Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Technology Predictions for 2009

Over the next few days, TrendSpotting will be publishing a series of trends and predictions as presented by influencers and experts in different consumer fields. Here are the first 2:




Thanks to Paul Reynolds for the heads up on his blog.

Criminalizing a Generation

I was chatting with my 18 year old niece last week and in conversation I pointed out that downloading music using LimeWire was theft. Illegal. You could be sued. Infact, people have been. "Nah" she said, "how can it possibly be illegal". She went on to argue that it would be ridiculous if that was true, the technology was there. "How can it be illegal if its so easy to do". Quite.

So, I was very interested to read Lawrence Lessig's post today "Prosecuting Online File Sharing Turns a Generation Criminal" on USNews.com. more>>

Examples of Great Web Design


I am always interested in what makes a great website a great website so was easily tempted to check this story out on Digg:
"We live in a world of information saturation, and that translates to web design. In such a competitive world, it becomes more and more important to stand out by breaking conventions. Sometimes it’s about layout, sometimes about the graphics and cool illustrations or anything else that can be different from others.

In this post, we take a look at 100 websites that look really different from their peers and automatically captivate their audiences with their design of elaborate backgrounds, illustrations, and textures. Is different always good? Let’s take a look and decide by yourself…"

Poodle Grooming : an Extreme Sport ?


For the "Only in America' section of this blog, I offer for your holiday entertainment this crazy little story.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Ranganathan's 5 laws and FRBR

The Koha list has been awash with posts these last few days. What started as a cry of frustration has evolved into a really interesting discussion and I sense a positive aspiration to think about how we can acquisition and catalogue in Koha 3.0 at a range of different levels and for a range of different audiences.

Horowhenua Library Trust designed Koha 1.0 back in 2000 with BIBLIOS, GROUPS and ITEMS. This achieved a similar result to that possible with FRBR.
RDA is relevant here to.

The Koha database had ITEMS, which inherit all of the attributes of the GROUP record they are attached to, and GROUPS inherit all the attributes of the BIBLIO record they were attached to. This meant reserves could be placed at a BIBLIO level (if you didn't care which ITEM you got), or at GROUP level (if you wanted the first ITEM available of a particular edition) or at an ITEM level (when you wanted a specific issue of a periodical or a specific video to send away for cleaning etc).

It was designed this way because oftentimes patrons didn't care which copy of which edition they got when they reserved a book - they just wanted the first one that became available!

Brooke Johnson reminded me of Ranganathan's 5 Law's of library Science. These are:
  1. Books are for use.
  2. Every person his [or her] book.
  3. Every book its reader.
  4. Save the time of the reader.
  5. The library is a growing organism.
William Denton blogged in 2007 :
"I think the laws should underpin everything we do every day. Memorize them so you can quote them in meetings. You’ll be amazed at how they cut things down to some sensible size and help you remember what’s important. FRBR fulfills the laws: it will help people find their books, it will help books be found, it will save the time of the reader, and it is part of the continuing growth of libraries not just in shelves and buildings but in ideas and services."

If we remember Ranganathan when designing cataloguing in Koha 3.0, I don't think we can go too far wrong!

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Generation WE aka The Millennials

This YouTube video, apart from having a powerful political message, depicts a generation of library users whom we need to engage: the Millennials.



How will pubic libraries develop relevance for these kids as they move through adulthood?

A New Way of Learning

Michael Stephens, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at Dominican University in Illinois. I found this video by Alex and Wendy Drexleron his blog Tame The Web. It explains how students are - or should be - learning in this new networked age.

Book buying has never been such fun!


From Pippa (naturally!)

Arty Bees Books is an actual bookshop in Wellington - I kid you not. You can find them at The Oaks and on Courtenay Place.

You can also browse their lovely collection online!

The catalogue of Bizarre books is by far my favourite. The History of Lesbian Hair looks good, or perhaps The Mullet is more your style, and don't miss Hair Care.

If you are looking for a special gift for someone do try the 'Inspirational Christmas Present Flowchart'.

