Showing posts with label e-books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label e-books. Show all posts

Sunday, 29 July 2012

What I've been reading in July

Mashcat

I found Mashcat a really interesting unconference. I won't pretend to have understood everything that was talked about, but I definitely learnt a lot! These are the slides/blog posts from my favourite sessions.

Ed Chamberlain, Text to data [slides]

Gary Green, A Travellers Map in Yahoo Pipes (Really cool visual way to search subject headings referring to places)

Owen Stephens, Boutique Catalogues (Includes demonstration of how a catalogue could be customised for musicians, creating faceted indexes for key, bpm and time-signature)


Presenting

Ned Potter, Good presentations matter


Libraries and the Internet

Lauren Smith, Internet Access and Public Libraries

Phil Bradley, Libraries charging for internet access is wrong

Voices for the Library, Free internet access should be a cornerstone of every public library

Ian Clark, Barking libraries - tiny cuts or massive scars?

CILIP, Act risks limiting internet access in libraries, schools and universities


E-books

Alison Flood, Call to 'move libraries into 21st century' sparks ebook lending review


Volunteer libraries

CILIP, Value of staff at heart of revised volunteer policy

Dalya Alberge, Authors face royalty threat from volunteer libraries

Ian Anstice, Surrey chooses volunteers over paid staff at the same cost


Online learning

Emma Cragg, Where next for 23 Things?   (I've heard a lot about coursera lately, and I'm definitely going to look into it when I finish my MA. One course at a time though...)

By Guillermo Esteves on Flickr

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

#CPD23 Thing 9 revisited

As a Christmas present to myself I bought a Samsung Galaxy tablet when it was on sale in January. It was definitely something I wanted rather than needed, and I spent weeks debating whether to splurge that much money on something I didn't actually need. However I've been using it for all the time, for emails, Twitter, Facebook, reading e-books, taking notes in lectures, playing games... etc. etc. I still love my laptop, but it's pretty big and heavy which makes it a bit of a mission taking it out and about, so it's great to have a portable alternative.
Evernote interface

I've found that some of the tools I discovered in 23 Things but didn't get that excited about, have suddenly become much more useful now I'm using the tablet, in particular Evernote. The interface on the mobile version is so much nicer than the rather dull PC version (see right), and it's very intuitive. I'm using it for my lecture notes and quotations I want to put in essays, nothing too fancy, but it's working very well. I could have used Google Docs for the same thing, but I find editting Google Docs quite fiddly on the tablet, even in the app version.

I think I still haven't taken full advantage of Evernote yet, as it has all kinds of things like OCR for images and handwriting, and I discovered entirely by accident in my last lecture that it has a recording feature, and my tablet has a microphone, so I could have recorded all of my lectures as well as taking notes. So when I get a chance I really need to sit down and explore all of the features I don't use, because some of them are probably very useful!

Sunday, 1 July 2012

What I've been reading in June

Save Libraries

Ruthie Saylor, The night they came to arrest the library

Rita Meade, Where Would You Be Without Your Library? (Brought a tear to my eye!) 

Anita Pati, Country dancing and learning support: the new face of the council library

Alison Flood, Ed Vaizey says libraries 'thriving' and rejects prediction of 600 closures

Ian Anstice, Special report: Ed Vaizey's most important speech since he took office

Ebooks

OnlineUniversities blog, 10 Reasons Why Students Aren't Using eTextbooks

Pew Internet, Libraries, Patrons and E-books: Libraries in Transition

Bobbi Newman, The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly (and the Interesting) of Libraries and eBooks - Pew's Latest Report

Leadership

#uklibchat, Libraries and Leadership [Storify]

Nicola Franklin, Some thoughts on leadership and management 

Simon Barron, We're all leaders now 

Library design, space management etc.

#uklibchat, Library Spaces and Space Management 12th June 2012 [Storify]

Jonathan Shaw, The Library Test Kitchen

Information Literacy

#uklibchat, Summary - 26th June: Information Literacy & Needs

Steve Wheeler, Blogging as literacy 

John Tedesco, How to solve impossible problems: Daniel Russell's awesome Google search techniques

Meredith Farkas, Broad vs. deep in information literacy instruction 

Conferences

Ian Clark, Lighting the Future - a personal perspective ("I say you should grumble and grumble loudly.  And not just grumble, actually try to do something about it.")

