Monday, December 7, 2009

William Burroughs' Naked Lunch at 50

Link to December 7 boingboing post, "Mark Dery on Naked Lunch's 50th Anniversary".

Excerpt: This year marks the 50th anniversary of Naked Lunch, William S. Burroughs's weird, challenging, creepy, funny, cut-up trek through the Interzone. To celebrate, Grove Press published a new hardcover, slipcased edition of the book: Naked Lunch: 50th Anniversary Edition. This edition presents the original restored text of the novel and and Brion Gysin's original cover art that appeared on the first Olympia Press printing. Over at the Las Vegas Weekly, Mark Dery pays his respects to the mugwumps among us.

An edition of Naked Lunch is owned by the following 7 LINK libraries: Madison Central (4 copies, tho 1 is lost), Pinney Branch, Sequoya Branch (2 copies), Monona, Oregon, Stoughton, and Sun Prairie. LINK is a consortium of 49 public libraries.

Hmm, just a few copies in the reality zone but none outside of Dane County.

Television: Still the King

Link to December 7 Multichannel News post, "Americans Still Watch 99% Of Video On TVs: Nielsen".

Excerpt: Web video may be the buzz of the TV industry, but Americans still spend the vast majority of their time watching video -- approximately 99% -- on traditional televisions, according to Nielsen's latest "three screens" report released Monday.

In the third quarter, the average American spent 31 hours, 19 minutes per week watching traditional TV, compared with 31 minutes watching time-shifted TV, 22 minutes of Internet video and just 3 minutes on a mobile phone, according to Nielsen's Anytime Anywhere Media Measurement (A2/M2) Three Screen Report for the period.

Even among those 18-24 -- a cohort that typically consumes the most online video of any age group -- viewing is largely on TVs, with the demographic registering 22 hours, 44 minutes of traditional TV watching in the period compared with 35 minutes of Internet video and 19 minutes spent watching time-shifted TV.

Food and Drink in the Library: That's Why There's "Roach Movie"



Thanks to Mark Arend for passing along.

David S. Ferriero Recently Confrimed as 10th Archivist of the United States

National Archives Building, Washington, D.C.

Link to December 7 Washington Post article, "Sharing a sense of history: Ferriero is first librarian in charge at National Archives". (via LISNews)

Excerpt: [David S.] Ferriero, who looks as much like an amiable police detective as an academic, was nominated by President Obama on July 28 and confirmed by the Senate on Nov. 6. His name rhymes with "stereo."

He had been director of the research libraries of the New York Public Library system since 2004 and university librarian and vice provost for library affairs at Duke University since 1996. He oversaw Duke's $55 million library expansion into two new buildings. Before that, he worked in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology library for 31 years.

Job Announcement: UW-Washington County Director of the Library

University of Wisconsin - Washington County
DIRECTOR OF THE LIBRARY

Position Description

POSITION OVERVIEW
The Director of the Library is responsible for the management of the campus library and reports directly to the Campus Executive Officer/Dean. The position is an academic staff, twelve-month appointment (expectation of FTE commitment variable according to academic calendar). The Director develops, promotes, maintains and evaluates library services to faculty, staff, a varied student population, and the community. The Director trains, supervises and evaluates staff and student employees, supports the curriculum through active collaboration with faculty and staff, and is proficient in library computer technologies.

QUALIFICATIONS
A Masters Degree in Library Science and a minimum of two years of relevant experience are required. Experience in an academic setting is preferred.

ADMINISTRATION OF THE LIBRARY
1. Within the framework of the campus mission and governance bodies, and in consultation with the Dean; set library policies, goals and objectives.
2. Administer all aspects of library and media services for the campus.
3. Maintain the library as a user-friendly, technologically sophisticated learning center. Actively consult with faculty, students, and staff in utilizing library resources and developing programs to serve their educational needs.
4. Maintain professional knowledge of library and information science. Communicate new developments and potential opportunities to the Dean and campus community. Keep current with developments in information technology and instructional media and their relationship to the library as a teaching and learning resource.
5. Participate in campus, UW Colleges, regional and statewide committees and represent campus issues, ideas, and concerns as appropriate. Serve on the Colleges Library Council. Actively participate in campus and university-wide planning and governance activities.
6. Manage library lending, collection maintenance, service agreements, and all user services.
7. Develop and implement policies and procedures relating to the library and its various functions.
8. Work closely with the Campus Library Committee, Library Support Services, and appropriate bodies and individuals to coordinate library operations and plans.

COLLECTION MANAGEMENT
1. With the advice of faculty and staff, select books, periodicals, audiovisual materials and other information resources to support the campus mission and curriculum.
2. Maintain records and files necessary for access and inventory of library holdings. Collect, evaluate and report data regarding the Library’s collections in a timely and accurate manner.

PUBLIC SERVICES
1. Provide a wide range of reference and information services to meet the needs of campus clients and the public. Participate in regional library consortia, as appropriate. Provide technical advice on information services to the campus and community. Maintain a strong, friendly and professional image for the library.
2. Provide instruction and assistance to students, faculty, staff and the public on the use of information resources. Create library-related aids for users; work with faculty and IAS to develop library instruction presentations; stay current with curricular and pedagogical trends/developments, and keep campus informed of new information resources and services.
3. Collect, evaluate and report data regarding public services, and adapt services to serve changing needs.

SUPERVISION
1. Supervise and evaluate all library staff, including support staff and student employees. Develop and provide training in conjunction with other appropriate offices.
2. Maintain all required personnel records and manage all personnel matters related to the library.

