Volume 17, Number 5 • May 2000 |
• IT
Report from the Field •
Internet Librarian International/LibTech 2000 This global conference featured many languages, opinions, and views by Stephen Abram |
Gossip Heaven
You can also tell that spring is in the air when young information
industry companies’ minds turn their attention to mergers and acquisitions.
The hallways at the Olympia 2 conference center were buzzing with discussions
of the recent executive changes and reorganizations, rumored mergers and
corporate divorces, and the newest products. On the first day of the conference
Dialog was asked by authorities to clarify its rumored corporate changes.
It then issued a press release that set off another round of speculation.
By the end of the conference Thomson was identified as the suitor for the
Dialog service, DataStar, and Profound. It was then announced that Bright
Station has been built to hold the remains of Dialog CEO Dan Wagner’s venture.
Delegates, with an ironic twist, surfed to its new Web site (http://www.brightstation.com)
at the Factiva Internet Café and made humorous comments about the
home page’s “egg” symbolism. Much raucous laughter ensued.
Is Print Dead?
Not by a long shot. This conference is held parallel to the London
Book Fair (LBF). I got lost on the street on the way over to the Olympia
and asked a local mother with a baby carriage if she could help. She immediately
assumed that I was intending to go to the Book Fair and knew how to direct
me there. As an inmate of the info biz, it was humbling to have to walk
through the LBF’s immense space and hundreds of booths. Its booths (which
seemed like islands or small homes, actually) were replete with huge offices,
secretaries to manage the appointments and authors, buskers, chefs, and
booth babes for porno-lite publishers to draw the crowds. Only later did
I find most of the electronic information industry’s players safely protected
in a private hall a fraction of the size of the LBF. Print lives.
A Truly Global Conference
This year’s ILI attendance was more than double that of last year.
And even more interestingly, more delegates came from outside the U.K.
than within. The halls were filled with many languages and conversations
between delegates who had arrived from all continents, with the exception
of South America and Antarctica. It was a treat to see library and information
professional issues addressed without the cultural dominance of any one
country overpowering the discourse. Storytelling and sharing were the basis
of the event, with both speakers and audience questioners seeking the solutions
for a balanced approach to a global Internet while meeting the disparate
needs of their local users and individual or national cultures. The panels
at ILI were also very interactive. Another innovation this year was the
presence of 11 free workshops in the Exhibit Hall.
From this vantage point there were several themes that seemed to thread
throughout every talk. I also noticed a few emerging themes that might
be harbingers of things to come as the non-industrialized world adopts
the Internet in the next wave and brings its influences to bear on the
medium.
Wireless
Lots of sessions discussed wireless as the next wave of the Internet.
The WAP (wireless application protocol) and its integration into hand-helds
were clearly on many attendees’ minds. This might have been because, as
many European Community info pros will tell you, the U.K. is way ahead
on wireless technology and implementation. This would appear to be true
given the ubiquitous sight of Londoners with PCS phones permanently affixed
to their ears.
Enterprise Information Portals
Clare Hart, recently appointed CEO of Factiva, gave one of the daily
keynotes. While showing the focus on professional users—info pros and business
end-users alike—she opened the door ever so slightly on some of the leading-edge
client work that Factiva has been doing with customization and its intranet
tool kit. Mouths watered at the glimpses of enterprise intranet portals
that flashed up on the screen showing the integration of the external and
internal content that Factiva filtered for customer needs, and the integration
of other vendors’ “stuff” too. It was a rare look into the corporate portal
where too few share and show off—one hopes because the content integration
is considered such a major competitive advantage.
Knowledge Management
The KM sessions were among the best attended at the conference. This
conference focused on actual case studies and real-life experiences in
addition to the promise-and-potential overviews. The real experiences of
almost a dozen corporate, academic, and public sector enterprises were
exceedingly educational. Each session underlined the fact that content
and intranets are just the tools of the strategy. Cindy Hill of Sun Microsystems
summed it up best by listing the risks involved in KM strategies when the
holes in end-user information literacy skills are not filled or addressed.
Talent
It appeared that we’re getting better at describing the actual “talent”
involved in searching. There was a clearer differentiation between what
info pros could do and what could reasonably be expected of an end-user.
Danny Sullivan (of SearchEngineWatch fame) delivered one of his patented evaluations of the size of the Web and where he thinks it’s going. The age of huge search results is ending as the algorithms for displaying results get smarter—at least for the average Joe. The quest for increasingly larger databases of Web page indexes is a race that, if you win it, you lose. More pages seem to coordinate to lower results satisfaction.
Mary Ellen Bates—super searcher extraordinaire—did her usual superb
job of showing the best in tips and tricks from super searchers. She made
it clear both through example and metaphor that there’s an emerging and
unbeatable split coming between those search engines and services that
want the mass market and those that serve professionals and market niches.
Education
D. Scott Brandt’s track on end-user training and teaching was equally
successful. His session on teaching the Internet in 50 minutes was standing
room only.
Emerging Threads
It’s clear that we’re entering an era where language needs to be addressed.
There was a whole track on ways people with disabilities can use the Internet.
It became increasingly clear to me that unilingualism will be a disadvantage
in the future of the Web (or at least in the preference for sources written
in English only).
The emergence of the Third World as a major growth niche for the Web was clear in both the diversity of the attendees at ILI as well as in the breadth of global issues covered in the sessions.
It was a great conference, unfettered by the politics of any one association,
country, or profession. With this second conference ILI has found its feet
and its niche. Freedom of thought, expression, and creativity reign.
Stephen Abram is vice president of corporate development at Micromedia,
Ltd., a division of IHS Canada. His e-mail address is sabram@micromedia.on.ca.
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