John Kirriemuir, Don't shush me, I'm tweeting the speaker

Dissertation

Leo Casey, How to Write a Literature Review for a Dissertation 

Literature Review HQ, 3 Great Methods to Structure Your Literature Review

Reading by Rachel Sian on Flickr

Friday, 1 June 2012

What I've been reading in May

CILIP New Professionals Day 2012

Speaker and workshop presentations

Ned Potter, You already have a brand! Here are 5 ways to influence it (#CILIPNPD12) (contains links to blog posts about the day)

Social Media

Simon Barron, "Pictures or it didn't happen." (Reflections on the negative impact of Twitter)

Andy Burkhardt, Puppies in the library and social media (Puppies! No more needs to be said.)

Google

Lance Ulanoff, Google Search Just Got 1,000 Times Smarter 

Volunteers in libraries

Helen Murphy, 50 shades of volunteering (also known as #CPD23 Thing 22: Volunteering)

Voices for the Library, Arts Chief Executive comments on need for skilled library staff

Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals, CILIP's Policy on the Use of Volunteers in Public Libraries: A Review

Ian Anstice, CILIP Policy on Volunteers not explicitly against direct substitution of staff

Gary Green, CILIP Volunteer Policy & Job Substitution: Letter to CILIP Update 

Johanna Anderson, CILIP and "job substitution" 

Phil Bradley, Volunteers in Public Libraries

Lisa Hutchins, Volunteers: What organisations say and what they do

Ian Anstice, Grey is not a popular colour 

Library Masters

Jen Laurenson, Masters schmasters? Rising fees, methods of learning and general confusion

eBooks

Samantha Murphy, Harry Potter Series Coming to Kindle Library in June

Lindsay Barber, Alternative E-Book Lending Models Gaining Ground and Harry Potter Meets Amazon's Lending Library

Anna Baddely, Writers won't lose out if libraries lend ebooks

Alison Flood, Pay us for library ebook loans, say authors

Misc.

Funktious, In which I rant about 24 Hour Opening... 

Ned Potter, 6 useful things Prezi can do (which even experienced users miss)

Library by Ellen Forsyth on Flickr
 

Saturday, 12 May 2012

#CILIPnpd12 - Simon Barron & Abby Barker

I think this was the most useful workshop I went to, and I know it was oversubscribed so I was lucky to get a place on it! If the embed doesn't show up, the Storify is also available here.

Saturday, 28 April 2012

What I've been reading in April


eBooks

Peter Pachal, What Apple's Ebook Fiasco Means for Amazon and the Book Business (See also Digital Divide. Very worrying...)

Bobbi Newman, Ebook Readership Increases, Still Only 21% 

Kathryn Zickuhr, E-books aren't just for e-readers: A deep dive into the data

Andy Woodworth, Reading Between the Lines (has the internet killed reading books?)

Andy Priestner, Ebooks: an epiphany

Digital Divide 

Ian Clark, The income divide and its impact on digital exclusion

Ian Clark, Age, disability and digital divide

Ian Clark, The internet - don't need it, can't afford it

Information Literacy

Greg Downey, Counterintuitive Digital Media Assignments (Very interesting assignment set for a digital media course)

Job Applications

Laura Wilkinson, Designing interview tests

Helen Murphy, Dum de dum de dum de dum de dum (otherwise known as #CPD23  Thing 21: Job Applications) ("I defy anyone reading this to imagine something more likely to take a ruby-encrusted pickaxe to your soul than a poorly formatted Word table.")

Cataloguing

Claire Sewell, CIG eforum - Social media  in the cataloguing community

Misc.

Simon Barron, ISBN, ISTC, and ontology

R. David Lankes, Beyond the Bullet Points: Libraries are Obsolete 

By needoptic on Flickr

Thursday, 29 March 2012

What I've been reading in March

Speak Up For Libraries Rally

Ian Clark, Speech on behalf of Voices for the Library at the Speak Up For Libraries Rally 

Ian Anstice, Two Sides of the Coin

E-Books 

Sarah Stamford, The Cambridge Conundrum: Sherlock Holmes considers... (a brilliantly written post about collection development and e-books)

K.G. Schneider, The impact of Random House price increases 

Cataloguing

Claire Sewell, Problems of Cataloguing in Higher Education - a CIG/ARLG event

Heather Jardine, Shameless Self-Promotion (guest post on High Visibility Cataloguing)

Professionalism

This seems to have been the Topic of the Month on Twitter and blogs!

