Barnes & Noble abandoned ebooks once, so why are they coming back to them now? Because the format is starting to take off. Why is that? What's popular on Fictionwise? Well, once again it seems like porn is blazing a path to a new media format. Of the top 10 bestsellers under the "Multiformat" category, nine are tagged "erotica" amd the last is "dark fantasy".
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Erotica stimulating ebook sales?
Barnes & Noble abandoned ebooks once, so why are they coming back to them now? Because the format is starting to take off. Why is that? What's popular on Fictionwise? Well, once again it seems like porn is blazing a path to a new media format. Of the top 10 bestsellers under the "Multiformat" category, nine are tagged "erotica" amd the last is "dark fantasy".
Library Use Helps Spelling Bee Winner
Excerpt: "When I got to middle school, I started checking out books in the library and reading those harder words and stuff," he said. "I kind of remembered the words a little bit and just kind of pieced them together over time."
OK, Maybe Not So Smart In This Case
Excerpt:
According to a criminal complaint:
A bartender at Cozy Bar, 116 E. Mill St., called police about 2:30 a.m. Feb. 22 after discovering lights on, a cooler open and a window screen cut in the basement.
She also found Lehnhardt's Mead Public Library card on the floor by a door, where it appeared to have been used in an attempt to unlock the door.
Missing were four cases of Miller Lite and six cans of Pabst Blue Ribbon beer.
2008: A Very Good Year at the Colby Public Library
Excerpt:
2,748 people of all ages attended our special programs in 2008.
32,500 people were welcomed as they walked through our door.
58,994 was the number of circulations at the Colby Public Library in 2008. This is an increase of 84 percent in the past three years. [Retiring Guy's emphasis.] If the library seems like a busy place, we can assure you it is. We thank you, the patrons, for this support.
And this is just a sampling of the Colby Public Library's overall success story.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Advice from an Unlikely Source
The words in bold have been changed from the source material.
But if you are unsure of the patron's question, then [asking] a close-ended question serves you ill, because it immediately, perhaps irrevocably, moves you along the wrong track.
What does it take to succeed with open-ended questions? The librarian has to make the patron feel that he is really interested in hearing what they have to say.
Even if the librarian asks the right questions, the patron may not be forthcoming because of his emotional state. The goal of the librarian is to get to the real information need, and to do so he has to understand the patron’s emotions.”
Notes from my recent SLIS session on the reference interview. Well, yeah, they are, but you might be surprised by the source.
Book Review Central for Free Marketers
Planning for Expansion in Baraboo
Excerpt: A ground-level entrance, more space for quiet individual or small-group study, more light for the children's section and respect for the beauty of its historic design were among the desires voiced by community members during a forum on expanding the Baraboo Public Library.
"We hope to instill the belief that the library is a home to them."
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Pop Quiz
- Gen Y (18-30)
- Gen X (31-42)
- Trailing B0omers (43-52)
- Leading Boomers (53-61)
- Matures (62-71)
- After work (72+)
No peeking at the result of a 2007 Pew Research survey.
Insert Mark Twain Quote Here
Excerpt: Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and best-selling author Anna Quindlen is not about to write a eulogy for the printed word on a stark white page.
The Evidence Keeps Piling Up
Excerpt: "I don't think the use has gone up so much in terms of borrowers," Ron [McCabe, Library Director] said. "It's more in terms of the amount of use of things here, and that has gone up very, very dramatically."
In 2008, 489,554, items were checked out -- a 17.4 percent increase over 2007.
Of course, the library isn't just for checking out books, movies or art. On-site computers and Internet get plenty of attention.
Todd Larson, 45, Rome, who was laid off by Hamerski Farms in Plover, chatted online with friends Wednesday at the library.
"We want (Internet) at home, but just can't afford it right now," he said.
The library offered 340 programs in 2007, attended by 12,731 people. Last year, 17,752 people attended 417 free library-sponsored programs -- a 39.4 percent increase.
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Dun of the Dead
Link to March 4 New York Times article, "You’re Dead? That Won’t Stop the Debt Collector".
There's just no escaping technology. Improved database technology is making it easier to discover when estates are opened in the country’s 3,000 probate courts, giving collectors an opportunity to file timely claims.
DCM Services, a Golden Valley (!) Minnesota company that specializes in this service, trains its new hires in "empathic active learning". Hmm, sounds like a follow-up discussion on the reference interview is in order for my SLIS class tomorrow.
Remember what John Steinbeck wrote about Golden Valley in "Travels with Charley". I still have that arrogant plan -- into St. Paul on Highway 10, then gently across the Mississippi. The S-curve in the Mississippi here would give me three crossings of the river. After this pleasant jaunt I meant to go through Golden Valley, drawn by its name.
Survey Says....
Here's Retiring Guy's line-up.
Auburn, Washington (1949-1952)
Great Falls, Montana (1952-1957)Warren, Pennsylvania (1957-1968)
Buffalo, New York (1968-1970)
Minneapolis, Minnesota (1970 summer)
Buffalo, New York (1970-1971)
Laguna Beach, California (1971, Aug-Dec)
Buffalo, New York (1972, Jan-May)
Laguna Beach, California (1972, Jul-Aug)
Buffalo, New York (1972, Sep-Dec)
Warren, Pennsylvania (1973, Jan-Aug)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (1973-1974)
Deer Lodge, Montana (1974-1975)
Warren, Pennsylvania (1975-76)
Springfield, Massachusetts (1976-1978)
Oshkosh, Wisconsin (1978-1986)
Middleton, Wisconsin (1986-)
Trying to Make Its Point Again
Then there's the appropriately melodramatic Hollywood take, with over-the-top music by Max Steiner, who never met a screeching chorus of violins he didn't like.
