2009 ALA Conference Begins…07.09.09

9 07 2009

creating

ALA Annual Conference was reported today in the Chicago Tribune:

“Thousands of librarians are expected to gather in Chicago starting this week for the American Library Association’s annual conference. 

ALA officials say the conference comes at a time when library use nationwide has soared. But that jump in usage also comes as many public libraries face budget cuts. 

Data compiled by the association show 41 percent of U.S. states reported declining state funding for public libraries in the 2009 fiscal year.

Other issues to be discussed at the conference include technology, literacy and issues school libraries face.

The conference starts Thursday and ends next week.”

*********************************************************************

A great opportunity has arisen.

Perhaps there has never been so much positive publicity in America about libraries and librarians — ironically at a time when libraries and librarians face their biggest challenges from within and without the profession.

Carpe diem quam minimum credula postero – “seize the day and place no trust in tomorrow“! This cannot be just a cliché, an eloquent quote from a bygone era, or an intellectual assent.

Now is the time to exhort our professional colleagues to daily excellence, continual development, proactive planning, and unified advocacy.

Our success or failure will not be determined by new programs or plans, more, bigger or better conferences, education reform , fiscal bailouts or the latest technology.

Success is dependent upon inclusion, relationship and commitment.






10 MORE Tips to Manage Your Social Media – Post #2…07.08.09

9 07 2009

Here is an excerpt from the MakeUseOf.com post 20 Tips to Manage Your Online Social Life — Part 2 as a follow-up to my previous post on the subject:

“…11. Use Your Mobile for Social Updates

If you spend a lot of time with your mobile phone, use applications that interface with multiple networks…

12.  Engage and Participate

Are you sharing a lot of content in your blog posts, photos, videos, and bookmarks, but not receiving many comments, ratings or feedback?

Sometimes we get so caught up in our ‘create/discover-post-share’ routine that we forget to listen, view, comment and rate others’ posts….

13. Use an Aggregator

Choose an aggregator service that supports your favorite networks. Use only one service and make sure your content is not being pushed twice…

14. Unleash the Power of Feeds

RSS Feeds are very powerful. For example, you can get an RSS feed update every time you Digg an article or save a bookmark in Delicious….

15. Create a Portable Online Identity

If you have signed up with a lot of sites and services, letting people find you on all of them can be a daunting task…

16. Merge Your Social Media

Your social media (photos, status, bookmarks, etc.) lies scattered across different websites. It is not easy to share a single URL that encapsulates all your social media together. There are some services that aim to help you do just that…

17. Auto Sync Your Profile

Want to change your profile picture across several networks at once? Atomkeep helps you keep your profiles in sync across 23 social networks as well as cool stuff like keeping your resumes in sync across job sites.

18. Use Dashboards

Dashboards let you view and update statuses in real-time across multiple networks. Since Twitter is the de-facto real-time service, all dashboard applications are centered around Twitter. TweetDeck and Seesmic Desktop are popular desktop clients that also let you view and update Facebook status feeds…

19. Manage Your Reputation

Social Networks are powerful. Whether you are an individual or a business, you should track your reputation by what people are saying about you. The viral nature of social networks can cause reputations to swing very fast…

20. Live the Real Life!

Social media and networking can get very addictive. Remind yourself to take adequate breaks from your online social life, and spend time offline with your real-life friends and family…”





Destino – Salvador Dali & Walt Disney…07.09.09

9 07 2009

Amazing video animation from 1946 from Salvador Dali and Walt Disney to be released on DVD soon.

more about “Destino – Salvador Dali & Walt Disney“, posted with vodpod





Kindle 2 Price Drops to $299…07.08.09

8 07 2009

kindle21According to Wired today:

“…Amazon has lowered the price of the Kindle 2 e-book reader by $60. The Kindle 2 will now sell for $300 instead of the $360 it was introduced at earlier this year.