Rory Litwin, Deprofessionalisation and the Library Blogosphere

Tina Reynolds, A Plea to CILIP (really good arguments for a compulsory CPD log for professional members of CILIP)

Jo Alcock, Am I a librarian?

Simon Barron, Defining the Modern Librarian

Laura Williams, New Librarianship: Librarian or Person Who Works in a Library?

Lane Wilkinson, What can we learn from DIY libraries?

Rebecca Halpern, On Professionalism

Job Hunting

Ned Potter, Do you really need to market yourself? Community-versus-local impact (lots of interesting comments on this one)

Laura Woods, LIKE North Workshop: Transferable Skills for Information Professionals (some good CV tips!)

Academic Librarianship

Ned Potter, So you want to be a subject librarian?

User Testing, Focus Groups etc.

Bethan Ruddock, Invisible Barriers and the Reservoir of Goodwill

Jo Alcock, Facilitating Focus Groups

Misc.

Aaron Tay, What are library Facebook pages using as cover photos? A survey

Wednesday, 21 March 2012

A visit to Bloomsbury

The taught part of my MA is now more or less over, as I had my last lecture yesterday. I still have a lot of coursework to hand in over the next month, an exam and, oh yes, a 15,000 word dissertation to write, but it still feels like a bit of a milestone!

My last lecture was for one of my favourite modules, Publishing Today, and included a field trip to the offices of Bloomsbury in Bedford Square. This was the second publishing house I have visited, as I went to Cambridge University Press last year with the other graduate trainees in Cambridge. Bloomsbury was rather different to CUP, as its offices are in one of the big converted houses off the square, and rather than crowding into a meeting room or board room our group gathered in the very cosy conservatory for a chat with members of the publicity, production, and events teams.

Henry Jeffries, the Senior Publicity Manager at Bloomsbury talked to us about his job, which sounds rather fun! Way before publication, the publicity team will start generating excitement for a project, a process which starts within the company and then works outwards to retailers and then customers. What I found particularly interesting was what Henry said about social media. Bloomsbury have started running preview events for bloggers, and are using social media to publicise books and authors alongside 'traditional' media which include radio, TV and newspapers. However, Henry pointed out that you can't draw a line between online and offline media - reviews and articles in traditional media are also appearing, and more importantly being discussed, online.

A member of the production team, Polly Napper, gave us an insight into working in production at a publishers. Obviously there have been massive technology changes in the last few decades, and different publishing houses have done different things with their production teams. Some have split e-book production off to a seperate digital department, but Bloomsbury have kept electronic and print together, as the skills involved in typesetting etc. are the same for both.

This is the events programme director whose name I want to say was Sarah, or perhaps Emma (bad blogger, not paying attention!*), but who was very nice and showed us around the building.

 

I enjoyed my visit to CUP as a trainee, but after taking a module about publishing and learning a lot more about what it involves, I found this visit even more interesting. As we've learned more and more about publishers' roles and the challenges facing them, some of their decisions which have vexed me in the past seem a bit more understandable now! (For example I learnt today that publishers have to pay VAT for e-books but not for paperbacks, which helps explain why they are so expensive!) Bloomsbury looked like a nice place to work, and not just because of the bookcases full of Harry Potter books! All in all a very good way to end the term.

*Edit: her name was Claire Daly, what utter fail. Sorry Claire!

Wednesday, 29 February 2012

What I've been reading in February

#libday8

Lots of people, Library Day in the Life blog posts and tweets

Bobbi Newman, Reflecting on Library Day in the Life Round 8

Save Libraries

Guardian Readers, Save Our Libraries: Readers' Reports

Rachel Bickley, National Libraries Day in an academic library

House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee, Written evidence accepted by the Culture, Media and Sport Committee for its enquiry into library closures 

#uklibchat, Summary: 9th Feb 2012 National Libraries Day

Library School

The Bradford Librarian, The MA - Just a means to an end or invaluable? (Good comments too)

Zach Frazier, It's OK to not have time (that's a relief, because I don't!)

