Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Internet Radio Hangs in the Balance


Today many Internet-based radio streams went silent as a protest to Congress's decision to increase royalties to astronomical levels, beginning in mid-July. Savenetradio.org has stepped up to the plate to raise public awareness and lobby to stop the 5-20% royalty hikes from putting countless small broadcasters and large non-profits alike out of business.

Instead, proponents of net radio urge citizens to contact Congress to pass the Internet Radio Equality Act that would put rates on the same levels as satellite radio.

We shall see whether webcasters will make it to July 15, the date set for the new rates to take effect. It would also call for backpayment of 17 months at the new rate.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Koha Virtual Bookshelves

Take a look at my handiwork in Koha, an open source ILS.

ZoomClouds url

SuprGlu to the rescue! This website's made integrating multiple RSS feeds a breeze (plus, the layouts they give you for your page are pretty nice looking too). Here's the url to my ZoomClouds cloud including del.icio.us, Connotea and Heteroglossia feeds all neatly wrapped into one nice basket of goodness.

Grazr widget

You can find the url to my Grazr widget here.

Also, see a visual representation toward the bottom of my sidebar.

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Dance Dance Revolution - In the Library?

That's right, you heard me. Dance Dance Revolution, along with many other un-library like activities (like jazz sessions and coffee bars), is invading libraries at an alarming rate. The Charlotte Observer brings us the story complete with photos of patrons playing Guitar Hero at the Main Library in the Charlotte Area public library system.

Along with the news that an Arizona library has chosen to axe Dewey, this doesn't seem to be a surprise in our emerging culture of comfortable-ness. Anything to make it easier on our kids and adults. Maybe they'll start teaching third graders how to hold a Wiimote to get a better toss on Bowling than worry about multiplication tables or perfecting that awful cursive writing. Soon, writing won't even matter. But I digress. For now.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Custom Search Engine URL

Here it is.

On a totally unrelated note, I've been enjoying my iGoogle homepage. When you choose a theme, it changes "mood" according to the time of day where you are located. Right now the sun's high in the sky in the background.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Let's see if this works...

Click here for an RSS feed to my Scopus search.

Goodbye, Computer

Well, the day has finally arrived. Five years and I've finally put my beloved laptop to rest. It's odd how one day your life's there and the next it's gone. Fortunately, I'm able to mooch off of our laptop pool at work... but the hunt begins for some kind of replacement. I'm leaning towards Dell because I can get a discount, but the MacBook is looking so nice... Argh for compatibility issues and my Mac-awkwardness. Maybe someday. On to re-tagging all 50 Zotero links...

Monday, June 18, 2007

Smoke and Mirrors

Well, there might as well be smoke coming from my computer. I think it's dead. Thank goodness for roommates. This, however, causes just a SLIGHT problem as my entire program takes place online. Goodbye all my Firefox settings, bookmarks, etc. At least a lot of what we're working on like del.icio.us and blogger and koha is web-based, so that isn't all lost. Bleh.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Take a Hike, Dewey!

Dana Jones brought up an interesting piece of library news tonight on our Hot Topics discussion board - 'Arizona Library Shuns Dewey Decimal System.' Apparently, this public library has decided to shush forever the organization method that 95% of public libraries presently use to catalog and store materials - the Dewey Decimal System.

According to the NPR report today, they will be setting the library up like a Barnes and Noble or Borders - organized by interest like "Gardening" or "Gaming" or "Lame" or things like that. Don't get me wrong, I think libraries need to be aware of what's going on in the corporate world. It just doesn't mean that they need to follow obediently, tail between legs, every trend that hits the market. So while college bound teenagers will be able to easily find information about top schools and how to write decent essays, they won't be ready for the shock that sets in when they set foot into their very own University library - Library of Congress style. I wonder if they'll outlaw letters now that numbers have been deemed too difficult to decipher. We shall see.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Networked Books - Will they make it past Wikipedia?

I recently stumbled upon a new genre of literary creations called Networked Books. Basically, these books cease to act like typical print books in that they're never complete. They're open for continuous revision, addition, and brainstorming by multiple "authors" in a disorienting sense of the word. Wikipedia is a massive example of a networked book. These may link to hundreds of other sites or networked books in a variety of mediums. An intriguing group who call themselves the Institute for the Future of the Book, located in Brooklyn, NY, work heavily on developing social software to allow a wider audience to experiment and create electronic works such as networked books.

Check out my custom Google Search Engine that focuses specifically on Networked Books. If you'd like to collaborate on making it or another customized search better, feel free to comment.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Do we want books or not?

Should libraries be required to preserve every single book that enters its collection? Should they work to keep as many as possible on the shelves? Should they weed incessantly to make room for new material? Should they buy microfilm rather than keep runs of journals and newspapers on the shelves? Nicholson Baker's book Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper has provoked many of these kinds of questions as I cobble together my stance on how libraries should act in these situations. Mass digitization projects, like Project Gutenberg and ibiblio, attempt to copy existing works for the generations to come. Baker rants about people like Michael Lesk, who apparently want to throw away mind-numbing amounts of perfectly good material in favor of digitizing it (and throwing the originals to greedy private sellers). I fall somewhere in the middle, but hesitate to spend my life savings on a warehouse full of original newspaper runs.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

EndNoteWeb - Yea or Nay?

So I've been bombarded by EndNoteWeb this week, both from work and school. My first encounter was less than ideal, trying to import tags from Connotea into ENW. Apparently, it works just fine with dozens of scholarly databases, but doesn't know how to communicate with tagged websites without authors. Needless to say, ENW may be more convenient in its portability than its predecessor, EndNote 10, but it has a long way to go to win my final vote.

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Aghhhhhh!

I am so frustrated right now. It seems like everything I'm trying to do refuses to work, and the assignments just creep out of nowhere. I can't figure out how to post an RSS feed from Bloglines on this stupid thing, I can't get Connotea to export to EndNoteWeb, and I have no idea how I'm going to get all three books read and a 1500 page paper written by next Monday. Too much technology at once. I would have called myself half decent at computers before this week. Now I'll just be glad when June is over.

Saturday, June 2, 2007

Marc Smith on social networking


Marc Smith of Microsoft Research implies that the future of social networking is going to be increasingly telling about the way people live their private lives - publicly. "It's a great time to be a sociologist . . . our society is not going to be recognizable in ten or twenty years." He speaks of "myspace as a new kind of body adornment . . . a fundamental shift that hasn't been seen in millennia." Social network profiles will be emitted from our bodies, he claims, in a way that makes information that we choose public in a way never thought possible. It makes sense, as most people love to talk about themselves. Why not have an ongoing conversation with everyone who cares to view it?

A chilling take on Big Brother 2.0...

Friday, June 1, 2007

Fahrenheit 451

So I received an email today with the subject line of "Burned Book..."

Now, I'm not sure what the funny part is - the fact that I work in the library and a phrase like this should strike fear into everyone employed here - or the elipsis at the end. I often wonder why people think that using an elipsis is a good idea. I have no room to talk, I use them fairly often (mainly in email correspondence), but in certain situations they can completely change the tone of what's actually being said. If the line would have read, "Burned Book," fine. There was a burned book. There's nothing I can do about it. It will probably involve a bill and someone trying to get out of the bill. But when you write "Burned Book..." the possibilities suddenly become endless. There is most likely a story behind it that I will hear that involves some kind of drug or alcohol use and the abuse of housesitting privileges. Not that this has ever been told to me. But it's always possible.