Amazon’s move has put Kindle in a better position to compete with its rivals by bridging the price gap.  Sony’s basic e-book reader costs $280, while lesser known brands such as the Cool-er will set you back by $250…”





Screenjelly – Records Screen Activity Along With Your Voice…07.08.09

8 07 2009

screen2

Jane’s E-Learning Pick of the Day has highlighted an interesting and potentially useful new screen capture with audio website service named Screenjelly which describes itself as follows:

Screenjelly records your screen activity with your voice so you can spread it as a video via Twitter or email.

Use it to quickly share cool apps or software tips, report a bug, or just show stuff you like.

To start recording, click on the red button. No need to install or download anything!”

screenjelly





10 Tips to Manage Your Social Media…07.08.09

8 07 2009

Here is an excerpt from Part 1 of a helpful MakeUseOf.com‘s post 20 Tips to Manage Your Online Social Life — Part 1:

“…1. Visualize Your Social Map

Use pen and paper or mind mapping services like MindMeister to draw your social network or social map…

2. Define Your Target Audience

For each network where you share data, define your target audience…

3. Use a Password Manager

When we sign up with a lot of different web services, we are tempted to use the same password across several websites. The problem with using different passwords was remembering all of them…

4. Separate Private & Public Photo-Sharing

Use two or more photo-sharing sites for different types of photos…

5. Use One Social Bookmarking Site

Social bookmarking helps keep all your bookmarks together, easily search and tag them, and share them with your friends. Do not spread your bookmarks across different sites. Choose Digg, Delicious, Redditt, or any other service you fancy and stick to it…

6. Use a Gravatar

Use an avatar that looks good in both 64×64 and 128×128 sizes and save them for reference. Using a gravatar helps you get a consistent avatar across multiple sites…

7. Use Social Surfing

Do you browse a lot of websites, open separate tabs to social sites, and copy-paste to share interesting stuff with your friends? Or keep several tabs open to check updates in Twitter,Facebook, and Friendfeed? If you’re using IE or Firefox, get the Yoono plugin to make life easier. Yoono also supports popular IM networks. Or if you’re a power social user, try using the Flock browser…

8. Integrate IM, Email, and Social Networking

If you use a browser that doesn’t yet support plugins or are a heavy user of IM, check out the latest version of Digsby or Trillian

9. Use a Consistent Username

For people to easily recognize you, use a common username across all sites…

10. Track Your Comments

Ever leave a comment on some blog or site and never visit it again? You may be disgruntling those who respond to your comment with a question. Get control of your comments across blogs, sites, and social networks, with comment tracking systems like BackType…”





Visualizing the Petabyte…07.08.09

8 07 2009

Thanks to Stephen’s Lighthouse for pointing out the following very cool and good description of a petabyte titled “Visualizing the Petabye Age” posted on Gizmodo in How Large is a Petabyte:

petabyte





“Knowledge Should be Given Away to the World as a Public Good”…07.08.09

8 07 2009

The following video discussion of Google’s book scan project on LISNews and notes that ”…James J. Duderstadt [President Emeritus, University of Michigan]…argues that academics are starting to realize that knowledge ‘should be given away to the world as a public good’…”





Google Announces Chrome Operating System…07.08.09

8 07 2009

chromecartoon

The Boy Genius Report today commented on the new Google Chrome operating system:

“It all started with a browser (well, actually it started as search but you know what we mean). After growing out of web pages and applications, Google created the Chrome browser and now the behemoth is leaping beyond that and getting into the computer OS game. Naturally, the search giant’s new cloud-friendly OS is going to be open source and will run on x86 and ARM chips. Google has decided to get its feet wet by targeting the netbook market first, then more capable computers later. The new operating system is intended to be lightweight so that it starts up quickly and you can get going without having to wait too long for items to load up and other processes to run…”





ALA membership down? Can it be just the economy?…07.08.09

8 07 2009

ala

Why can’t non-members attend the ALA 2009 Virtual Conference FREE?