Job Applications

Emma Davidson, Killer CVs 

In the Library with the Lead Pipe, Q&A: Lead Pipe on Professional Development (has quite a bit on CVs and job applications) 

OPAC 2.0 and Gamification

Aaron Tay, Adding Social & Gamification to the Library - Catalogues & Lemontree 

Andrew Preater, Grouse about your next-generation catalogue - LibCamp@Brunel

Marie Cannon, Library Camp @ Brunel

eBooks

Brian Herzog, Freading Ebook Library from Library Ideas, LLC

Sarah Stamford, Assessing the value of print and ebooks for academic libraries

Wikipedia

Aaron Tay, Is Wikipedia really the library's competitor? 

Lane Wilkinson, Wikipedia and the role of the non-expert

People Management

Funktious, Angry Person is Angry! (Great advice on how to deal with angry people in the library)

Funktious, "But we weren't doing nothing Miss!" (2nd post in the series, how to deal with disruptive patrons)

Writing

Jo Alcock, Writing for Publication 

Diari by Ariadna on morgueFile

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

What I've been reading in November

Google

Lane Wilkinson, Life after Google (Start of a 3 month experiment to not use any Google products for 3 months)

Phil Bradley, Google Verbatim tool (searches Google for what you actually asked it for)

eBooks

Andy Woodworth, The Amazon Lending Library is NOT the Library Apocalypse 

Jessamyn West & Dan Smith, The Kindle lending experience from a patron's perspective "a wolf in book's clothing"

Save Libraries

Benedicte Page, Campaign against library closures has scored a vital victory

Lauren Smith, DMBC Must Take Equalities Duties Seriously

Gamificationj

Cathy Foster, My Library Induction Recipe (bringing games into school library inductions)

Niamh O'Donovan, Library Scavenger Hunt

Cataloguing

Céline Carty, Training the Cataloguing Trainer: Interesting Conversations on Twitter, Part 1

Freedom of Speech

Ian Clark, Blog comments: to censure or not to censure? 

Ian Clark, A classic case of playing the victim

Simon Barron, Freedom of Speech 2.0

Misc.

David Lankes, Beyond the Bullet Points: Don't be the Mud 

Seattle Central Library by Thomas Hawk on Flickr
 

Monday, 31 October 2011

What I've been reading in October

Save Libraries

Peter Walker and Alison Flood, High Court Bid to Halt Library Closures Fails 

Lauren Smith, Just Another Liberal Whinger? (A brilliant response to this article by John McTernan) 

Alison Flood, Philip Pullman declares war against 'stupidity' of library closures

Voices for the Library, 22nd October 2011: Library Campaign Conference (includes full speech of Philip Pullman's speech) 

Library Camp

Paul Stainthorpe, Let them tweet cake: why Library Camp was unconferencing done right

Gaz Johnson, Camping

Saint Evelin, Library Camp: Call me Sarah if it makes things easier...

Presenting

Ned Potter, 5 Easy Ways to Create Fabulous Slides 

Ned Potter, Student Induction, Libraries, Prezi, and Interactive Maps

Digital Resources

Micah Vandegrift, The Digital Public Library of America

Dan Cohen, Digital Ephemera and the Calculus of Importance

eBooks and eReaders

Simon Barron, Why I got a Kindle

Ian Clark, Why I have not got a Kindle... (I'm considering buying something to read ebooks on - Kindle, Kobo or Android tablet - so Simon and Ian's posts came at a great time! Any other advice would be very much appreciated.)

Digital Divide

Ian Clark, Follow your dreams - but it will cost you

Mark Herring, Fool's Gold: Why the Internet is no Substitute for a Library (London: McFarland, 2007)

Jobs and Careers

#uklibchat, Summary: Thursday 22nd Sept 2011. LIS Jobs and Careers 

Simon Barron, Thoughts on Military Librarianship

Carley Deanus, My Graduate Trainee Year: On Reflection... 

Games and Gamification

 Gerard LeFond, Why Education Needs to Get It's Game On

by Cindiann on Flickr

Friday, 30 September 2011

What I've been reading in September

Advocacy

Lauren Smith, Thing 16: Advocacy, speaking up for the profession and getting published (from the CPD23 blog)

Nikki (Musings from a Librarian), Thing 16: Advocacy 

Ian Clark, Advocacy etc. 

