I'm a former librarian, from Singapore. The postings were library-related (mostly). I tended to ramble. As with things in life, my thoughts were incidental (i.e. insignificant). DISCLAIMER - Views expressed here were strictly my own and did not represent the official stand of my former employer. But you know that already.
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Wednesday, April 11, 2007
TeacherTube.com
First there was YouTube (for videos). Then Slideshare (popularly known as the YouTube for Powerpoint).
Will we see LibraryTube next? You know, instructional videos on how to make the most of libraries, community-contributed videos on reading and learning... : )
Ivan, I admire your enthusiasm in championing all things libraries. Personally I am not too sure if there is very much to shoot if you have a LibraryTube. Many of these spinoffs from youtube are trying to capitalise on the same idea that they have pioneered in online video streaming and viewing.
I would say in the long run unless these newer tubes find a sponsor, it will be hard to sustain these. Video publishing needs storage and lots of bandwidth. Another issue is copyrights/legality etc. Youtube is big enough to withstand or negotiate with people trying to sue them. On a smaller service you may not have resources to spot copyright violations etc and stand up to governments/corporates asking you to remove videos that is objectionable .
I would suggest using existing infrastructure of youtube, jumpcut, vimeo etc. and use tags, channels etc. to create a seperate area for education use.
If I remember correctly one of the motivation of the guy who created teacher tube was that schools were starting to ban youtube. I think the solution is not to create a new platform - that may one day be hard to sustain - but to educate the school board members and decision makers that kids are going to be more distracted from now on. Youtube is working on a mobile version. Kids will just watch the video they want to watch on their mobile.
Motiono is also a great video sharing site just like Youtube and Yahoo's Jumpcut. Just like Youtube, on motiono there is a choice to upload from mobile devices.
In January Yavapai College Library will actually have a link on their website to a page they have called LibraryTube. It will contain videos such as this An Afternoon Romp
Ivan, I admire your enthusiasm in championing all things libraries. Personally I am not too sure if there is very much to shoot if you have a LibraryTube. Many of these spinoffs from youtube are trying to capitalise on the same idea that they have pioneered in online video streaming and viewing.
ReplyDeleteivan, teachertube is awesome - thank you for blogging about it. before reading your blog post, i had not heard about it.
ReplyDeletei think librarytube is an excellent idea.
I would say in the long run unless these newer tubes find a sponsor, it will be hard to sustain these. Video publishing needs storage and lots of bandwidth. Another issue is copyrights/legality etc. Youtube is big enough to withstand or negotiate with people trying to sue them. On a smaller service you may not have resources to spot copyright violations etc and stand up to governments/corporates asking you to remove videos that is objectionable .
ReplyDeleteI would suggest using existing infrastructure of youtube, jumpcut, vimeo etc. and use tags, channels etc. to create a seperate area for education use.
If I remember correctly one of the motivation of the guy who created teacher tube was that schools were starting to ban youtube. I think the solution is not to create a new platform - that may one day be hard to sustain - but to educate the school board members and decision makers that kids are going to be more distracted from now on. Youtube is working on a mobile version. Kids will just watch the video they want to watch on their mobile.
Motiono is also a great video sharing site just like Youtube and Yahoo's Jumpcut. Just like Youtube, on motiono there is a choice to upload from mobile devices.
ReplyDeleteIn January Yavapai College Library will actually have a link on their website to a page they have called LibraryTube. It will contain videos such as this An Afternoon Romp
ReplyDelete