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Category Archives: Libraries
Damn it, Obama, when are you gonna get this e-book thing? Check out Donalyn Miller’s literacy efforts and connect the dots!
Barack Obama drew a $500,000 advance for a children’s book, a mere five days before swearing a presidential oath. I’m happy for him. Literacy has served The First Reader well. So has technology—as shown by his fondness for BlackBerry-style devices and using the Net to raise campaign money.
Why, then, isn’t the First Reader more [...] Continue reading
Posted in E-books and all that, Education, Libraries, One Laptop Per Child, Uncategorized, e-book, e-book economics, e-book ergonomics, e-book pricing, e-book technology, e-books, e-books and other digipubs, ebook, ebook pricing, ebook publishing, ebooks, librarian, librarians, libraries + schools + tech, library
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An execration of public libraries
Editor’s Note: Richard Herley has been absent from these pages for too long, so it’s a pleasure to re-print, with his permission, this article just published on his blog. Paul
You will not find a more passionate advocate of literacy than me. Reading is the key to so much — education, enlightenment, defence against [...] Continue reading
Posted in Libraries, Paul Biba, Richard Herley, Uncategorized, library
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World Digital Library to launch on April 21
You can find out more about the Library by clicking here. Sounds absolutely fascinating. From their website:
The World Digital Library will make available on the Internet, free of charge and in multilingual format, significant primary materials from cultures around the world, including manuscripts, maps, rare books, musical scores, recordings, films, prints, photographs, architectural drawings, [...] Continue reading
Posted in Libraries, Paul Biba, Uncategorized, digital libraries, library
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Ada Lovelace Day ABC
Ada Lovelace Day helps to “make sure that whenever the question Who are the leading women in tech? is asked, that we all have a list of candidates on the tips of our tongues”. I was tempted to talk about Mitchell Baker (Chief Lizard Wrangler at Mozilla) but the Ada Day specifically requested “unsung heroes”, so I’m going to give… Continue reading
Posted in Libraries, Uncategorized, adalovelaceday09, people
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Oregon State University Libraries Adopt Library Faculty Open Access Policy
The Oregon State University Libraries faculty have adopted a Library Faculty Open Access Policy. (Thanks to Circulation: Just Another Librarian Blog.)
Here's the policy:
The faculty members of the OSU Libraries support open access to our scholarship and knowledge. Consequently, we grant to the OSU Libraries permission to make our scholarly work publicly available and to exercise [...] Continue reading
Posted in Libraries, Open Access, Self-Archiving, Uncategorized
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Taiwan Brings E-Books and Audio Books to Nation’s Libraries
Taiwan has teamed up with Ingram Digital to digitize the nation’s libraries. From the press release:
The Taiwan Library Consortium, in conjunction with the government of Taiwan, has selected Ingram Digital, an Ingram content company focused on solutions for digital content management, hosting and distribution, to provide e-books and audio books to a majority of [...] Continue reading
Posted in Libraries, Library of the Future, Paul Biba, Uncategorized, library
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Delia Locke diaries digitized
I love this type of stuff and am a great reader of diaries and autobiographies. From the Holt-Atherton Special Collections website: Delia (Hammond) Locke was the matriarch of the family. Born in 1832, she married Dr. Dean Jewitt Locke and moved to California in 1855. That same year Delia began keeping a daily diary, a [...] Continue reading
Welsh national repository launched – digitization program progressing
The Welsh Repository Network (WRN), a network of twelve institutional repositories within each of the higher education institutions within Wales, was launched at the National Library of Wales on Thursday 19th February, 2009.
The project is on target for the creation of 10 new open access digital institutional repositories by March 2009, and has placed an [...] Continue reading
A case study in converting image-based ebooks into XML
There’s a great deal of valuable information in this recently-released white paper by The American Council of Learned Societies: ACLS Humanities E-Book XML Conversion Experiment: Report on Workflow, Costs, and User Preferences. Although the study was based on scholarly books, their findings would apply to many other digitization projects.
The Humanities E-Book (HEB) project took [...] Continue reading
Posted in Digitization, Libraries, Uncategorized, book design, ebooks, images, xml
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Exclsv Midtown Resdnce, Fab Vues, Twin Lions Guarding Front Entrance
I take pride in my sense of humor, but sometimes it can get rather heavy-handed. That was demonstrated about ten years ago when I was invited to the New York Public Library to give a talk to librarians about the future of books.
The venue was the Map Room, an exquisite gilded salon that epitomized an age that revered the printed book. The attendees, solemn acolytes of the Dewey Decimal System, fit perfectly into the decor. My subject, you will not be surprised to hear, was the digital revolution, and to illustrate it I brought with me some CD-ROM discs. On the podium I had piled a large number of impressively thick tomes. I then produced the discs and declared that all the content of those books and more could fit onto a few of the slim shiny objects I held before them. I declared that a day would come when brick and mortar institutions known as libraries might become irrelevant. Whereupon I gestured broadly at the magnificent building and said, “I’ll bet this joint would make a great condo.”
One hundred librarians volubly sucked in their breath and gaped at me as I had torn a page out of Audobon’s Birds of America and blown my nose in it.
“Just kidding, folks,” I said sheepishly.
Actually, I wasn’t. As print media – newspapers and magazines and books – enter the endangered lists, so do the brick and mortar venues that service them: magazine stores, book shops – and libraries. The contents and catalogues of most libraries are accessible online from practically anywhere in the civilized world. The only reason patrons must go them is to check out and return their physical books. But as libraries acquire e-books, even that function becomes irrelevant. As I recently wrote, E-libraries don’t have a locus. Their patrons have no loyalty to a specific branch; they can traverse cyberspace to locate and download the e-book they wish to “borrow”. Yes, libraries (like bookstores) have managed to remain relevant in the digital age by offering a warm and vibrant social center for scholars, students and book lovers. And many provide computers for patrons to search the Worldwide Web even though they could do as much from their home, office, or a café in Paris.
These ruminations are reinforced in Millions of Books, but No Card Catalog, a New York Times article by Noam Cohen describing the recent legal settlement of the lawsuit brought by the Authors Guild and a publishers group against Google, which since 2002 has been scanning millions of books into its colossal digital archive. Cohen suggest that “digitization of books is ending the distinction between circulating libraries, meant for public readers, and research libraries, meant for scholars.”
Cohen’s article ends on a hopeful note: “The digital-rights class-action agreement has the potential to make physical libraries newly relevant. Each public library will have one computer with complete access to Google Book Search, a service that normally would come as part of a paid subscription.” He cites an NYU professor, Thomas Augst, as asserting that Google is “creating a new reason to go to public libraries, which I think is fantastic. Public libraries have a communal function, a symbolic function that can only happen if people are there.”
Okay, you can hold up on the wrecking ball for now. But I have dibs on that 44th floor penthouse on the corner of 42nd Street and Fifth Avenue.
Posted in Libraries, Richard Curtis, Uncategorized, ebooks
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