Ian Anstice, Arguments Against Libraries, Arguments For Libraries 

The Good Library Blog, About two thirds of reading in this country is of books from public libraries


Marketing

Ned Potter, Marketing Libraries in a Web 2 World [slides]


Social Media

Nancy Baym, Personal Connections in the Digital Age (Cambridge: Polity, 2010)

Meredith Farkas, The Changing Professional Conversation

Ned Potter, thewikiman blog? There's an app for that! (Useful looking tool for turning blogs into iphone apps, shame no Android support though!)

Ian Clark, Turning blogs into apps (How the above tool could be a lot better)

Laura Wilkinson, Highlights from Oxford Social Media Day 2011

Jo Alcock, 6 Twitter Tips for Organisations #hhlib (Great advice from Donna Ekhart at the Handheld Librarian conference)


eBooks and Digital Resources

JSTOR, Early Journal Content on JSTOR, Free to Anyone in the World 

Simon Barron, UK Government rejects idea of National Digital Library

David Rapp, Sony Announces First Dedicated eReader with Wireless Library eBook Download Capability

Obnoxious Librarian from Hades, The one with the e-book chaos 

Julie Bosman, Kindle Connects to Library eBooks (But only in the US as yet)

Bobbi Newman, How to Check Out (and Return!) Library eBooks from OverDrive on Your Amazon Kindle


Library School

Annie Pho, What does your degree mean to you? (Is a library degree more than just a "union card"?)


The Future of Libraries

Ian Clark, Could the UK soon need an official 'Banned Books Week'? 

Ned Potter, Skip to the end: library futures, now... 


Misc.

Anna Martin, Organising a Day Trip 

Central Station, Mysterious Paper Sculptures

Brian Herzog, Work Like a Patron Day 2011

By LibraryMan on Flickr

Saturday, 27 August 2011

What I've been reading in August

eBooks

#uklibchat, Summary - Thursday 4th August 2011 eBooks Discussion (I've been finding the fortnightly Twitter chats very interesting and fun to take part in. Every other Thursday, 6-8pm!)

Aaron Saenz, Pixar Ex-Designer Creates Stunning Interactive Book for iPad. Blurs Lines Between Books, Film, Games

William Skidelsky, The True Price of Publishing

Library Marketing

Andy Woodworth, Marketing & The Donated Book

Save Libraries

Francis Bennion, Public Libraries are Protected by Law  (Full letter to The Times from the man who drafted the Bill which later became the Public Libraries and Museums Act 1964)

Johanna Bo Anderson, Activism, Advocacy and Professional Identity

Social Media

Jill Walker Rettberg, Blogging (Cambridge: Polity, 2008) (Really interesting book on the history and culture of blogging)

Phil Bradley, Twitter for Librarians (A very long list of Twitter resources that could be of use to librarians) 

Robert Sharp, Always link, even to your enemies

Jez Cope and Geraldine Jones, Connecting Researchers at the University of Bath

Nathan Jurgenson, Augmented Mobs: Riots and Cleanup On and Offline

Technology

Mike Ellis, QR isn't an end, it's a means (I found the final four paragraphs particularly interesting)  

Mary Mallery, Tales of Technology Innovation Gone Wrong (or rather, how to learn from mistakes, plan ahead and fit the right technology to the job in hand)

Relationships with Library Users

Social Justice Librarian, How Academic Libraries Annoy Academics (Some of the comments on this are pretty astounding, and not in the good way)

Katie Birkwood, Doing It Wrong (Excellent commentary on the above post)

Rebecca Halpern, Ethics in LIS

Information Literacy

Lauren Smith, The Three Rs: Reading, wRiting and Rioting 

Steve Kolowich, What Students Don't Know

Library School

Hack Library School, Best of the Summer Semester

Job Applications

Laura Wilkinson, Tips for Applying for Library Jobs

Misc.

#uklibchat, Summary: Thursday 18th Aug 2011: Breaking down barriers within the profession

Thursday, 30 June 2011

What I've been reading in June

Save Libraries

CILIP, Women's Institute to Campaign for libraries (hooray!)

Lauren Smith, Libraries and the WI


Conferences

Various people, CILIP New Professionals Information Day blogs (a bit.ly bundle put together by Richard Hawkins)

Ned Potter, Presenting opportunities at library events, and how to get them 

Annie Pho and Lauren Dodd, Hack ALA: Get Your Network On!

Ned Potter, Librarians are horizontal; libraries are vertical (thoughts on the opening keynote of SLA 2011)

Laura Steel, New Professionals Conference 2011 

Jo Norwood, NPC 2011 Part One and Part Two (Tired of reading conference write ups? Here's the New Professionals Conference in comic form!)