BUDGET
1. Plan and administer the library budgets in consultation with the Dean, Campus Steering, Library Committees, and the Colleges Library Council.
2. Order materials, equipment and supplies following System, campus, and Library Support Services procedures and within budgetary amounts.
3. Seek funding and alternative resources to enhance the library’s ability to provide adequate collections, access to information resources, and services to its clients.

PROFESSIONAL/COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES
1. Participate in local, state, and national library professional organizations and activities, as appropriate.
2. Establish goodwill and working relationships with a variety of external groups and organizations for the benefit of the campus.


APPLYING FOR THE LIBRARY DIRECTOR POSITION
University of Wisconsin – Washington County

This is a 12-month, 83% position. Starting salary $49,058., excellent benefits.

Please send a letter of interest, resume, names, addresses, and phone numbers of three references to: Library Appointments Committee, UW-Washington County, 400 University Drive, West Bend, WI 53095.
Applications must be received by e-mail at Librarysearch@uwc.edu or postmarked on or before January 3, 2010.

Employment will require a criminal background check. An AA/EO employer.

Barnes & Noble's Nook: No Kindle Killer, According to Technologizer Review


Link to December 6 Technologizer post, "Your First Look at Nook: The Technologizer Review".

Excerpt: Let’s get one thing out of the way right now: The Nook isn’t a Kindle killer–not in this initial form, at least. For all its pleasing touches, intriguing innovations, and clear advantages over the Kindle, it feels like a less-than-perfectly-polished 1.0 product, just like Amazon’s first e-reader did a couple of years ago. The user interface is surprisingly sluggish, there are some usability gaffes, and I encountered a major bug with the device’s most-touted feature. Even the much-hyped lending feature has a major gotcha: You can lend a book once. Period.

Leader-Telegram "Small Towns: Fork in the Road" Series Focuses on Durand, Wisconsin


Special Project summary. The future of the Chippewa Valley depends in part on many smaller communities that strengthen the regional economy and preserve its culture and character. As the percentage of people working in agriculture and manufacturing declines, leaders in area communities large and small must devise strategies to better position themselves in this rapidly changing environment.

To explore how one city has been affected by the changing economy and is trying to respond, the Leader-Telegram focused on Durand, the Pepin County seat and a close-knit community. The project, titled "Small Towns: Fork in the Road," illustrates how Durand, like so many other communities, faces important challenges and decisions as it tries to retain its character and commerce.


"Durand facing challenges familiar across Midwest".

Excerpt: Number don't lie. The numbers show the issues extend beyond just the business community, as the city's population has declined steadily since peaking at 2,103 in 1970. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates the number of residents had fallen to 1,859, a drop of nearly 12 percent, by 2008.

By contrast, the population climbed 27 percent in Wisconsin and 50 percent in the United States during the same period.

At the same time, those who remain in Durand are getting older, with the median age increasing from 34.3 in 1970 to 41.1, or about five years higher than the state median, in 2000. Along with that, enrollment in the Durand school district has tumbled from about 1,500 in 1986 to 1,004 this year, bringing the budget pain that comes with the corresponding drop in state aid.

Other headings:
  • Empty storefronts
  • Surge in competition
  • Brain drain
  • Future no guaranteed
  • Vanishing identity

  • "Many graduates nostalgic about their hometown, but few consider it a place to settle down".

    Excerpt: A decade after graduating from Durand High School, two-thirds of the class of 1999 no longer calls the Durand area home.

    Five out of six members of the class don't work in Durand or the immediate area.

    The results of a recent Leader-Telegram online survey of the 122-member class of 1999 drive home a key challenge facing leaders in many Wisconsin small towns: how to rejuvenate their communities by retaining more of their young people.

    A full three-quarters of the 45 respondents indicated Durand doesn't offer adequate job opportunities in their field.


    "Chippewa River critical to Durand's tourism, economic development".

    Excerpt: Mayor Gerald Bauer acknowledged that some residents also refer to the city's position nestled between the Chippewa River and surrounding limestone bluffs as being stuck between a rock and a hard place. The assessment comes from the idea that those geographic features, though aesthetically pleasing, leave the city little room to grow and limit the amount of relatively flat land sought by industry.

    But in recent years city fathers have come to realize that those supposed disadvantages have the potential to form the foundation upon which to build a new local economy.

    They envision using the Pepin County seat's scenic spot along the shimmering Chippewa River - one of the central reasons residents cite for cherishing the quality of life in Durand - as the anchor of an effort to get more people to visit. In short, city leaders hope to reinvent Durand as a tourist town.

    "You don't get here by accident," Durand school Superintendent Jerry Walters said. "A small town like Durand needs to have something that makes people want to come here. And then once they're here, we've got to have something that makes them want to stay."



    "Farm country around Durand suggests the industry is holding its own ".

    Excerpt: A snapshot of farming in Pepin County, according to the 2007 U.S. Census of Agriculture.

    54.6 - Average age of principal farm operators, up from 49.8 in 1997.

    503 - Farms, 78 more than 1997, although slighly more than half of those operators declared farming was not their primary occupation.

    252 - Farms with annual sales of less than $10,000, up from 125 in 1997.

    $105,795 - Average market value of products sold per farm, up 53 percent from 1997.

    108,426 - Acres of farmland, up 4 percent from 104,044 acres in 1997.



    "Natural attractions, entrepreneurial spirit offer future for Durand".

    Excerpt: "Durand's strength is people who want to live in a small community that's not too far from a big city; that is, if you call Eau Claire and Menomonie big cities," he [Pepin County Board Chairman Pete Adler] suggested.

