About MuseumBlogs.org
MuseumBlogs.org is a directory of museum and museum-related blogs as well as a space for re-postings and roundups. The purpose of the site is to raise awareness and increase the authority of blogs focusing on museum issues. Authority is used by search engines to filter results. The more links, the more authority and more visible a blog will become.
The Directory
A publicly editable, moderated directory provides a central website for listings to museum and museum-related blogs.
The Blog
We encourage re-posting from qualified blogs and bloggers. The aim of MuseumBlogs.org is to drive visitors to other museum blogs and increase their authority. If you're interested in re-posting or creating roundups which focus on the museum blog world, please feel free to contact us for password and log in information.
Who and Why?
This site was developed by Ideum. We're a small design company that develops interactive exhibits and websites for museums. The idea for MuseumBlogs.org came about after we developed a survey of museum blogs & community sites in March of 2006. One of the major outcomes was that the vast majority of museum blogs lack authority which was covered in a follow up post on the Ideum blog. It's our hope that MuseumBlogs.org will help increase communities’ awareness and authority.
Policies
MuseumBlogs.org is run as a public service and encourages community participation. The site does not accept commercial advertising of any kind.
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April 16th, 2008 by AutoAggregator
All programmers hate documentation, right? But I’ve discovered a way to make it less painful and I’m posting in case it helps anyone else.The first trick is to start documenting as soon as you start thinking about a project - well before you’ve written any code. I keep a
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Read the full post at Open Objects
Posted in development models, code, programming, documentation | Comments Off
April 11th, 2008 by AutoAggregator
These are my notes from the Advanced Web Development: software strategies for online applications workshop with Rob Stein, Charles Moad and Edward Bachta from the Indianapolis Museum of Art at Museums and the Web 2008 (MW2008) in Montreal. I don’t know if they’ll be useful for anyone else, but if
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Read the full post at Open Objects
Posted in code, programming, museums and the web, cultural heritage sector, web development, best practice | Comments Off
March 28th, 2008 by AutoAggregator
courtesey Ard Hesselink
This Friday I thought I would post on some of the tools that our web/media group has been using lately.
Assembla
Writing code is hard. Writing code in a group that might not even be on the same floor, building, or state is much harder. Assembla is a set
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Read the full post at Beyond the Button
Posted in Technology, buttons, chat, code, interaction design, interface, IRC, programming | Comments Off