Social Media and Technology

Josh Halliday, British Library creates a "national memory" with digital newspaper archive

Soren Gordhamer, 3 Pressing Questions Facing the Future of Social Media 

Audrey Watters, How the Library of Congress is building the Twitter archive

Hamilton Chan, HOW TO: Make Your QR Codes Beautiful


eBooks and Digitisation

ML Burgess, E-book campaign: advocating e-books in a visually pleasing way

BBC News, British Library makes Google search deal

Olivia Solen, JK Rowling reignites DRM debate 

Bobbi Newman, eBook FAQs. 36 Most Common Questions Answered by the OITP eBook Task Force 


Copyright

Jennifer Howard, What you don't know about copyright, but should 


Job Applications

Katy Wrathall, Gizza Job - From Both Sides of the Desk 

Becky Woods, Application, application, application


Misc.


Andy Woodworth, It's Pretty Dark Inside a Closed Mind 

Sarah Kessler, Startup Publisher Gives Readers Control Over What Books Get Printed 

New Professionals Conference audience (photo by sarahjison)

Sunday, 29 May 2011

What I've been reading in May

The Future of Libraries

The Librarienne, If reference is dead, why am I so tired at the end of the day?

Tim Carmody, A Budget for Babel (well worth a read. Would you pay $100 a month for unlimited access on any device to everything ever printed?)

Seth Godin, The future of libraries

Andy Woodworth, "Bring me the head of Seth Godin!"


Save Libraries

Ian Anstice, Special Report: Newsnight

CILIP, National Libraries Day launched


eBooks

Simon Barron, Four Things Kindle Can Help You Do (I don't have a Kindle but am saving up tips for when I do get one eventually!) 

Josh Catone, Digital Publishing and the Imperative to Preserve the Integrity of Print

Fred Stielow and Raymond Uzwyshyn, Back to the Future: The Changing Paradigm for College Textbooks and Libraries  


Social Media and Technology


Boyhun Kim, Tech Skills for New Librarians & Me (Seeking Advice)

Kelsey Gagliardi, How to use Social Media to Engage Students (Google doc)

Ian Clark, A tiny contribution to the debate (some reasons why ereaders won't, or shouldn't become 'as expensive as Gillete razors' (see Seth Godin's post above)

Phil Bradley, Zanran (seems like a useful numerical data search engine)

Aaron Tay, Libraries and Augmented Reality, Adding Video Reviews to Books - Aurasma 


Library School

Sam Wiggins, Learning from librarianship

Librarian_101, Please promptly remove head from sand

Theatregrad, Theatregrad’s top advice on getting the most out of library school

Nellie Akalp, 9 ways to increase your productivity while working from home (filing this one away for dissertation time next year!)


Public Libraries

Lauren Smith, Public Libraries and Adult Learning 

CILIP

Maria Giovanna De Simone, Queen: Stop this Nonsense! (Thoughts on Annie Mauger's CILIP East of England talk a couple of weeks ago)  

Laura Wilkinson, On the Road to Chartership 

Job Titles

Andy Woodworth, Bikes, Branding and Bellyaching (Does it matter if patrons don't know the difference between a library assistant and a qualified librarian?)

Laura Wilkinson, Job Titles - What's in a Name?

Misc.

Karen Loasby, Managing information about people 

Becky Woods, "The move to co-working is a move from a culture of me to a culture of we"... 

Wendy MacNaughton, Meanwhile, The San Francisco Public Library (Really beautiful watercolours illustrations of patrons at San Francisco Public Library. Go and look.)

Bethan Ruddock, Presenting 

By Moriza on Flickr

Thursday, 28 April 2011

What I've been reading in April


Save Libraries

Simon Barron, Libraries, Bias, and the BBC

BBC Radio 4 Today Programme, Zadie Smith: A Defence of Libraries

Ian Clark, The Taking Part Survey -- usage down again, but why?

Lauren Smith, Say what you've got to say, and say it hot. (Absolutely brilliant response to John Redwood's ridiculous comments)

Brian Herzog, Reference Question of the Week 4/17/11 (Another example of the fact that not everything is on the internet, and even when it is not everyone can find it.)


The Future of Libraries

Ned Potter, Library Adolescence. (Or: how can we avoid growing up?)