    "People who live here tend to stay here, if they can," he added. "They want a small-town atmosphere with a small-school population."

    Adler said there is an "active group of people who want to do something to keep Durand vital," including artisans, business owners and civic leaders.



    "Art, music, movies — Durand covers all bases ".

    Excerpt: For a town of 2,000 souls, Durand boasts a thriving arts scene. Nestled along the Chippewa River, the Pepin County community has several entertainment options, including a movie theater, art gallery, blues festival and summer concert series.

    Durand also has a public library.

    Community Library Board Member Wields Machete to Address $1,000 Deficit

    Link to December 6 Kenosha News article, "Board seeks library cost cuts".

    Excerpt: The Community Library Board is seeking to cut spending for the coming year but is divided over how to do it.

    Options range from reducing hours to laying off employees.

    Under the library’s operating agreement with member communities Salem, Silver Lake, Paddock Lake, Randall and Twin Lakes, the library already has funding in place for 2010, approximately $1.2 million to run three libraries.

    Library Board President Marlene Goodson, also president of Paddock Lake, said the existing budget for 2010 has a small deficit, about $1,000, [RG's emphasis: is this it?] in part because of increased employee retirement costs that will occur when Twin Lakes takes over as fiscal agent for the district, a change that forces the library to move its employees to the state employee retirement system.

    Facing those increased costs, the finance committee presented a series of three options to the board last week, including reducing employee hours, closing the libraries at 8 p.m. rather than 9 p.m. during some portions of the year, or closing the libraries on very low-traffic days, such as the day after Thanksgiving.

    Cuts would allow the district to maintain spending on library materials and build a capital improvement fund, Goodson said.

    Board member Kenneth Mangold says he doesn't want to seem cold and heartless, but then why is he making such drastic suggestions?
    • Combine 4 supervisor positions into 2.
    • Eliminate in-house computer services.
    • Cut 3 part-time gardeners.
    According to the 2008 Wisconsin Public Library Service Data, the Community Library's materials budget expenditures totaled $123,020. At the risk of sounding cold and heartless myself, wouldn't it be worth it to bite the bullet and cut the $1,000 from this account-- if there is indeed no other wiggle room in the budget and if $1,000 is all we're talking about.

    Marshfield Library Director Responds to Anonymous Comment on Privacy



    Link to Lori Belongia's column in the December 7 Marshfield News-Herald, "Library must respect individual's privacy".

    Excerpt: Recently, I received a complaint in the library's suggestion box. The complaint was well thought out, and the writer's frustration clear.

    The individual was upset that the library could not share specific information about overdue materials on a family member's account, creating an inconvenience for the family member. In addition, the person was concerned that the library was viewing the family as a secretive, unfriendly grouping.

    Unfortunately, the complainant did not leave contact information so that I could explain the library's policy. However, this column is the perfect forum for me to address these concerns.

    The Marshfield Public Library takes your privacy and confidentiality very seriously. The Library's Confidentiality Policy is not solely a local choice. It is based on chapter 43.30 (1m) Wisconsin Statutes,

    Sunday, December 6, 2009

    Libraries: Still a Minority View, But......

    Link to December 5 KCHBlog post, "10 Reasons I Love Yet Ignore the Library". (via Lazyfeed)

    Excerpt: So why can’t I remember the last time I visited a library other than to say “hi” to the high school librarian? Here are a few reasons:
    1. I already have a pile of books and magazines waiting to be read.
    2. When I decide I want to read a certain book, I put in a request on Bookins, and more often than not I get what I want and just pay the shipping.
    3. The wonderful Flintridge Bookstore is up the street, and it stocks the required reading books for our school district. I like to support them since they’re big supporters of our local schools, and since their business suffered when the truck crashed into them last year.
    4. Amazon.com. Sorry, but I get free shipping.
    5. When I read a book, I don’t always finish in time to return it to the library.
    6. My local library is loud, bright and sometimes seems like an afterschool daycare facility. (The picture to the right is not of our local library: it’s a picture of the Camarillo Library, whose interior was designed by The Design Studio.)
    7. The library usually doesn’t have what I’m looking for in stock at our local branch. They’re good about ordering online, but that doesn’t help if I’m in a hurry.
    8. If I want to listen to an audiobook, I purchase it on iTunes and put it on my iPod.
    9. I don’t need to use the computers at the library, since I have one at home. And through it I can access more updated research information than the printed encyclopedia at the library has. (Are there printed copies of encyclopedias anymore?)
    10. My dog chewed up my library card, and then I lost it. Seriously. I was hoping to scan it for this post, but I can’t find it.

    The Farmville Experience

    Link to December 4 Gamasutra blogpost, "Farmville, Social Gaming, and Addiction". (via Slashdot)

    Excerpt: Farmville's popularity is impressive on a few levels--more people are playing it than World of Warcraft, than ever bought a Wii, and a look at my own Farmville friends list indicates it's seducing players to the joys of gaming who would never even pick up a video game under normal circumstances.

    Granted, Farmville exists with a very different business model than most video games: you don't pay by the month to play it, you don't even shell out a one-time payment to play: you play for free, and then the game tries to sell you in-game perks and a chance to skip the grind to unlock all of the game's content by spending money rather than time.


    It exists in a social rather than solitary space, while it's not an explicit pyramid scheme like some online games such as mybrute that rely on referrals, Farmville locks you out of some content unless you have enough friends playing Farmville with you, and having friends in your network playing Farmville is a reliable source of coins, experience, and gifts, the main resources of the game.