Faking an Online Identity is a Crime?

From the ReadWriteWeb comes this story:

Being "Fake" Is Now A Crime

"A precedent-setting case, the Lori Drew MySpace trial, has just come to an end. If you're unfamiliar, this was a case where an overprotective mom established a fake online identity to bully her daughter's rival. The judge's ruling has now criminalized the act of creating a fake persona online. In the case of Drew, most would agree she deserves the punishment she received. However, the aftershocks of the ruling could very well impact the online identity creation process for years to come if it's not overturned." more>>

Would be nice to say "Only in America" but its increasingly becoming a borderless world ...

Merry Christmas !

So here probably the only Merry Christmas mesage you will get from me:

Monday, December 15, 2008

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Standard and Poor's stock index's annual returns



This is a graphic of the Standard and Poor's stock index's annual returns, placing every year since 1825 in a column of returns from -50% to +60%. As you can see, it is a rough bell curve, with 45 of those 185 years falling in the +0-10% column. There are only 5 years each in the 40-50% and 50-60% return columns, and, through 2007, there were only one year each in the -31-40% and -41-50% columns. You can see where 2008 to date falls.

I love the way statistics can mean so much more when presented in different ways. This kinda supports the arguments that the fall is the market correcting itself ...

Source

(UPDATED: From DailyKos, via Greg Mankiw.)

Disney World Promo Video



Disney's running an ingenious web-promo; you enter the name of a loved one and they automatically edit a fake video news story about Walt Disney World being given over to that person. Try it its fun! You can send the link to friends apparently, but it was broken (or overloaded) when I tried!

(Thanks Cory Doctorow on Boing Boing for the heads up about this one)

Friday, December 12, 2008

The 100 top Web apps for 2008

These are the 100 best Web 2.0 applications, chosen by Webware readers and Internet users across the globe. Over 1.9 million votes were cast to select these Webware 100 winners.

Breath taking library buldings


Take a look at these breathtaking designs for libraries ...

I might show them to our architect and see if its too late to changes the plans for Levin ...

Horizon Report : 2008 Australia - New Zealand Edition.

Just released in a new series of regional and sector-based Horizon Reports is Horizon Report: 2008 Australia-New Zealand Edition.

The new series is a product of the New Media Consortium’s Horizon Project, an ongoing research project that seeks to identify and describe emerging technologies likely to have a large impact on teaching, learning, or creative expression within higher education around the globe.

The project drew on an ongoing discussion among knowledgeable leaders and practitioners in Australia and New Zealand business, industry, and education, as well as published resources, current research and practice, and the expertise of the NMC community itself.

The Horizon Project's Australia-New Zealand Advisory Board probed current trends and challenges in post compulsory education as they uniquely are expressed in Australia and New Zealand, explored possible topics for the Report, and over several rounds of rankings and dialog, selected the final technologies.

The Horizon Report: 2008 Australia-New Zealand Edition (304K, 32 pp) is available now. The report is free, and has been released with a Creative Commons license to facilitate its use, easy duplication, and broad distribution.

HLT Staff: I have a printed copy on my desk!


Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Te Papa - Wow !!


Te Papa have just launched an amazing new interactive space. Called Our Space. It features 2 main components.

The first is an interactive floormap called (appropriately) The Map. In the Our Space media bank there are thousands of images of turangawaewae - places all round New Zealand where people are proud to stand. These appear on the mirrored media walls around the Map, triggered as you move across the glass floor. Each time you step on a trigger, a new image of that region appears.

The second new installation, is called The Wall. To 'play' you select media from the loading stations and send them to the wall. There are thousands of images and videos from around NZ to choose from, or you can load your own, or even create media on the spot by recording videos and photos in the station’s web-cam or creating text messages with the touch screen keyboard.

Your media appears instantly, floating high on the Wall. Then you take a wireless remote and choose an image: move it, stretch it, paint it, animate it, crop it, join it to other images. You can even nick other peoples media!