Lauren Bradley, The Technical and User Services Divide & its Future in Libraries  

Ian Clark, No Furniture so Charming - The Future of Libraries 

Ned Potter, Librarians Before, Librarians Now, Librarians Next
 


Rita Meade, The Library of the Future (very cute, and look at the poster Jonathan Auxier made based on this)


Library School

Hack Library School, Best of Semester One (there's only one link in my library school section this month because this HLS post has EVERYTHING brilliant.) 
 

Social Networking and Technology

Amy Pajewski, Social Networking and the Academic Library 

Andy Woodworth, Digital Native Diatribe 

Ange Fitzpatrick, Travelling Light - Adventures of a Mobile Librarian 


eBooks

Dan Rowinski, Kindle Comes to Android Tablets

Amazon, Amazon to Launch Library Lending for Kindle Books


Bobbi Newman, Some Questions for Overdrive and Amazon about the Kindle Lending Library


Professional Awareness

Ben Lainhart, Non-LIS Blogs to Follow


Interviews

Ned Potter, What's the key to a good interview - beyond the usual truisms we all know already? 


Cataloguing

C  


Gamification of Library Use

Brian Herzog, Gamify Your Library Fines (pretty interesting idea, and I like the speed camera example as well)

Chad Boeninger, What if libraries gave users achievements?

Andy Woodworth, 1Up @ Your Library 


Misc.

Steve Kolowich, Wielding Wikipedia (University of Houston librarians using Wikipedia to increase exposure of their collections)

Laura Wilkinson, Knowledge Management

Macpherson College Miller Library, Library of the Living Dead (best library guide I've ever seen!)

Possibly the most badass librarian ever. Reproduced with permission.

Monday, 28 March 2011

What I've been reading in March

I was in Oxford today, and will write a post about that at some point in the next couple of days, but in the meantime, here's what I've been reading this month!

I've picked up a few books that people have recommended as pre-library school reading - have read Buckley Owen's Success at the Enquiry Desk (very clear and helpful), and have Broughton's Essential Classification and Bowman's Essential Cataloguing on the shelf waiting for me to get around to them!

eBooks

Sarah Houghton-Jan, The eBook User's Bill of Rights

Cory Doctorow, Ebooks: durability is a feature, not a bug (YES. This.)

BBC Click, Do eBooks Spell the End of Lending Libraries (Interesting video, though the publisher guy advocating a model where you have to physically go to the library to check out an ebook is SILLY.)

Phil Bradley, Further Thoughts on eBooks


Technology

Kate Sheehan, You Know, I Know, Don't Know (Overcoming technophobia - "Librarians are professional problem solvers and those skills don’t stop working when applied to technology.")

Michael Wilson, Survey of the use of social media by a selection of Cambridge libraries

Laura Wilkinson and Emma Cragg, 23 Things Oxford

Claire McAffrey, Peter Reilly and Helena Feighan, 23 Things @UL: a web 2.0 learning experience for faculty and staff at the University of Limerick

Miss Information (Closed Stacks), Social Networking Best Practices 

Junko, Heibergert & Loken, The Effect of Twitter on College Student Engagement and Grades

Matt Buchanan, What the Amazon Kindle Tablet Might Look Like 

Miami University Augmented Reality Research Group, Augmented Reality App for Shelf Reading (Very cool!)


Save Libraries

Voices for the Library, Public Libraries and Museums Act 1964 (Another month, yet another thing...)

Library School

Julia Glassman, Apprenticeships: A Model for Library School?


Teaching

LFairie, "Threw his book on the table" : My first teaching session


Professional Awareness

Lauren Gibaldi, Know Your Literature - Keeping Up With the Kard... uhh...New Books.


CILIP

Céline Carty, CILIP Branches & Groups: Some Thoughts



User Friendliness

Darlene Fichter and Jeff Wisniewski, Practical Website Improvement Face-Off (One of the articles being discussed at this month's Brown Bag Lunch)

Erin (User-Centered Cataloger), What "Fix the Catalog" Might Really Mean  (Now if only there was an augmented reality app to help me do this...oh wait.)
Andy Priestner, Advertising Space


The Future of Libraries

Justin Hoenke, Thank you Harper Collins (for making the path forward a little clearer)

Ned Potter, The Future of Libraries is Transliteral

Simon Barron, The National Digital Library: A Personal Quartet 

Lots of people, Tweets from the Personalised Library Services in Higher Education Symposium

Emma Cragg, Personalised Library Services in Higher Education


'Illuminated Keyboard' by Connect7 on stock.xchng

Monday, 28 February 2011

What I've been reading in February

Here's a rundown of the most interesting blog posts and articles I've read this month. A few of these are from the end of January, because during the last week of January I was blogging each day for the Library Day in the Life project, so I decided to post the January list the weekend before :) February's a short month anyway, so it evens up!

