Please read jenny’s excellent post at ALA TechSource! Texting with Jenny from the UK, I said I just wanted to post a big “DITTO” next to this post. “All very interesting, but it worries me all the more when all of this is sold directly to the consumer and bypasses libraries. It’s times like this I re-light a candle that Audible will wake up from its coma and bridge the Digital Rights Management (DRM) gap between libraries and iPods. Right now, I believe OverDrive is the only company that lets libraries circulate copyright-protected videos, but of course Overdrive’s Windows-Media-encrypted files […]
Yearly Archives: 2005
(Darlene Fichter and I are presenting a workshop on organizational weblogs next Saturday in Monterey…this is good food for thought!) http://stephenslighthouse.sirsi.com/archives/2005/08/the_gartner_hyp.html 1. Technology Trigger: A breakthrough, public demonstration, product launch or other event generates significant press and industry interest. Ponder any of the hot hot technologies we’re discussing. When did you first hear about RFID? Podcasts? IM in libraries? Was it at a conference or a big event or in an article… what about BLOGS? Let’s ponder blogs and podcasts for this example. March 2002: CIL…I first heard about blogging..and I discovered some classic bloggers… 2. Peak of Inflated Expectations: […]
http://flagrantdisregard.com/flickr/calendar.php See any library Web uses folks? I sure do!
http://www.insideindianabusiness.com/newsitem.asp?id=15312 Hopefully, many more universities will follow with similar programs!
I shared this link with my class at Dominican: http://www.useit.com/alertbox/designmistakes.html Via Jakob Nielsen, there are many gems here. Pay attention to the “Writing for the Web” bit.
From the Rambling Librarian: http://ramblinglibrarian.blogspot.com/2004/09/differentiating-public-service.html We should go out there and engage potential users in the forums, chatrooms etc. As I wrote in my other blog:”… the presence that librarians project can no longer be the “Thou knoweth more than you-eth” attitude. To connect with our average information-customer, we need to show them that we’re as human as they are; as fallible, and there’s nothing to be fear from us.” In providing our service, be it answering reference enquiries or Readers’ Advisory, or checking a reader’s loan record, PLS librarians can distinguish themselves by engaging in conversations with the reader. […]
Well, yes…the New Order song rocks but I’m J-E-T-lagged folks… more in a couple days…
When a new technology gets picked up by NPR, I’d count it as on the upward slope toward tipping into the mainstream. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4956468 Thanks to Meg in Evansville for the heads up!
I interviewed Wanda Bruchis for my technology planning article last year. I emailed shortly after Hurricane Katrina and was glad to hear she’s fine. She sent along a link to local coverage of the hurricane and her library. http://houmatoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051006/NEWS/510060315/1026/ARCHIVES14
Sunday morning I spent three hours with a neat group of librarians from all over the world discussing how to successfully implement weblogs into the library setting. We had a lively discussion and the group came up with some brilliant ideas. Many of them already had some blog experience as well as a few were working with wikis! URLs Visited Handout Blog Bibliography Sample Style Guide from SJCPL Evaluating LIS weblogs & a worksheet to use when evaluating other library blogs. A brief PPT file of blog features used as a handout (With special thanks to Darlene Fichter for this […]