History 9808 2008-09 08. Mashups and Collective Intelligence

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A mashup is a computer program that draws information from a number of different online databases, integrates it on-the-fly, and presents it to the user in the form of a dynamic webpage. The idea behind collective intelligence is to harness the problem-solving capabilities of a networked and communicating group of collaborators. Both phenomena are quintessentially “Web 2.0″. How can / will they change the practice or products of historical research?

Readings for Discussion

Cohen, Daniel J. “[WWW]Do APIs Have a Place in the Digital Humanities?” dancohen.org (21 Nov 2005).

Cohen, Daniel J. “[WWW]When Machines Are the Audience,” dancohen.org (2 Mar 2006).

Cohen, Daniel J. “[WWW]Where Are the Noncommercial APIs?” dancohen.org (10 Mar 2006).

Howe, Jeff. “[WWW]The Rise of Crowdsourcing,” Wired 14, no. 6 (Jun 2006).

Jenkins, Henry. “[WWW]Collective Intelligence vs. The Wisdom of Crowds,” Confessions of an Aca-Fan (27 Nov 2006).

Koman, Richard. “[WWW]Remixing Culture: An Interview with Lawrence Lessig,” O’Reilly Network (24 Feb 2005).

Miller, Paul. “[WWW]Web 2.0: Building the New Library,” Ariadne Magazine 45 (Oct 2005).

Mills, Elinor. “[WWW]Mapping a Revolution with ‘Mashups’,” CNET News (17 Nov 2005.)

Nardi, Bonnie A. and Vicki L. O’Day. “[WWW]Information Ecologies: Using Technology with Heart,” First Monday 4, no. 5 (1999).

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