(Maybe the ALA leadership, “movers and shakers”, etc. haven’t read or agree with “The Radical Price” reality of “Free” as Chris Anderson’s new book explains).

Why is ALA still so exclusive in the age of “FREE”?

Mmmmmmmmmmm…

Tradition? Nepotism? Hubris? Ignorance?

“…Those not attending Conference in-person can register for the Virtual Conference online through the ALA Web site. The cost is $215 for ALA members, $210 for division members, $120 for student members, $145 for retired members, $298 for non-members and $215 for institutional members.

Libraries or schools can also receive the following special group rates: $300 for one to three employees; $500 for four to nine employees; and $1000 for 10-plus employees.

I wonder how much extra it would actually cost ALA to provide it FREE?

Surely, not much.





Librarians and Libraries Must “Strike While the Iron’s Hot”…07.07.09

7 07 2009

anvil

First Lone Wolf Rant:

Are we up to the task at this pivotal time?

A great opportunity has arisen of which we have all seen. Perhaps there has never been so much positive publicity in America about libraries and librarians — ironically at a time when libraries and librarians face their biggest challenges from within and without the profession.

Carpe diem quam minimum credula postero – “seize the day and place no trust in tomorrow“! This cannot be just a cliché, an eloquent quote from a bygone era, or an intellectual assent.

Now is the time to exhort our professional colleagues to daily excellence, continual development, proactive planning, and unified advocacy. Our success or failure will not be determined by new programs, plans, conferences, education or technology.

Success is dependent upon inclusion, relationship and commitment.





New Image of Omega a.k.a. Swan Nebula…07.07.09

7 07 2009

The image below is a three-color composite of the Omega or Swan Nebula was captured by the European Southern Observatory’s 3.58-metre New Technology Telescope at La Silla, Chile.

swan-nebula





Florida Electronic Library Implements PowerSearch 2.0…07.07.09

7 07 2009

galepowersearch

From the ”About” page of The Florida Electronic Library:

The Florida Electronic Library is a gateway to select Internet resources that offers access to comprehensive, accurate, and reliable information. Available resources include electronic magazines, newspapers, almanacs, encyclopedias, and books, providing information on topics such as current events, education, business, technology, and health issues. The Florida Electronic Library offers information for all age groups, including homework help for students and resources for teachers…”

The NEFLIN Blog today announced:

“On August 1, the Florida Electronic Library will unveil its new look and implement the new Cengage-Gale PowerSearch 2.0 platform. PowerSearch 2.0 gives comprehensive access to authoritative reference and periodical information from a single starting point…”





Evaluating RFID for Libraries…07.07.09

7 07 2009

rfid

Here is part of an interesting post about evaluating RFID for libraries by Mick Fortune, “UK based library RFID specialist. Working on national standards for the profession”, titled Finding the Right Solution:

“…Apart from standards one recurring theme of the process was the difficulty in reconciling the claims made for RFID as a technology with its application in libraries.

There are many layers of misunderstanding between libraries and their suppliers over what RFID is meant to be/do.

The first is the widely accepted use of the term ‘RFID’ as shorthand for self-service:

Libraries and suppliers alike see the terms as interchangeable. (Oddly enough some parts of the world see “RFID” as being synonymous with “inventory”). This leads to a great deal of miscommunication – particularly when talking to tag manufacturers or more generalist RFID companies. Unless they are one of the companies that created this confusion in the first place the chances are that supplier and client will be speaking slightly different languages.

The next problem arises out of the approach taken by the RFID supplier in the first place:

Some RFID suppliers have a track record in library self-service, a handful even understand that library operations go beyond loans, but many came from the retail supply chain – a very different market altogether. In the fast moving and exciting world of RFID solutions appear and disappear rapidly. New tag technologies appear all the time making old ones obsolete.