Mash up your media to remix NZ, as you see it. Cameras take snapshots every minute of the wall. You can view the wall online and even print off your bit by locating the wall image by timestamp. It is very cool.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Akoha : virtual / real world game


Akoha is a new reality-based game that uses mobile, web and real-world missions to create a new form of game play.

The idea for Akoha came from a series of discussions after the founders attended the TED Conference in Monterey, where the theme was “Ideas Big Enough to Change the World,” and the Sundance Film Festival in Utah, where friends were discussing "movies that can make a difference." Their conversations about game design, social change and Internet trends led co-founders Austin Hill and Alex Eberts to ask the question, "What if playing a game could make the world a better place?"

On April 28, 2008, Akoha announced it had received $1.9 million in financing from angel investors. The very coolest thing of all is that while the game is in Beta stage (its very new - was launched at the Techcrunch Conference 2008) the organisers have adopted a school project with Room to Read. After the completion of 25,000 missions, they will sponsor a Room to Read school in Nepal, building the library and equipping it with books, games and posters.
Click here to learn how the game is played .. and don't be surprised if I buy you an icecream sometime!

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Paul Gerhardt at NDF 08

I love the National Digital Forum. It is the most important event in my professional development calender and always fills me up again for the coming year with inspirational and thought provoking speakers.

Unfortunately I missed day 1, but made it to day 2 which opened with Dr Paul Gerhardt as the keynote speaker for the day. Dr Gerhardt leads the UK's Creative Archive Licence Group - a consortium of public and commercial broadcasters and archives developing a shared public access strategy. He was joint director of the BBC Creative Archive. Click here to learn more about the Archives for Creativity.

These are the key 'makes you think' things I noted down:
  • Transformative use rather than 'mashup' - a much better term,“These films are about us - they are ours” - response of people who appeared in the BBC documentary made in the 60s which was 'revisited' or used a base for the film: “BBC in the East End – Updated” by Chris Dorley-Brown,
  • Digital content expanding rapidly: 6 months of Youtube saw the volumn of digital content created equal to 60 years of BBC production,
  • The total digital content is on track to double every 11 hours by 2010,
  • it won’t be very many years before all the AV content ever made will be available online.

This staggering stuff! We are on the edge of an explosion of digital content - not just words but audio, still and moving pictures, and informal community content and formal, institutional content too. The opportunities for transformative use are boundless.. what fun!

As usual I came away with a list of things to do:
  • Read: “Towards a theory of digital library” by Aharon Auram and Yoram Eshet.
  • Research: Creative Archive Licence derived from CC licence.
  • Find: A good beyond the basics tutorial on editing video from the bbc site.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Cell phones : the next big thing in libraries?



While in Auckland last week I gave up trying to find an internet machine in order to check my emails.

The hostel had internet to the room - but I needed a cat 5 cable (I don't make a point of carrying around network media...) There were numerous internet cafes - down the hill, seedy looking and $10 an hour - and while I could have gone to the cafe next to Auckland Library and used their free internet connection the coffee was crap and I would have had to lug my Dell Vostro around all day (a weight lifting exercise of some merit and there was that hill to consider ....)

Then I remembered my cellphone - hooray for pocket computers! It is just so dam easy and quick and convenient to check my emails that way. Wish I'd remembered my internet capable cellphone while I was in Singapore: had to pay $NZ40 for the first hour of internet access in the hotel!

After a hideous experience a few years back when my desktop got hammered by a virus I now use my computer as an access point only. In addition to saving all my work to the network server I have also shifted my bookmarks to delicious, post links I want to remember to this blog, and have copies of all emails, from all 5 of my email accounts, sent to my gmail account. This means I can not only work at any desk in the workplace, but I can get my emails from anywhere - including while lying in bed in a student hostel.

I was chatting to Wendy at work a week or so ago about a report I had been reading about the phenomenal uptake of cell phones especially in Africa. There is a whole continent apparently skipping the wired world and going straight to wireless. Here in Horowhenua we find growing numbers of people are not bothering with a landline and using cellphones only .... noticeable in Shannon initially but becoming more frequent. I observed that I think cell phones will be the next big thing for libraries; we need to think all the different ways that we could be utilizing that technology, a communication device in the pockets of most people over 13 and under 65.

