Subject: Web sites for professionals
Most of the web is a black hole. This has persuaded many professionals to keep it at arms length, using it for temporary messages on list-serves and to access source material posted by research institutes, labs, and major universities, but shunning the web as an avenue for their own professional publication. This is rapidly changing as scholars and other professionals recognize that print publication and web publication each have distinctive advantages. Most of us recognize the advantage of the web in making material available quickly and to a large, diverse international audience. But the web also has certain advantages for professional disciplines. When reading articles in professional journals, we must often accept the conclusions on faith or, more likely, suspend judgment, because the evidence on which the conclusions are based is too extensive and costly for print publication. On the web, appendixes of this data, both text and images, can be made available easily and inexpensively. Think of having Studies in Conservation, the Journal of the AIC, and other professional journals available on the web with full documentation, both data and images. Some professional societies are already publishing separate, scholarly material on their web sites. I have recently posted a web site that attempts to take advantage of a few of the web's advantages and I hope may encourage other professionals to use the web as an avenue for making some of their own research available. I am think especially of areas of our research that is not destined for print publication, but which would be valuable for other professional and for faculty and students. The web site I have recently posted does not deal with conservation and so I hesitate to mention it on this list. But I hope it provides an example for one type of web site that would be of value in many disciplines, certainly in conservation and historic restoration. It is a web sites on which images provide the central content and where they are of sufficient number and quality to serve as evidence, not just as illustration. There are captions and text but the site is considered a supplement to text already available in books, where 600 photos are simply too expensive to publish. The web site was created with professionals, faculty and students in mind and requires an efficient internet connection, such as those generally available at colleges and universities. The site is available at <URL:http://www.reed.edu/gettyarchitecture>. Every photograph is dated (not likely to find its way past many editors but surely desirable for all photographs intended as evidence, whatever the field), and the site includes the only annotated bibliography on its subject, rare in print publication in spite of the obvious value. Without annotations, bibliographies are simply lists. I look forward to seeing some of you in Melbourne this October. Charles S. Rhyne Professor Emeritus, Art History Reed College 3203 S.E. Woodstock Blvd. Portland, OR 97202-8199 503-771-1112 x7469 Fax: 503-788-6691 *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:9 Distributed: Friday, July 28, 2000 Message Id: cdl-14-9-008 ***Received on Thursday, 27 July, 2000