In retail such rapid change is welcomed. In a market where the priorities are speed of supply, greater accuracy and better margins data standards are practically non-existent and tags – and tag data – change almost as fast as the applications that use them. These solutions are not designed to be used by anyone else, Asda don’t share their RFID warehousing solutions with Tesco. So the solutions are “closed loop” – i.e. they are designed to work in a closed environment to perform a particular task.

So when RFID suppliers came to libraries they assumed that lending of books was an equivalent operation to the delivery of consumables at the end of the supply chain and built solutions accordingly

Even the more ‘savvy’ RFID suppliers seem capable of proposing new solutions that could – if not carefully integrated – compromise existing systems by duplicating both data and functionality.

I’m not suggesting that innovation is a bad thing…No I’m just suggesting – as you might expect – that you cannot make many assumptions about how RFID solutions will work. You have to do the research.





Wikipedia Mobile Out of Beta…07.07.09

7 07 2009

Wiki

LifeHacker reports today in Wikipedia Mobile Leaves Beta, Automatically Redirects Your Mobile Browser:

“After being in what the company calls ‘alpha-beta-development-maybe-kind-live mode,’ user-edited online encyclopedia Wikipedia’s mobile site has officially launched, complete with support for iPhone, Kindle, Android, and Palm Pre devices, redirecting these devices to the new mobile page by default.

The mobile site at mobile.wikipedia.org was recently moved to a new server and, so far, around 18,000,000 pages have been served.

From now on, whenever you open a Wikipedia link on any of the above devices, you’ll automatically be redirected to the mobile version…”





WorldCat Mobile Now Available in Europe…07.07.09

7 07 2009

WorldCatMobile-iPhone-1

According an OCLC newsrelease:

OCLC today announced that the WorldCat Mobile pilot, a program that makes collections from libraries visible through mobile devices, has been extended to Europe.  Expanding the pilot to Europe means that now phones in the Netherlands, Germany, the UK, and France will also be operational.

The WorldCat Mobile pilot allows users to search for and find books and other materials available in libraries near them through a Web application they can access from a PDA or smartphone.

Based on WorldCat.org, the world’s largest online resource for finding information in libraries, the pilot has already proved a huge success in the U.S. and Canada. Thanks to advanced global positioning capabilities found in most mobiles, WorldCat Mobile pilot users in these countries will be able to find local library materials, if the library in question has loaded records in WorldCat, no matter where they happen to be. Users can even get a Google Maps view of the library location along with detailed driving instructions if the mobile device supports the application…”





What the hashtag? – Guide to Twitter Hashtags…07.07.09

7 07 2009

wthashtag

Read the complete TechCrunch post What the Hashtag: Your Guide to Enigmatic Twitter Hashtags for help in understanding hashtags using What the Hashtag – “The user-editable encyclopedia for hashtags found on Twitter”:

“There’s been a lot of chatter recently about the reliability of Twitter’s trending topics and how to make sense of hashtags. Hashtags are words preceded by a ‘#’ which denote what the Tweet is about and makes it easier to search for Tweets about specific topics and events. This weekend’s ‘Moonfruit‘ and ‘GorillaPenis‘ trending topics on Twitter were examples of trending topics that aren’t easily recognizable and aren’t current events. Personally, I find trending topics and hashtags to be confusing at times because there’s little context surround them on Twitter. And many of the Trending Topics aren’t necessarily breaking newsand is often polluted by spam. What The Hashtag is a site launched to solve this exact problem…”





Information and Media Literacy in the Age of Information Overload…07.07.09

7 07 2009

There is an interesting article titled Shelf Life: Information Overload from Unte Reader today that ends with the following conclusion/advice for readers:

“…For the out-of-school, significant information literacy can be gleaned from public librarians, who are info-literate by trade. Yes, even in this digital ageespecially in this digital agelibrarians are often the best place to start. They’re at reference desks andRadical Reference (www.radicalreference.info), on instant messenger and telephone, behind brightly colored ‘Ask a Librarian!’ buttons on library websites. They’ll help you cut through the clutter and send you back into the world with a few literacy skills you didn’t even know you needed.”





