“A year after its launch by 25 leading U.S. research libraries, HathiTrust Digital Library announces a service that will transform how researchers use the more than 1.6 billion pages (4.6 million volumes) in its collections. The breakthrough allows for full-text searching capabilities across the entire library. Researchers can now search public domain and in-copyright works by keyword or phrase. Based on open source Solr/Lucene technology, the service expands on an experimental search of public domain volumes introduced in November 2008. Full-text search will continue to be supported across the repository as it grows at a rate of hundreds of thousands of volumes every month…”
HathiTrust Digital Library Announces Full-Text Searching of Over 4.6 Million Volumes…11.21.09
21 11 2009Comments : 1 Comment »
Categories : Librarians
Social Technologies Impact Every Customer Touchpoint…11.20.09
21 11 2009Something libraries and librarians should consider from Social Technology Impacts Every Customer Touchpoing by Jerimah Owyang.
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New Sony Daily Edition eReader Unboxing…11.21.09
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This Holiday Season Join THE ADVENT CONSPIRACY…11.21.09
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Thanksgiving…Praise God from Whom All Blessings Flow…11.21.09
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Librarians Need to “Listen”…11.20.09
20 11 2009The following great excerpt is from 10 Things You May Not Know About Listening by Dan Erwin:
“….1. About 70% of our waking day is spent in one or more of the four kinds of communication. Listening, 42%. Talking, 32%. Reading 15%. Writing 11%.
2. In general, listening CAPACITY increases with age, but listening HABITS deteriorate with age.
3. Listening experts believe that people in our culture are taught NOT to listen (Information is repeated, and people are not held responsible for effects of poor listening.)
4. In most situations where selling of ideas, services or products is the focus, there is a kind of “80 Percent Syndrome” at work. The person doing the selling is talking 80% of the time. Contrary to popular opinion, however, the best selling is not done by the guy with the fastest mouth in the West. In the vast majority of cases (internally or externally to the organization), selling success begins with the ability to ask good questions and then listen–really listen–to the answers.
5. Active listening is fundamentally about questioning. Out loud and silently, trying to understand what the other is saying and meaning. That means summarizing, clarifying and anticipating are all part of listening.
6. As much as 50% of a given message is typically misunderstood without engaging in active listening.
7. Like most communication skills, listening is not much imporved by merely trying to listen better. Listening is learned in much the same manner as are reading and writing–by training and study of the art.
8. Focusing on the structure of the message, rather than factual details is fundamental to listening success.
9. One important key to effective listening is controlling our emotional response to words, ideas and “hot” issues.
10. Listening needs to be obvious as well as active. The verbally or nonverbally reticent create difficulties for a speaker. Lack of obvious responsiveness can intimidate a speaker. Remember the truism: the listener controls the speaker.”
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Categories : Librarians
Intel Says Microchips in Human Brains Will Control Computers by 2020…11.20.09
20 11 2009ComputerWorld today reported:
“By the year 2020, you won’t need a keyboard and mouse to control your computer, say Intel Corp. researchers. Instead, users will open documents and surf the Web using nothing more than their brain waves.
Scientists at Intel’s research lab in Pittsburgh are working to find ways to read and harness human brain waves so they can be used to operate computers, television sets and cell phones. The brain waves would be harnessed with Intel-developed sensors implanted in people’s brains…
Intel research scientist Dean Pomerleautold Computerworld that users will soon tire of depending on a computer interface, and having to fish a device out of their pocket or bag to access it. He also predicted that users will tire of having to manipulate an interface with their fingers.
Instead, they’ll simply manipulate their various devices with their brains…”
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Categories : Librarians
Early Thanksgiving Praise – Here is Our King!…11.20.09
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NEW – Automatic Captions in YouTube Videos…11.19.09
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Google Chrome OS (Operating System) – 7 Second Boot Time…11.19.09
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A Concise History of the Internet…11.19.09
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Intel e-Reader for the Visually Impaired…11.19.09
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Neuroscience, Coaching and Leadership…11.19.09
19 11 2009There is a fascinating post today by executive coaching and change management specialist Ed Batista titled David Rock on Neuroscience, Coaching and Leadership. Here are some interesting findings by David Rock which is worth considering:
“…Rock’s central thesis is that neuroscience research has revealed four big (and surprising) truths with implications for coaching and personal development:
1) How limited our attention is.