    A Call to Catalog the Latest Media Merger Hysteria

    Link to Adam Thierer's December 6 The Technology Liberation Front blogpost, "And so the Comcast-NBC Merger Hysteria Begins: Help Me Document It!"

    Excerpt: As I noted in my recent paper, “A Brief History of Media Merger Hysteria: From AOL-Time Warner to Comcast-NBC,” every time a media merger is proposed we hear all sorts of silly Chicken Little predictions of impending doom. Among the more entertaining claims we hear are conspiracy theories about supposed nefarious schemes to take over the media universe and control our minds, predictions of the death of journalism or democracy, or just good ol’ fashion screw-the-consumer price hikes. But, as I showed in my paper, those predictions have always proven to be bunk once the historical record is in–which usually only takes a few years. While most media mergers do end in misery–it’s for the merging firms and their shareholders, not the public. Unforeseen technological innovations and expanding media marketplace options typically doom most media mergers, while the viewing and listening public enjoys the fruits of continued marketplace evolution.

    The Girl Who Lived in the Library


    Link to December 6 New York Times article, "About New York: Stoking the Furnace, and a Love for Books".

    Excerpt: When Sharon Washington says she grew up with books, she is speaking literally: Her father, George King Washington, was a library custodian, a job that for much of the 20th century included shoveling coal into the furnace at all hours.

    It came with an apartment, and a world of remembered magic for the little girl who grew up in the library, an only child.
    “It was the books, of course, but it was also my father, working on the furnace, feeding the dragon that ate the coal,” said Ms. Washington, 50 and a successful actor, shown above with her father in 1963. “I remember the coal truck deliveries.”

    The coal sluiced down a chute next to the furnace. The pieces sparkled with blackness. Her father — a long, lean man — had a shovel nearly as tall as himself. She would sneak downstairs to watch him wield the shovel and spin the ashcans to the curb. “The family mantra was: Don’t let that furnace go out,” she recalled last week.

    Saturday, December 5, 2009

    Live Oak Tree at Live Oak Library

    NatureMaker President Gary Hanick

    Link to December 4 NatureMaker blogpost.

    Excerpt: Savannah, GA’s Live Oak Public Library system recently opened its newest, state-of-the-art branch on the south side (Southwest Chatham) of the historic city. The library, Chatham County’s first to open in twenty years, is also its first LEED registered building. At 50,000 square feet, the southwest Chatham branch is the second largest library in the system. Watch video

    In its effort to create a magical place for families to explore lifetime learning together in a welcoming environment, the library commissioned NatureMaker to create its first “Giving Tree” around a prominent structural column in the children’s department. Befitting the library’s moniker, as well as the region’s most famous tree, NatureMaker spent months researching the nuances of the live oak tree, including a detailed study of the bark texture, growth patterns, characteristics and so-called “imperfections.”

    Magazine Death Watch 2009: National Geographic Adventure

    Link to December 4 New York Times article, "National Geographic Adventure Magazine Folds".

    Excerpt: National Geographic announced on Thursday that it was ceasing regular publication of National Geographic Adventure, its 10-year-old magazine about travel and the outdoors published eight times a year. However, it will keep the brand alive in two annual newsstand-only publications, in books and on the Web.

    Did they mean to say "semi-annual" instead of "two annual"? Guess we'll have to wait and see.
    LINK libraries affected: Baraboo, Brodhead, Cambridge, Dane County bookmobile, Madison Central, Madison Ashman Branch, Reedsburg, Sauk City, Sun Prairie, and Verona.

    Orfordville (WI) Plans for New Library


    Link to December 5 Janesville Gazette article, "Plans for new library taking shape in Orfordville".

    Excerpt: A new Orfordville Library is now less talk and more plan.

    The library board bought a parcel of land at 115 N. Center St. for $32,000 about a year ago. On Monday, library officials will request a variance for less parking than required at the new site during the village's plan commission meeting.

    The new site is less than a block away from the current library at 203 W. Beloit St., where no parking spaces are available. Ten off-street parking spaces will be at the new library. The new site also is across the street from the municipal building and its parking lot.

    "The building project has been something wanted and needed for many years," librarian Sarah Strunz said.

    The board has raised $40,000 over the last year through small fundraisers, but it plans to start a full campaign once drawings are complete, hopefully early next year, Strunz said.

    The board wants to stay within $500,000 to $600,000 for the project, she said.

    "I would love to see the building built within the next three years," she said.

    The current facility consists of 1,200 square feet on 2 levels. The second floor is not handicap-accessible.

    Rosholt Branch Library Needs More Space

    Link to December 5 Stevens Point Journal article, "Efforts to expand Rosholt library gather steam".

    Excerpt: The Rosholt Public Library has been cramped for years.

    Patrons from Rosholt and the towns of Alban and Sharon have asked for more space, but to little avail.

    With circulation up 33 percent in the last year, however, village officials now are taking a serious look at expanding or finding a new location for the 760-square-foot library.

    During the past few months, a library committee formed by the Rosholt Village Board has been working with The Rosholt Development Group to study the issue
    .

    Colby Public Library Offers Holiday Gift Certificates

    Link to December 5 Marshfield News-Leader article, "Make gift certificates redeemable at library:Make gift certificates redeemable at library".

    Among the choices:
    Good for one cooking/baking session.
    Good for one story night.
    Good for a music night.
    Let's have a craft party.
    Deck the halls.
    Movie night.

    Link to Colby Public Library website.