Open Library Notes Upgrade…07.07.09

7 07 2009

openlibrary

Open Library has upgraded to new software. Improvements include readable URLs, better default cover images, an improved type system and more APIs for developers, including the RESTful API. More improvements are coming soon – check our blog for updates.”

“…featuring 23,285,112 books
(including 1,064,822 with full-text)”





“Make It Digital” One Stop Shop for Digitization…07.07.09

7 07 2009

Digitization

This is from the post DigitalNZ launches Make It Digital regarding a new source for digitization (of course, “digitisation” for our British & commonwealth friends–Eh?):

“…we’ve recently launched the Make it Digital website, a one stop shop to help people create NZ digital content.

The site is focused on creating and sharing New Zealand digital content, which we’re tackling in two ways:
1. The Guides and Ask a Question sections are designed to help people who are trying to create new digital content, or digitise their stuff. We hope that some of you will be able to share your expertise by answering others’ questions, and helping us to write and update the guides.
2. The Voting section – It’s a public forum for people to share their ideas for new NZ digital content, with voting and commenting functions. There’s some great ideas in there already that you can vote on, for example, School Journal, New Zealand music artwork and Appendices to the Journals of the House of Representatives…”





Lone Wolf Librarian on Twitter…07.06.09

6 07 2009

tweeter

I have had a Twitter account for some time but have been remiss in posting.

Hopefully, that will change now with regular howlings (tweets) from the “proverbial” LoneWolfMLS


lone_wolf





Librarians and Others – Manage Your Online Reputation…07.06.09

6 07 2009

reputation-balloon

LifeHacker post Your Deleted Social Network Pictures are Probably Still There tells us:

“Tech site Ars Technica saw a university study reporting that photos and other images posted by Facebook, MySpace, and other social network users are often left on those services’ servers long after the posters hit ‘delete.’ They put that finding to the testAnyone who can grab a direct link, in other words, can get at your stuff long after you want it gone. Need some web reputation triage? Break out the web Band-Aids and get to managing your online reputation.”





New NY Public Library Catalog Goes Live…07.06.09

6 07 2009

Library Journal today reports on an interesting development at the NYPL:

“…A major division between the New York Public Library’s (NYPL) Research and Branch libraries has been NYPL merged catalogbridged, thanks to a new integrated catalog which includes both research materials (formerly CATNYP) and circulation (formerly LEO) collections. The new system, known as The Catalog, includes eight million bibliographic records representing 14 million items…”





“Long Tail” Author to Release “Free: The Future of a Radical Price”…07.06.09

6 07 2009

free

Although I rarely mention new books in this forum, Free: The Future of a Radical Price from best-selling author Chris Anderson of the much disussed “The Long Tail” will be released tomorrow.

Here is a video from last year with Chris Anderson discussing the topic:

From the author’s blog:

“…Adobe and Brand Republic

We have concluded a sponsorship partnership with Adobe  – who, like Spotify [which is distributing the free audiobook, UK only], adopt a freemium model with both free and paid for goods and services. In association with Adobe we will be offering a limited number of abridged sponsored versions of FREE in paperback and e-Book through BrandRepublic.com…”





Library Social Media and Customer [Patron] Service…07.06.09

6 07 2009

customerservice

The Search Engine Watch blog had a good post by Linda Evanas today relevant to libraries titled Customer Service in Social Media:

“… ‘The Undo Button‘ showed a Twitter conversation between a restaurant owner and a woman who had visited their establishment.

@BrasseriePavil @BloomMaternity Twitter Conversation

…This example demonstrates a few things about conversations in social media that any marketer can integrate into their strategy for entering the social media space.

