Posts filed under 'taxonomy metadata conferences'

HS Digital Asset Management Symposium, London 2008

I just returned from the two day London HS DAM/MOM Symposium where the food was phenomenal, as usual. They always have wonderful catering at those Henry Stewart events The rest of what was served up at the conference was a little less than palatable. The event lacked focus this year and catching a session with any direct relevance to DAM was an ala carte gamble.

Theresa Regli’s opening session on the Vendor-neutral Approach to Selecting the Right DAM was standing room only. CMS Watch has published its Digital & Media Asset Management Report 2008 which can be purchased for the large sum of $1900. An interesting debate followed in a panel session regarding its perceived value. A self proclaimed “world-class thought leader and strategist in social media” challenged the need to purchase such reports when the same information could be found on networks and online reviews for free. Theresa responded that since so much information existed on the web today, the value in her report was in the time saved sifting through a plethora of noise to get to the facts needed to make sound business decisions.

Noise was prevalent at this year’s London conference. It took a disciplined ear to mute the proclamations of the evangelists to get to the meat of any given topic. And please, can we stop evangelizing and start achieving?

Here’s hoping that next conference I feel more inspired and encouraged rather than exhausted from enduring so many lectures.

Add comment June 27th, 2008

Essentials of Metadata and Taxonomy Conference, March 11, 08

The Essentials of Metadata and Taxonomy conference held on Monday, March 10, 2008 held in the CBI Conference Centre in London, was an interesting gathering of an ever-growing consortium of experts and novices trying to get their digital houses in order. The fact that so many different approaches were presented only reinforced the fact that the topic was much more than simply describing a classification system or data management model, but a window into the sea change that is affecting business as we know it.

From a meat-and-potatoes (a delicious meal) introduction to taxonomies (from the indefatigable Seth Earley) to BBC’s proof-of-concept demonstration of harvesting Wikipedia’s structured URL’s to import as controlled vocabularies, to analysis of auto-categorization and auto-classification tools available on the market, the conference covered a wide swath. An archive panel even delved into the challenges of raising money for digitisation projects which, while not exactly a metadata or taxonomy topic, resonated as a common ROI dilemma.

It was my first time chairing a conference and I enjoyed myself much more than I thought. Mostly because it was an absolute joy to be in a room with information architects, taxonomists, library scientists, information technologists, XML specialists, and knowledge organizers with such keen and sustained focus. There in the middle of the room were Leonard and Sheena Will, who have been doing information management and thesaurus work since way before the first publication of Wired. Next to them was Stella Dextre-Clarke, the award-winning information consultant who is currently advising the Bridgeman Art Library. Yeah, you heard me right. There are awards for information retrieval!

Unlike other conferences dedicated to taxonomy or search, this small and intimate gathering felt more like a professional association that allowed non-members in for the sake of edification. Even the obligatory vendor presentations were low key and casual.

Here’s what others are saying:

The importance of Taxonomy and Metadata

Semantic Revolution

1 comment March 13th, 2008


Calendar

February 2012
M T W T F S S
« Jan    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829  

Posts by Month

Posts by Category