    Marathon County Public Library to Celebrate 1,000,000 Circs



    Link to December 4 Wausau Daily Herald article, "Marathon County library to mark million items checked out".

    Excerpt: Visit any library location or log on to www.mcpl.us by Dec. 11 to sign up for your chance to win. Grand prize is a $50 gas card from Riiser Energy. Other prizes include gift cards from City Grill, Great Dane Pub and Brewing Company, Village Inn of Marathon, New Roots Coffee Company and Wausau Mine Company and a family certificate to Nine Mile Forest Recreation Area.

    Winners will be announced in a program at 11:30 a.m. Dec.18 at the downtown library and do not need to be present to win.

    Friday, December 4, 2009

    Nicolet College President Elizabeth Burmaster's First 100 Days

    Or thereabouts.


    Link to December 4 Rhinelander Daily News article, "Burmaster reflects on early days at Nicolet".

    Excerpt: With a reported increase in enrollment of 12 percent for the Fall Semester, Nicolet College President Elizabeth Burmaster said this week the technical college is working hard to meet the needs of students.

    “It’s never been a more important time for Nicolet College,” she said.

    Burmaster, who took over as college president in July following the retirement of Adrian Lorbetske, said the economic downturn has produced dislocated workers who are seeking the technical college for retraining and retooling
    of their skills.

    Jessamine County Recataloging Project


    Link to December 4 Lexington Herald-Leader article, "Jessamine library to move its collection of graphic novels".

    Excerpt: The graphic novel that got two employees fired and launched a book-banning campaign in Jessamine County is being recataloged, along with other graphic novels with mature themes, to the adult section of the library.

    Critics had contended that Alan Moore's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier was shelved in a section of the Jessamine County Public Library that was too close to the young adult fiction. They also said it was too obscene for young readers and too similar to comic book material.

    The graphic novels that belong in the teen section will be moved as well, library director Ron Critchfield said.

    Comparing Wisconsin and Colorado Interlibrary Loan Activity

    Link to December 4 Library Research Service Fast Facts report, "State's Collaborative Climate Fosters Interlibrary Loan in Colorado".

    Looks like we need to use a verb stronger than "foster" to describe Wisconsin's collaborative climate.

    Link to Wisconsin Public Library Service Data reports.

    Gerard, next time buy your coffee filters at Costco



    You'll never run out.

    Link to Lake Mills Library.

    LINK Collection Development Alert

    32 holds.
    9 copies.

    Cory Doctorow gives it a rave review in a December 4 boingboing post.

    Excerpt: Jonathan Lethem's extraordinary new novel Chronic City tells the story of Chase Insteadman, a washed up, grown up child actor living off his sitcom residuals in wealthy, Upper East Side New York. Chase is caught between two improbabilities: his fiancee, a dying astronaut stranded on a space-station walled off from Earth by a Chinese orbital minefield, from which vantage she commands daily headlines; and Perkus Tooth, a media-obsessed Philip-K-Dickian ex-rock-critic who lives in a weed-smoke- filled cave of a rent- controlled apartment from which he obsessively watches obscure movies and reads obscure books.

    Mashable Founder and CEO Looks at Web Trends

    Link to December 3 cnn.com post,"10 Web trends to watch in 2010".

    The list and excerpts/summaries:

    1. Real time ramps up. (The term represents the growing demand for immediacy in our interactions. Immediacy is compelling, engaging, highly addictive ... it's a sense of living in the now.)

    2. Location, location, location. (Soon, our whereabouts may optionally be appended to every Tweet, blog comment, photo or video we post.)

    3. Augmented reality. ([I]magine walking around a city and seeing it come to life with reviews of the restaurants you walk past and Wikipedia entries about the sights you see.)

    4. Content "curation". (Your friends are your filter.)

    5. Cloud computing. (...data and applications cease to reside on our desktops and instead exist on servers elsewhere...)

    6. Internet TV and movies. (Think Hulu, etc.)

    7. Convergence conundrum. (Smartphones v. task-specific devices, such as ebook readers.)

    8. Social gaming. (FarmVille and the rise of virtual currencies.)

    9. Mobile payments. (Like how you pay for stuff at the Apple Store.)

    10. Fame abundance, privacy scarcity. (...ongoing voluntary erosion of privacy...)

    Pink Glove Dance: the Latest Viral Sensation

    Created to raise money and awareness to fight breast cancer.



    Via Mashable.

    Twoddler: Tongue Twister of the Day

    Twoddler: Twittering Toddlers from Bart Swennen on Vimeo.

    Via December 3 Mashable post, "Twoddler: the Baby Toy That Tweets".

    Excerpt: Earlier this year we looked at devices that are integrating Twitter in remarkable ways, from enabling your plants to tweet when they need water to automated updates from bakeries when stuff comes fresh out of the oven.

    Add another innovation to that list: the Twoddler. The prototype device, developed by a team at Hasselt University in Belgium, essentially hooks up a Fisher Price toy to a Twitter account, such that when the baby performs different actions, the account is updated.

    Plants that tweet? What about a water softener that lets us know when we need to add more salt pellets?

    Library Collection Development: Earning a Place on the Shelves

    Link to December 4 Cedar Rapids Gazette article, "Library director plans to improve operations, circulation".

    Excerpt: Pasicznyuk wants to increase circulation by 10 percent, so that 35 percent of the library’s materials are checked out on a given day.

    “If more of our collection is in the hands of people, we can have a larger collection, because we don’t have to store it all,” he said.

