Monthly Archives: April 2005

70 posts

Pondering the Place of Weblogs

Nice post at Weblogs in Higher Edcucation. Ken writes about discussing weblogs with a friend who sticks mainly with newspapers, journals, columnists, etc. I found myself saying that bloggers were performing a different function than columnists. Sure, once in awhile bloggers carry out a direct act of reporting or research that could just as well have been done by a journalist. I think bloggers are processing issues and facts, passing ideas around, turning them over and over, nudging them, extending their reach, recontextualizing them, and otherwise living with ideas and information and drawing them out into wider communities to test […]

Exhausted…but WOW

Great day in Kokomo, I learned so much! I’ll post about it soon, but I’m tired now… Thanks to Sharon, Dan, Steve and Ida for a great day — and thanks to the folks who attended! Here’s a set at flickr:http://www.flickr.com/photos/michaelsphotos/sets/215227/ Here’s my PPT: Trends for 21st Century Libraries

This is Important

http://www.librarian.net/stax/1215 “…we all know libraries are changing. The library workforce is changing and the nature of the job is changing. The more librarians know the lingo of the new tech world of fee-for-service models instead of you-bought-it-you-own-it models of yore, the better we will be able to advocate for our patrons to provide the best service for them and the best return for their investment in us. You don?t have to live on IM to understand why IM might be a good alternative to 24/7 ref. You don?t have to check your email 100 times a day to know why […]