I found an interesting report from Nielsen Mobile : Critical Mass - The Worldwide State of the Mobile Web.

Key findings:


  • 15.6 percent of mobile subscribers in the US, 12.9 percent in the UK and 11.9 percent in Italy actively use the mobile Internet. In New Zealand the figure is 1.6%.

  • In the US , mobile internet use has reached a critical mass as an advertising medium: 40 million.

  • In the US, there is almost an even split with the same % aged over 35 as under 35.

  • and there are approximately as many teenagers using the mobile Internet as there are persons over the age of 55 (5.1 million persons age 13–17 and 4.4 aged 55 and older).

  • The mobile Internet audience is not overly concentrated in high-income households.

  • 82 percent of iPhone users access the mobile Internet, making them five times as likely to do so as the average mobile consumer. Remember iphones are still very new and expensive, and due to their strong brand their use will mushroom. (ipod generation)

  • Mobile Internet users do not visit nearly the same number of individual sites as Internet users do over the PC. PC Internet users visit more than 100 sites on average vs 6.4 for mobile.

  • Email, weather, news, maps and search predominant uses.

Critical mass is when a sufficient mass has formed to sustain a chain reaction. The researchers suggest that mobile Internet is today at a point of seeing rapid growth in consumer adoption
and, in turn, mobile Internet marketing.

So how are we as libraries going to prepare for this trend which will hit NZ? How can we maximise the value of having almost everyone having a pocket receiving device, GPS, audio-video and still image recording device in their pockets?

Monday, December 1, 2008

Memory Maker : digital remix tool

As part of the 'Coming Home' activities being led by Digital NZ, a video mixing tool has been launched.

The 11th of November 2008 is the 90th anniversary of the signing of the Armistice between the allies and Germany, marking the end of the First World War. From November 2008 through to March 2009, New Zealand is commemorating this anniversary and the 'Coming Home' of our soldiers.

The Memory Maker enables the remix of photographs, graphics, film clips, and music from the years following the First World War. Videos can then be shared with friends and family. The Memory Maker is hosted by the Auckland Museum, with members of the National Digital Forum and others providing the unique content - including Kete Horowhenua. More >>

The Memory Maker is an excellent example of the ease with which community contributed informal content gathered up with Kete can be harvested and repurposed.

Cuba Street Memories


Delighted to see that Wellington City Libraries have got their Kete up and running: Cuba Street Memories.

To find out more read the press article or the WCL blog post.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Reflections on the Kete Community Meeting

Wow - home at last ... what a week. Exhilarating, stimulating, fulfilling, inspiring and most of all satisfying. Just spent the week in Auckland: 2 days of Kete Community Day meetings, then down to the lovely folk of Paeroa for a couple of days before 'filling up' at the second day only (alas) of the 2008 National Digital Forum.

Kete Community Day
This was a gentle and productive couple of days. We had 16 - 20 people in attendance, representing the big CPF funded projects plus Digital NZ and APN, both of which represent big partners in the Kete project, plus a team from Hamilton.


We all shared where were up to and it is absoutely clear that we must document or keep a register of what enhancements are underway. Too often people were thinking about what they'd like to see developed when Walter was already doing it.

Open source model
I fell in love with Open Source as a development model all over again too. I love the way that a bunch of people have funded so many enhancements over the last 12 months - all of which have been given back to the project. It is a very cost effective, and mutually beneficial way to develop cool stuff.


The spirit of this Kete Comunity is pretty cool... we have always said that we need a strong community to nurture the project and to focus not on what we have now - but what could be. The project needs many brains and skill sets.

Pronouncing Kete.
Many, many thanks to Maatakiri for teaching us how to pronounce KETE correctly. She has posted a good tutorial here.