    Books that don’t get checked out will be dropped from the collection, he said, and popular books will be marketed better. Cookbooks, home improvement books and other popular items will be displayed prominently, sometimes on outward-facing shelves, he said.

    “Something has to earn its place on our shelf,” he said. “I know a lot of people get antsy when you talk about weeding a library, but I can tell you the most effective libraries do it constantly.”

    Appleton Public Library Director Responds to "Frequently Observed Misconceptions"


    Link to December 4 Commentary in Appleton Post-Crescent, "Getting a clearer read on Appleton Library".

    Excerpt: The future of the Appleton Public Library remains a hot topic.

    Though a Common Council committee moved money for a site selection process from the 2010 budget to 2011, a committee is still looking at the question of what's next for the library.

    A consultant recommended earlier this year that the city build a new library, but there's a long way to go before a decision will be made.

    That hasn't stopped debate about the issue, though. Library director Terry Dawson recently addressed the debate on his blog, the New Cybrary, at newcybrary.blogspot.com, hoping to answer questions about the project.

    Thursday, December 3, 2009

    GraphJam on "Literacy"

    funny graphs and charts
    see more Funny Graphs

    GraphJam practices a variation of the public library mandate; they offer something to offend everyone. In this case, Twilight fans, primarily.

    More Geo-Targeted Display Ads to Appear on your Monitor

    Geotargeting (Old School)

    Link to December 2 ClickZ article, "Geo-Targeted Display Ads Set for Growth".

    Excerpt
    : The market for geo-targeted display ads is poised for aggressive growth over the next few years, from $897 million in 2008 to more than $1.9 billion in 2013, according to digital media consulting firm BIA/Kelsey.

    Geo-targeted ads -- banners that are presented only to people logging on from a particular region, or that appear different depending on the location of the user -- currently represent only about 10.2 percent of display ad units, according to BAI/Kelsey, which is based in Los Angeles.

    But that share will increase to 15 percent by 2013, the firm says, as advertisers look for cheap alternatives to search ads and publishers and ad networks look for creative ways to unload a glut of display inventory.

    "Resellers like AT&T and the Yahoo Newspaper Consortium...are going to start to sell these geotargeted display products because the search CPCs are really high," said Matt Booth, SVP and program director at BIA/Kelsey. "If you're a reseller, you're buying a search click for $2 and you can get 1,000 impressions for 45 cents, the economics are in favor of shifting to this market."

    Robert Darnton's "The Case for Books"

    Link to December 3 Harvard Gazette article, "In defense of books: Library Director Robert Darnton says the form will survive". (via Lazyfeed)

    Excerpt: Next year, Darnton will publish a book with Harvard University Press about Parisian street songs. “The reader of the print edition will be able to tune in to the online material and hear the songs sung to their original tunes, while following text on the page.”

    But this library leader also has concerns about the difficulties of preserving digital works: “Their hardware and software will become obsolete; they are fragile; their digits can unravel, and their metadata may not be adequate to locate them, years hence, in cyberspace.”

    Darnton agrees that the physicality of books provides irreplaceable pleasure, saying, “They delight the eye, feel good to the touch, and even smell good.” He tells of a French producer of e-books who “offered its customers a sticker that they can put on their computers and scratch to produce a musty smell like that of an old volume.”

    Book Dealer/Customer Conversations

    Some librarians may have similar encounters to share.


    Link to December 3 the Book Mine post, "Stupid Quotes". (via boingboing)

    Here's a sample:

    (phone call)

    Do you buy books?

    Yes. What do you have?

    Reading books.

    Reading books?

    Yea. Books you read.

    Ok. But I am not sure what it is you have.

    I just said. Reading books. Do you buy them?

    No. Thanks for calling.

    Break Time: The Alps timelapse movies set to music

    Timelapse movie: The Alps -- part I from Michael Rissi on Vimeo.

    boingboing regulars have already viewed it!

    Fort Atkinson Library to Move to Temporary Quarters

    Link to December 2 Daily Union online article, "Library moving during revamp. Former Digi-Star building"

    Excerpt: The Dwight Foster Public Library will have a new, temporary home while the historic 93-year-old structure undergoes a substantial remodeling and expansion project beginning in 2010.

    The Fort Atkinson City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved approximately $131,000 in costs associated with a plan to relocate the library's materials and services to the former Digi-Star building, located at the corner of Janesville and West Rockwell avenues.

    The library will be located in the lower level of the facility, which is owned by Nasco. The space measures approximately 17,000 square feet and has ample parking, handicapped access and visibility, City Manager John Wilmet said.

    Survey Says: We Love Breakfast

    Any time of day.

    Retiring Guy's Favorite Breakfast Location

    Link to December 2 Marketing Daily post, "Customers Crave All-Day Breakfast Option.

    Excerpt: Nearly half (46%) of U.S. consumers would like to see full-service restaurants offer a breakfast menu throughout the day, and about a third (32%) would like the option in limited-service restaurants, according to recent surveys by food service industry consultant Technomic.

    Consumers in general find breakfast fare comforting -- and women are particularly keen on the all-day option, Technomic found in surveying 1,500 U.S. consumers about breakfast preferences and behaviors for its "
    Breakfast Consumer Trend Report."

    My favorite breakfast locations (listed in descending order of preference):
    Marigold Kitchen.
    Pancake Cafe.
    Hubbard Avenue Diner.
    Original Pancake House.

    Wisconsin Ranks 30th on 2009 Small Business Survival Index

    Better Dead Than Red?

    Link to December 1 SBE Council news release.

