Impact of New Information Resources: Multimedia and Networks

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290

2-4 units

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This course is not currently offered.

Course Description

As new technology makes the shift from broadcasting to narrowcasting more feasible, how will people get their news, culture, and other information? This course examines past predictions, currently available services, and future delivery mechanisms.

This course tracks the convergence and shifting alliances between the broadcasting networks, the telecommunications companies, newspapers, and the entertainment industry. We focus our attention on a wide variety of aspects of the changing landscape: technological, public policy, indexing & access, marketing of services, social, cultural, etc.

We examine the structure and interaction promoted by the various new information technologies. What kind of language and discourse are they composed of?

Many examples used in the course will be taken from current multimedia activities in the Cultural Heritage community, particularly those that the instructor is actively involved in.

We study current library and museum pilot projects to license, market and deliver multimedia material (individually, as consortia, or through marketers such as Bill Gates' Corbis Corporation). We examine licensing issues, terms and conditions, and costs of the various stages of these projects. We look at how people use these, and what they want from such systems. And we focus much of our attention on the systems design issues raised (particularly around metadata) in attempting to provide integrated delivery of images and text coming from a diverse set of sources. Much of what we discover in working groups and student projects will be used for future planning by the cultural heritage community.

Though this course deals extensively with technology and systems architecture, it is not a technical course. It is essentially a communications course that examines new multimedia and networking information systems from a variety of different social science perspectives: sociology, critical theory, public policy, communications theory, marketing, structuralism, political science, etc. Students also gain experience in technology forecasting, and should be better prepared to cope with planning in a world of rapidly changing technology. Because such a wide variety of perspectives are presented in this course, classroom time is not devoted to delving deeply into all the perspectives offered. The instructor expects that students are motivated and self-directed, and will focus on and pursue the topics and perspectives that interest them the most. We form working groups that meet weekly to look at the material more intensively through a particular set of lenses (such as critical theory or marketing).

Prerequisites

None
Last updated: January 10, 2017