Take a look, give a listen.
West Bend Update
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Money Talks, Free Access Walks
Excerpt:
Right now, there's a proposal in Congress to forbid the government from requiring scientists who receive taxpayer funds for medical research to publish their findings openly on the Internet.
This ban on "open access publishing" (which is currently required) would result in a lot of government-funded research being published exclusively in for-profit journals -- inaccessible to the general public.
The authors of this post point out that Conyers received twice as much money from the publishing industry as those on the relevant committee who are not sponsors.
Kiss and Make Up? Pat Conroy and The Citadel
Excerpt: The Citadel’s most famous alumnus is not an athlete, or even a general, but a novelist, Pat Conroy, class of ’67, who dared to write about the place and made himself so unpopular that for 30 years he was all but barred from the campus. Last week, though, he was on hand to see his former team thump Furman, its archrival, 75-54.
Let's see now. The Lords of Discipline was published in 1980. My math tells me this adds up to 21.
Fact Checking: After the Fact
Link to March 3 New York Times article, "Errors Cast Doubt on a Baseball Memoir".
What a story!
Racism. Steroids. Profanity. Wacko behavior.
Wait a minute? Hold on here, say Benjamin Hill and Alan Schwarz, the article's authors.
But statistics from that season, transaction listings and interviews with his former teammates indicate that many portions of the book are incorrect, embellished or impossible.
Congratulation, Viking Press. You're the latest winner of the Eggface Award.
Survey Says......
Survey Says
Excerpt: Contrary to the image of Generation Y as the "Net Generation," internet users in their twenties do not dominate every aspect of online life. Generation X is the most likely group to bank, shop and look for health information online. Boomers are just as likely as Generation Y to make travel reservations online. And even Silent Generation internet users are competitive when it comes to email (although teens might point out that this is proof that email is for old people).
"Gay Books" Under Attack at West Bend
West Bend Community Library
Link to March 2 GM Today article, "Action filed with West Bend Library Board to remove specific gay books".
Excerpt: Concerned with the presence and appropriateness of some materials at the West Bend Community Memorial Library, West Bend residents Ginny and Jim Maziarka are taking action.
The Maziarkas have filed a formal, written complaint with the library. The complaint has been placed on the March agenda and will be heard by the members of the Library Board when they convene for their monthly meeting on Tuesday night.
Monday, March 2, 2009
Libraries are new front lines of job hunt
Atrium of Central Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library
Link to March 2 Indianapolis Star article.
Excerpt: With the economy in a downward spiral, computer usage last year at the city's 23 library locations jumped by 42 percent from 2007.
"We're beginning to see more people wanting to use the computers for (employment reasons)," library Chief Executive Laura Bramble said. "I think the economy has had a huge effect."
Beyond surfing the Net for job postings, people are using the computers to file for unemployment benefits and to write and update their resumes.
Someone Has a Very Exclusive Definition of "Our"
Remember to vote for Tony Evers on Tuesday, April 7!
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Maybe I Should Watch My Step
It's called "scraping", shaving away potential readers and profiting from the content, a sense of the word you won't find yet in a dictionary definition.
Some traditional news organizations -- desperate for revenue, clueless about the changing times -- are now grousing over this practice of using of excerpts from original content. I do it all the time, excerpting no more than a few paragraphs per article, with the idea that the reader will click on the link I provide and read more. And I should be so lucky to profit from this activity!
No one's ever complained to me about this practice. In fact, every once in awhile I receive an email like this.
Quite a list, isn't it?
After I posted the story, a private investigator said he could have pointed me to where I might find most of the missing information. The exception was financial and medical records, which I could have obtained only by breaking the law (through social engineering).
Thanks for reading!--Robert L. Mitchell
This was in response to a link I provided to Mitchell's "What the Web Knows About You". My 1/28/2009 blog post included lists of "Information Discovered Online" and "Not (Yet) Found Online" that the author had included in his article.
What's next? A One Newspaper/One Reader campaign? I can't share my copy of the New York Times with anyone. They'll just have to buy their own.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Tapping New Sources of Green
Rep. Mark Miloscia, a Democratic state representative from Washington, suggested a tax on pornography -- 18.5 percent on everything from sex toys to adult magazines.
The reaction, in Miloscia's own words: "People came down on me like a ton of bricks. I didn’t quite understand. Apparently porn is right up there with Mom and apple pie.”
I wonder if he had any input from the folks in Utah?
In California, Tom Ammiano, a Democrat representing California's 13th Assembly District (San Francisco), suggests legalizing and taxing marijuana. According to Betty Yee, chairwoman of the California State Board of Equalization, this proposal could raise nearly $1,000,000,000 a year. Retailers would be charged a fee of $50 per ounce. Not to mention $400,000,000 in additional sales taxes. That additional revenue, in part, could certainly provide a shot in the arm for library funding. (Oops! Wrong drug metaphor.)
Other ideas from this series of "everything is on the table" discussions:
State Senator Bob Coffin, an Independent Democrat from Clark County, plans to introduce legislation to tax Nevada's brothels, with a fee structure "based on the amount of activities". Senator Coffin, an itemized list, please! (OK, but I just can't resist. The first item on the "Personal and Professional Achievements" portion of Coffin's resume is the Charles Dick Medal of Merit. My apologies to the National Guard for making light of this award. But then, as you can see from this LA Times headline, I'm not the only one having fun at Sen. Coffin's expense.)
And a group of Hawaiian legislators proposed legalizing same-sex unions as a way to turn around a slumping tourism industry.
And here in Wisconsin, all our legislators can do is work up a sweat over taxing haircuts.