Monday, November 15, 2010

VM to go: Because collections are A GOOD IDEA

This week I'll discuss "the possibility of downloading a pre-installed VM versus building your own, from a learning and pedagogical perspective."

The lines between user, content editor, and administrator, between local and remote servers, and between front and back ends are blurred as part of library 2.0, and indeed as part of web 2.0. So it has felt strange to me as a library student, that just as I am learning to make use of web tools possible for others, I am being expected to learn the most basic, unassisted computer application: the Command Line.

Should preconfigured virtual machines and similar solutions be available for download? DUH. Yes, they should. Not because this would provide more time to concentrate on the collection, but because it will open the possibilities of collection up to more people, more institutions, more collectors.

Would I use preconfigured systems? No, because I've spent time learning how to install repositories. I don't like the prospect of looking back on my Digital Information Management certificate the way I look back on my English and Women's Studies degrees. I want to feel I learned something useful that others don't know as well as I do. Knowing how a repository is structured and modified by building it from scratch is valuable, for me, because I believe I'm bound to do it professionally. But that doesn't mean it's valuable for everyone who wants to start a collection. It means that it's valuable for those who want to offer professional collections.

I am not one of those library students who thinks that fewer people knowing how to operate repositories means that I will be more in demand. People think repositories are worthless now. Not all people, but many of them. There are universes of data and information being lost because collection is not expected; it is an afterthought. So collection has to become a more mainstream activity first. It has to be happening where the grass is greener, where you're colleagues are spending their time. It has to be HAPPENING. So the more easy it is to start and manage a collection, the more likely it will be accepted as a good idea, then a trend, and finally, a necessity.

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