New Media Initiatives

Just another Walker Blogs weblog

Part of: blogs.walkerart.org

 

… blog about it in May!

onview

Museums and the Web 2009 wrapped up with a challenge to all the inspired delegates: use the energy and ideas generated here to get one thing done in April.  (The idea being that many small steps build momentum, and it’s too easy to ignore the small upgrades we should constantly be pushing out.)

Yesterday I pushed out a few small upgrades to our aging collection site:

You can now limit your search to objects that are On View

What works by Dan Flavin can you come see right now?

browser_searchOpenSearch capable

Can’t get enough of our collection?  Add it to your browser’s built-in search box!  When you’re on the Collection site, you should be able to pull down your browser’s search field and add “Walker Art Center”.

Developers (Piotr!): you can now use the Walker collection in your Yahoo Pipes tool without having to scrape the results!  Not an API (yet), but a good step.  Check out the XML for ideas.

Bring it all together:

You’re a busy person.  You’d love to come see Chuck Close’s Big Self-Portrait, and you know the Walker’s got it in their collection, but you see it’s not on view.  You don’t have time to check our website every day, so how will you ever know when it goes on display?  Easy:  build a search that finds Big Self-Portrait, then turn on the “On View” flag.  The object disappears (not on view), but you can subscribe to the OpenSearch RSS feed for this query (click the rss icon).  Now, when Big Self-Portrait is available to see in the galleries, the object will show up in your RSS reader!  (note: I picked this painting randomly.  I make no guarantee about seeing it in the galleries any time soon.  :)

So, baby steps.  Get one things done that opens more doors.

#didonethinginapril (I tag Andrew at the MIA to get one thing done in May!)

 

4 Comments

  1. Wow, that brings back memories of sitting in the retrofitted blackroom next to Trudie, arguing about HTML indentation. Probably bumping into Robin’s chair a few times in the process, possibly causing her to inadvertently kick off the dev database server.

    Great to see C&R becoming more useful, 8+ years later! When I moved from failing startups to working for a museum, part of my motivation was wanting to do work that people would actually see & use, but I never thought it’d be up this long.

    Comment by Joe — May 1, 2009 @ 8:35 pm

  2. Ha! Well, first of all, it’s a testament to your code that the thing is still running… :) But yeah, the whole site is on the list for this year or next as we (finally) get the collections database off of FMP internally. Monday we start some R&D on migration solutions for AxKit and an interim access solution for c&r before the relaunch. Fits and starts, things crawl and then lurch forward suddenly…

    Comment by Nate Solas — May 1, 2009 @ 10:07 pm

  3. Funny, the main thing on my current 5 year plan is transitioning our internal systems off FM. Only two places I know that are using it.

    Comment by Joe — May 2, 2009 @ 10:52 am

  4. You guys *rock*! That’s so cool.

    Comment by Mia — May 22, 2009 @ 8:20 am

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