Save Libraries

Philip Pullman, Leave the Libraries Alone. You Don't Understand Their Value. (I'm sure everyone's read this by now but it is Brilliant with a capital B.)

Ryne Douglas Pearson, Who Can Save the Library? I Think I Know. (It's @ScrewyDecimal!)

Andy Priestner, 'Save our libraries' day - Cambridge 

Cambridge News, Library Supporters Say Cuts Would Be 'Disaster' (Spot me in the picture?)

SE13URE, New Cross Library Occupation: Inside Story 

Sarah Stamford, Libraries Gave Us Power

BBC News, Are Libraries Finished? Five Arguments For and Against (Interesting, but their second example of things you can't do at a library is ridiculous - like many others I borrow ebooks from the library)

Ian Clark, Internet vs Public Libraries 

Mark Steel, The Caring, Sharing Way to Bad Times ("All you get from [libraries] is, "Borrow this, look up that", but at last that dictatorship is coming to an end, to be replaced with a voluntary system in which people will ask a neighbour for a book about the local canal system in 1817, and when told they haven't got it, they'll be free to give up")


Library Day in the Life
 
Lots and lots of people, Library Day in the Life Project, Round 6

Emma Cragg and Katie Birkwood, Beyond Books: What it Takes to be a 21st Century Librarian  (see also Echolib Escapes)


Library School

Steven Kaszynski, Cataloguing: Old School? (Good points made in the comments too, should cataloguing be a compulsory part of the library degree?)

Hack Library School, Job Tips for Future/Recent LIS Graduates

Hack Library School, How I Hacked Library School - WEB APPS!
 


Echolib Escapes

Katie Birkwood, Out of the Echolib and into the Fire   



Ebooks

BBC News, The Rights and Wrongs of Digital Books  

Bethan Ruddock, Reading in OverDrive

Dirk Johnson, Book Lovers Fear Dim Future for Notes in the Margins 

Internet Archive, Internet Archive and Library Partners Develop Joint Collection of 80,000+ eBooks To Extend Traditional In-Library Lending Model  (Great development, although as Jessamyn West points out (link below) the site is currently rather confusing)


Jessamyn West, The Interface is Us - What People Think About eBooks

Bobbi Newman, Publishing Industry Forces OverDrive and Other Library eBook Vendors to Take a Giant Step Back (New rules mean that a library's ownership of an ebook will expire after a certain number of patron checkouts. Bad news! Update: the number of checkouts looks like it's going to be just 26 - for libraries offering the maximum OverDrive loan period of 21 days this will mean popular books will expire after about a year and a half - for Hertfordshire library who have 7 day loans they will keep their books for about 6 months. Bobbi's post has links to lots of other stuff on the subject.)


Technology

Kirsty Braithwaite, QR code 101 (oh the horror, I am endorsing one of the Oxford trainees' posts!)

Brian Herzog, Scanning Library Cards on Smartphones

Simon Barron, A Social-Networking Success Story 

Digital Researcher 2011 Conference, DR11 Virtual Attendance

Jennifer Jones, Notes from #DR11: What does it mean to be a digital researcher?




Professional Awareness

Aaron Tay, Where do you get your library news? Evaluating library channels 


Online Presence

Bobbi Newman, The Problem with Pseudonyms

Dan Schawbel, 5 Reasons Why Your Online Presence Will Replace Your Resume in 10 Years

Annie Pho, Online Presence, a.k.a. You 2.0

Meredith Farkas, Your Virtual Brand


Misc.
  
New York Public Library, Do You Judge a Book by its Cover? (I like this idea!)

Karen Schneider, In Praise of Succeeding

David Lee King, 10 Tips to Do Presentations Like Me

Katie Birkwood, Curious Collections: What Do We Keep, and Why?




'Glasses' from stock.xchng