    Excerpt: The Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council (SBE Council) today released its 14th annual rankings of the states according to their public policy climates for small business and entrepreneurship in the “Small Business Survival Index 2009: Ranking the Policy Environment for Entrepreneurship Across the Nation.” (Access the SBSI 2009map of the states by visiting http://sbecouncil.org/survivalindex2009/.)

    SBE Council chief economist Raymond J. Keating, author of the study, said: “It’s hard to find any good news at the national level for entrepreneurs, small business and their employees. The U.S. economy slipped into a recession in December 2007, with matters getting far worse late last year. Congress and the White House have not offered positive solutions to help the job-creating sector. In fact, most of their actions will hurt, not help, small businesses. But what about the states? The ‘Small Business Survival Index’ helps business owners and investors understand the publicpolicy burdens placed on entrepreneurship and small business, with the states ranked accordingly.”

    Link to full SBE Council report.

    Link to SBE Council website.

    In 2008, Wisconsin ranked 48th on Forbes best-for-business list.

    High-Speed Internet Data-Use Meters in Oregon

    Link to December 1 Multichannel News post, "Comcast Tests Data-Usage Meter In Oregon".

    Excerpt: More than a year after instituting an "excessive usage" cap for all of its broadband customers, Comcast is launching a usage-metering pilot for subscribers in Portland, Ore., that will let them track how much Internet bandwidth they consume.

    Beginning Tuesday and continuing over the next couple of weeks, all of Comcast's high-speed Internet customers in Portland will receive e-mails informing them that the meter is available via their account details on the Customer Central Web portal.

    "Our hope is that people will see how little data they actually consume, and have some comfort that see that they're not even close to the limit," Comcast director of corporate communications Charlie Douglas said. "If you have to ask if you're an excessive user, you probably aren't one."

    Nielsen to Measure Online Audience

    Link to December 2 Advertising Age article, "Under Threat, Nielsen Accelerates Plan to Measure Online Video".

    Excerpt: Facing a client insurgency that could threaten its TV-ratings franchise, Nielsen took a step toward linking TV and online video measurement, making better comparisons possible between online and offline audiences for shows such as "Desperate Housewives" and "30 Rock."

    Three years in development, Nielsen today told clients it will begin installing electronic meters in Nielsen homes to measure web activity, which will ultimately allow it to include online viewing in its standard TV-ratings service. The hope is a "single source" of data will allow accurate comparisons between TV and online, allowing ratings to include, for instance, viewing for "The Daily Show" Comedy Central, Hulu and ComedyCentral.com.

    Nielsen starts the process of installing meters in 7,500 homes later this month and hopes to begin collecting data by Aug. 31, 2010. In September, the company had pegged 2011 as the earliest it could begin to do so.

    Wednesday, December 2, 2009

    Progress Information Literacy Progress Report: "Lessons Learned"

    Link to 42-page report "Lessons Learned: How College Students Seek Information in the Digital Age". (via Lazyfeed)

    Abstract: A report of findings from 2,318 respondents to a survey carried out among college students on six campuses distributed across the U.S. in the spring of 2009, as part of Project Information Literacy. Respondents, while curious in the beginning stages of research, employed a consistent and predictable research strategy for finding information, whether they were conducting course-related or everyday life research. Almost all of the respondents turned to the same set of tried and true information resources in the initial stages of research, regardless of their information goals. Almost all students used course readings and Google first for course-related research and Google and Wikipedia for everyday life research. Most students used library resources, especially scholarly databases for course-related research and far fewer, in comparison, used library services that required interacting with librarians. The findings suggest that students conceptualize research, especially tasks associated with seeking information, as a competency learned by rote, rather than as an opportunity to learn, develop, or expand upon an information-gathering strategy which leverages the wide range of resources available to them in the digital age.

    Reactions:

    Free Range Librarian
    December 1 post, "Must-read Project Information Literacy Report"

    The Informavens' Desktop
    December 2 post, "Librarians fail; again".

    Throwing Down the "Library Sciences" Gauntlet

    Link to December 2 Blogging for Soup post, "Library Sciences?" (via Lazyfeed)

    Excerpt: My friend’s brother is going to school for library sciences. I didn’t even know that was a designated degree path. I know a good librarian needs to know a lot about reference books, research methods, and general literature, but isn’t that one of those things that comes with experience? Besides, books are sadly becoming obsolete.

    Sherman Alexie's Appearance on Colbert Nation

    The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
    Sherman Alexie
    www.colbertnation.com
    Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorU.S. Speedskating


    Link
    to December 2 techdirt post, "Author Sherman Alexie's Rants On Colbert Against Ebooks, Piracy And 'Open Source Culture'".

    Excerpt: On last night's Colbert Report, author Sherman Alexie spent most of the interview ranting against digital books and how "piracy" was destroying the book business. The whole thing was odd not just because of how uninformed it was, but also because he seemed to contradict himself multiple times. I haven't read any of Alexie's books, but if his logic is so twisted, it's difficult to think that his books are worth reading:

    Tuesday, December 1, 2009

    Pittsburgh City Council Vote May Save Branches

    Link to December 1 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette article, "Pittsburgh Council approves $600,000 to help libraries".

    Excerpt: Pittsburgh City Council today cast a final vote to dedicate $600,000 to the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh system, in advance of a Dec. 14 meeting of the library Board of Trustees that could postpone the planned closing of four branches and the merger of two others.

    The money comes from a fund the city uses to pay for vehicle fuel. A dip in fuel prices has left that fund with excess cash, which Council President Doug Shields eyed as a temporary fix for the library's budget gap.