2) How wrong we get emotions.
3) How important the social world is.
4) How attention changes the brain…
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Categories : Librarians
Public Earth Launches…11.18.09
18 11 2009Public Earth has just launched.
“PublicEarth is a new wiki – and will only grow and improve over time. We want to encourage you to explore and experiment with our features, and then return and notice the changes. PublicEarth is personalized place searching, improved by integration with your social graph. The more you use PublicEarth the better it gets….”
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Categories : Librarians
User Generated Content Dominates the Brand Message…11.18.09
18 11 2009
Mashable!’s post Social Media in Search: User-Created Content Dominates the Brand Message [Stats] is quite revealing and important. You can read the complete data from The State of Search white paper.
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Cool Visualization of the Decline of Empires…11.18.09
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Become an iReporter with YouTube Direct…11.17.09
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WARNING!!! How Many Libraries Do You Know “Rent” Books????…11.17.09
17 11 2009WARNING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
There have been a lot of “lists” lately making the rounds on the blogshere and elsewhere on the Internet from dubious sources that even get picked up by librarians and academics.
What does the post 10 Things to Do at a Library That Don’t Involve Renting Books from onlinedegree.net make you think about their website and/or activities???????
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Text Translation on Google Translate…11.17.09
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Fantastic Video – Sixth Sense Computing…11.17.09
17 11 2009There was a problem embedding this TED Talk so click on the text above to watch this amazing video.
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Categories : Librarians
Augmented Reality Demonstration…11.17.09
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LibraryThing With Local Search…11.17.09
17 11 2009New from LibraryThing:

“We’ve just released a slew of new features (see overview). We hope members like them all, but Local Book Search is the most important. I won’t mince words: it is intended to change bookselling forever.
The Idea. It’s a simple idea: a location-based search for books. After all, you can ask Google for pizza where you live. But you can’t do it with books, until now…”
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“Awful Library Books” on Jimmy Kimmel Live…11.16.09
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A Web 2.0 Intro. Presentation…11.16.09
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Do Schools Kill Creativity?…11.15.09
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NCSU Mobile Site puts the “Library of the Future” in students’ pockets
15 11 2009
“The new NCSU Libraries Mobile site gives you access to essential library information, optimized for your mobile device. You can search for available computers, find hours and locations of branches and library services, look up items in the catalog, and even see the coffee line using the Hill of Beans webcam…”
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Categories : Librarians
Marketing Expert Seth Godin on e-Books and the Publishing Industry…11.14.09
14 11 2009Maybe publishers will listen to someone like Seth Godin regarding their precarious market:
“Some book publishers don’t like the Kindle. Either they’re afraid of it or they’ve crunched the numbers and they don’t like what they see. (Some days, 95% of the top selling Kindle titles are free… demonstrating that digital goods with zero marginal cost and plentiful substitutes tend to move to zero in price).
Worried about the medium, they hold back, delay or even refuse to support it.
Which is fine if you have market power, but you likely don’t. No publisher does, certainly. The Beatles couldn’t stop iTunes from changing the record business by sitting out the platform, and there’s no book publisher who can stop the Kindle alone.
It’s tempting to look at a high-momentum market innovation, something that brings efficiency but leaves change in its wake, and try to stop it single-handedly. Tempting, but not so smart, I think. The market waits for no one.
The alternative to joining in is to sit out the game loudly. Don’t just hold back your support, organize your peers. Create a (sometimes illegal) coordinated effort to stop innovation. I’m not going to bet much on your efforts, but it will certainly outperform a solo effort.
Quiet, passive-aggressive whining in the corner is both annoying and ineffective.”
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