TPB Physibles

The Web’s biggest pirate galleon has just announced a new search category: “Physibles”, a fancy name for digital 3D objects…

“Data objects that are able (and feasible) to become physical. We believe that things like three dimensional printers, scanners and such are just the first step. We believe that in the nearby future you will print your spare sparts for your vehicles. You will download your sneakers within 20 years.”

Google 3D Warehouse has of course being quietly doing something very similar for some years now. All their models are free (inc. commercial use) too, but legit. They even give you awesome software, Google SketchUp, for free to manipulate and alter the objects.

Dynamic Collections

Oxford’s Dynamic Collections is a forthcoming WordPress plugin that seems to still be in private beta, but which sounds interesting. Basically, it harvests OER [Open Educational Resource] records into WordPress from across a range or sources, but filters them by keyword(s). The results, presumably with a bit of hand tweaking, are quickly-built subject lists of such resources.

My guess would be that one could probably do something similar with repository record feeds: use Excel to sort simple CSV records by the presence of keyword(s), then export only the relevant records as CSV, then load these into Omeka.

Footnotes plugin for WordPress

A nice new footnotes plugin for WordPress. It uses simple square brackets, which must have a number at the start of them. It accepts HTML links inside the brackets. I’d love to see this plugin come as standard with the free WordPress.com -hosted blogs…

To get the smaller font size on the footnotes, paste this CSS into your theme’s styles CSS, probably at the foot of the font section (that worked for me). The plugin doesn’t add this CSS automatically.

U.S. boom in nonprofit startups is coming, says survey of older folks

A recent survey by Civic Ventures concluded that six million of the USA’s 1960s baby boomers seriously intend, upon retirement, to use their experience to develop new non-profit organisations. And these may not look like the creaky old non-profits that we’ve known until now. They’re likely to be seriously Internet-enabled, and reasonably well funded from private sources. So, here’s a question. Some of the effort will be local (saving stray kitty cats, developing local theatres, creating new woodlands, etc) but how could some of it be directed toward open-access scholarly content? Could structured national programmes be developed to stimulate and guide useful scholarly initiatives by retirees, perhaps based on alumni associations and running alongside things like tax breaks and the promotion of legacies left to help fund open access journals and archive digitisation? And how about your local university gives free library and journals access to any retiree who starts a suitable non-profit, and then invites them all to a free annual TED-like networking event just for them?

Omeka – like WordPress but for creating online academic collections

Omeka: a complete WordPress-like digital collections management system, for academics. It’s free, from the Center for History and New Media at George Mason University. It’s easy to install and use, and has themes, and plugins, and media support, just like WordPress.

Plugins include…

* OAI-PMH repository metadata harvester and CSV import

* Allow users to add a comment and rating to any record. Also add social media buttons.

* Add Library of Congress Subject Headings to your records

* Have your collection records be readable for Zotero users