    The library trustees voted Oct. 5 to close the Beechview, Hazelwood, Lawrenceville and West End libraries, merge the Carrick and Knoxville branches, and move the Mt. Washington branch from Grandview Avenue to Virginia Avenue.

    "What we did learn in all of this is the importance of the library system, and the importance of those libraries in neighborhoods," said Councilman Jim Motznik, prior to council's unanimous vote. "The Beechview branch is so, so important to that community -- I can't tell you how much."

    Battles in Ebook War Likely to Take Place on College Campuses

    Link to November 29 Delaware Online post, "Digital textbooks likely to energize e-book war: Sony, Amazon eager to seize opportunity in academic world". (via The Kept-Up Academic Librarian)

    Excerpt
    : As Sony Corp.'s e-book devices vie with the Kindle to win over readers, the real showdown may come later: when a shift to electronic textbooks at schools threatens to eclipse the current market for the products.

    Sony and Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle are both expanding into the academic world. Students at Blyth Academy in Toronto do all their reading on Sony devices, and five U.S. universities are testing the Kindle. The days of students lugging around heavy textbooks may be numbered, said Sony executive Steve Haber.


    "The only ones upset about this are going to be chiropractors," Haber, who oversees the digital reading unit, said this week. "It makes perfect sense to move to education."


    Within five years, textbooks will be the biggest market for e-book devices, dwarfing sales to casual readers, predicts Sarah Epps, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Mass. Corning Inc., which is developing glass screens for e-readers, expects textbooks to fuel about 80 percent of demand for those components by 2019.

    Palatine Public Library District (IL) Completes Renovation Project



    Link to November 30 Daily Herald article, "Palatine library ready to show off renovations".

    Excerpt: By repurposing staff space, the renovation has transformed nearly 5,000 square feet for public use. One of the highlights is a larger, 16-seat computer training lab created to accommodate the high-demand computer classes.

    he room will be available for patron use when classes are not in session.

    Three additional group study rooms have been added, making a total of five rooms suitable for small meetings. In addition, a small self-serve cafe provides a place for patrons to take a break with a snack or beverage.

    "Through careful, long-term decision-making and saving, we have economically expanded public floor space within the Main Library's original footprint," said Carol Barnes, board president.

    "The building was designed to accommodate a projected larger work force. With process improvements, use of technology and a flexible staff we were able to convert underutilized spaces into exciting new areas for the public. We are confident our patrons will take full advantage of these improvements."

    Frank Furness, Architect of Penn's Fisher Fine Arts Library

    Anne & Jerome Fisher Fine Arts Library
    (Image: Wikipedia Commons)

    Link to November 14 Wall Street Journal article, "This Library Speaks Volumes: Frank Furness treated reading as an active enterprise". (via Lazyfeed)

    Excerpt: It is hard to imagine an architect of libraries (of which he designed half a dozen) less bookish than Furness. His entire life seems a sustained effort to evade books altogether, no easy feat in his extraordinarily literary family. His father was the Rev. William Henry Furness, Philadelphia's celebrated Unitarian minister, who wrote a score of books and seemed unable to go from breakfast to dinner without writing at least a small pamphlet. Frank's brother Horace Howard Furness spent his life producing the mighty Shakespeare Variorum, a guide to every variant edition of Shakespeare's plays. Even his sister Annis translated German poetry into English, evidently for relaxation.

    But young Frank shunned reading for more physical pursuits, earning the Congressional Medal of Honor in the Civil War for his battlefield exploits. When he began to practice architecture after the war, he had no patience for designers who took their inspiration from books. An awestruck Louis Sullivan, who began his own career as a draftsman for Furness, noted how he made his buildings "out of his head." Another draftsman observed that the only book Furness ever praised was Viollet-le-Duc's richly illustrated Dictionnaire Raisonné de l'Architecture. (With characteristic perversity, Furness—who had no French—cited the one book he was unable to read.)

    Yahoo Top Searches of 2009

    Yahoo

    Link to November 30 Mashable post.

    Top ten categories include......

    1. Overall searches
    2. Mobile searches (Michael Jackson and Megan Fox are the only repeaters from the overall search list.)
    3. Economy-related searches
    4. Obama searches
    5. Celebrity farewell searches (Michael edges out Farrah.)
    6. Sudden-fame searches

    America's Oldest Public Library (?) Falls on Hard Times


    Link to November 30 philly.com post, "Despite hard times, Darby vows to save library".

    Excerpt: In Darby Borough, where the number of families living below the poverty line is twice the national average, a few dollars mean a lot.

    Yet Darby officials, facing the possible closing of the historic library founded in 1743, say they are committed to keeping it open, even if taxes go up.

    "The residents said that if we had to raise taxes, they would appreciate that we do," Mayor Helen Thomas said. "Everybody wants to save the library."

    Still, in a community where industry crumbled long ago, officials aren't sure how they'll find the money. Library director Susan Borders said she hoped the township would fund the library with $50,000, about $5 per person, almost double the $2.70 per person it receives now through a dedicated real estate tax.

    Borough Council President Janice Davis isn't sure residents can afford that.


    But wait a minute. The Peterborough (New Hampshire) Town Library calls itself "the oldest public library in the world". Who are we to believe?


    Peterborough Town Library


    Here's what Famous First Facts has to say on the subject.

    The above slide is from Retiring Guy's PowerPoint presentation for LIS 712 (The Public Library) session 3, "History and Development of Public Library Service".

    Do we have a controversy on our hands, a la Two Rivers Wisconsin and Ithaca New York?