, by extension, find us!).

Readers Advisory suggestion for today's exercise: Always Coming Home by Ursula K Le Guin, because reading this book set in a hummocky valley in Northern California, during the summer I was 15 (in my hummocky valley in New Zealand), helped me shape my landscape values.

3 comments:

pls@slnsw said...

Thanks for the Readers Advisory suggestions with each post,
I shall have to find more than 15 minutes a day to expand my reading!
Kathleen A

Ross said...

Wow what a cool story, it looks like an awesome place! That's the real essence of this new internet paradigm; the power to connect with people, those near by and far away. Yes Mosman's use of flickr is impressive!

Chris said...

I've seen that pic before, Errant:P

BTW:

"serindipitous nature of online communities, especially Flickr."

That reminds me of something :)