  1. Monitoring Pays Off: The establishment Brasserie Pavil was clearly monitoring their name in the social media space. If they weren’t monitoring their Twitter account and actively engaged in conversations with their audience, then they would’ve missed out on Bloom Maternity sharing her experiences with their establishment.
  2. Engaging Conversations: Looking at the Brasserie Pavil Twitter account reveals that this restaurant is clearly engaged in conversations with its audience by tweeting, retweeting, and replying to its followers. Also note their ratio of followers to being followed. They aren’t using Twitter to broadcast what’s on their menu — they’re speaking to patrons about their experiences, letting their audience know about events, and so on. Actual conversations are going on.
  3. Understanding the Power Community Members Hold: Brasserie Pavil recognized the power of the tweet that came from Bloom Maternity and what power the sharing of her experience at their establishment would have on her followers. By quickly recognizing Bloom Maternity’s influence and addressing her experience in a way that respected her opinion, Brasserie Pavil turned a negative experience into a positive situation.
  4. Being Humble: Brasserie Pavil didn’t argue, nor take offense to Bloom Maternity’s tweet. They embraced it as an opportunity to make a bad situation better. Being humble, accepting the bad, and saying ‘I’m sorry’ when bad things happen to your customers are some of the best actions companies can take when dealing with potentially negative situations in social media.
  5. Creating Fans/Evangelists: By being honest, forthright, and genuinely caring about Bloom Maternity’s experience and demonstrating that care with engaging conversation, Brasserie Pavil has likely created at least an avid fan in Bloom Maternity, who will relate this experience in a positive manner to her audience. Rather than continuing down the path of  ’this place was a disappointment,’now her experience is ‘even though my first experience there wasn’t the greatest, they cared enough to ask what went wrong so they could fix the situation that caused my disappointment.’

Investing in social media conversations is very resource-intensive. However, conversing with the audience in a genuine manner, not with predefined marketing messages, can have great rewards…”





Codex Sinaiticus – Bible Now Online…07.06.09

6 07 2009

codus

Thanks to Peter Scott’s Library Blog post today Codex Sinaiticus – The world’s oldest bible reunited online for pointing out the British Library’s press release:

  • All 800 surviving pages from Codex Sinaiticus, the earliest surviving Christian bible, now freely available to scholars worldwide at www.codexsinaiticus.org
  • New exhibition at the British Library tells the remarkable story of Codex Sinaiticus and reveals how cutting-edge technology reunited the pages of the 1600-year-old manuscript

A remarkable collaboration between institutions in the UK, Germany, Egypt, and Russia has succeeded in reuniting virtually more than 800 pages and fragments from the world’s oldest surviving Christian bible, Codex Sinaiticus.

For the first time, people around the world will be able to explore high resolution digital images of all the extant pages of the fourth-century book, which was written in Greek on parchment leaves by several scribes and had its text revised and corrected over the course of the following centuries.

See: www.codexsinaiticus.org

Please note: this website is experiencing exceptional demand. If you are unable to connect to it, please bookmark and return later…”





“Twitter Search in Plain English”…07.06.09

6 07 2009




Redux – 21st Century CV & Resume Help With VisualCV…07.05.09

5 07 2009

 

VisualCV.com gives you an easy new way to present your Curriculum Vitae (CV) online. VisualCV replaces the traditional resume with an online professional profile. VisualCV.com is the first website that allows you to create an Internet-based resume, build and manage an integrated online career portfolio, and securely share professional qualifications with your customers, partners, employers and colleagues.

How is it used?

You’ll use VisualCVs for professional networking, job searching, business development, and personal brand management. The VisualCV’s compelling Internet-based format helps you to differentiate yourself in a whole new way!…”

visualcv© 2009





Stars and Strips Forever…July 4, 2009

4 07 2009




“Library Workspace and Kitchen Etiquette”…07.04.09

4 07 2009

Here is a great video from Pikes Peak Library District for all of us cubicle workers:

Workspace and Kitchen Etiquette from PPLD TV on Vimeo.








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 130 other followers