Governance.
I have also come away feeling that the governance issue will be addressed. We need a governance structure that will define and defend the Kete project, selecting which enhancements will become part of the main trunk to keep Kete focussed. We want to make sure that great ideas are not lost through lack of funding, and it may be that various models like collaboration and sponsoring are looked at. A working group will investigate options over the next six months in consultation with the Kete community.

Kete.net as the communication channel
Kete.net is the place where we will share what we know or are thinking. Participate in any way you like, whether initaiating conversations, joining discussion, working collaboratively or just asking questions.


Other Kete
I didn't know how many Kete there are now! It is really inspiring to see how other people have configured their installations, especially overseas Kete... I know there are Kete developments in the Gulf region, and ditto in China and America. Who are these people and what are their projects and what can we share? Kete Horowhenua is for a really small population (30,000) , so I'd love to hear how Orlando Memory is getting on with their population of 1 million people. And how are people finding moderation options? We have no moderation - but it can be turned on. Does that hinder contributions?

Themes Repository
Themes too, are an area that we talked about at the Kete Day, and I really hope that people will load theirs into the repository for others to be inspired by. Maybe you have an enthusiatic bod on the staff who likes designing skins - we'd love their help!

Promoting Kete in local community
I am so happy with the work that Smita and her team are doing in Hamilton getting their Kete ready for launch in mid Dcember. Smita is so enthusiastic and that brings me to another wiki we should develop: "101 Ways to promote Kete in your community" . This should sit alongside the "How Can classes use Kete?" conversation which has been developing on kete.net over the last few weeks.

Digital NZ
The Digital NZ launch this week is a big moment for the Kete Project. Kete Horowhenua has turned on OAI-PHM (hope thats right ..) and Digital NZ harvest metadata from Kete Horowhenua to sit alongside the collections of National Library, Te Papa, National Archives etc. This was exactly what we hoped would happen with Kete: getting the informal, community created content sitting alongside the formal content.


I can just about retire now ... my work here is almost done!

Paeroa Museum, Past Perfect and Kete.
After the Kete Community meeting I headed down to Paeroa Museum and spent the afternoon working with their team and helping identify ways to work more efficiently. I led a training day where I talked about Past Perfect. PP is a collection management system for local history organisations and museums. I love it - just love it. And NZ has a big body of Past Perfect clients. What I find interesting is that there is no sales representation down here for PP - it markets itself entirely through word of mouth.... speaks volumes about the quality of the product and the service that is delivered out of the States.


Anyway, it was a very hard group to work with. Included people who have never used it before, to beginner users to quite experienced users. Note to self for next time: run it in two groups. What happened was I couldn't keep everyone happy and probably made no one entirely happy! Crique forms were really positive but I was aware I was struggling at times. I have had a beautiful powerpoint to deliver, all orderly and indexed and sequential with lots of examples and demonstrations but the delivery did not happen quite as planned. Its a real dilemma as to whether to explore questions and issues as they arise, and dip into a different series of slides, or to plough through rigidly and hope people remember their questions....


Anyway, my point here - and I do have one - is that I spent a good chunk of time talking about various means which are available for these 13 different museums, archives and local history orgnisations to get their records online - at minimal cost to themselves. We talked about NZMuseums, Past Perfect's Virtual Exhibit, Past Perfect Online hosting service (excellent) and of course my personal favourite - Kete.


My vision is that someone in the Waikato - Hauraki region (Hamilton City Libraries as the lead agency maybe?) invites all of these gorgeous little local history organisations (and maybe art galleries etc) who are already running Past Perfect, to upload their records into a big regional Kete. It can be down - quite easily. Walter imported all the records from the Horowhenua and Foxton Historical Societies collection into Kete Horowhenua, which has now been harvested by Digital NZ ... and required no additional work by the organisations themselves.


Anyway .. those are my thoughts. Off to the Christmas parade shortly... my show-pony children have all managed to get themselves onto a float in the parade so I shall go and take photos and stick them on Kete!

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Koha Song


Check out this YouTube video of Karen Hixon and Judy van Acker from a small rural library in Colorado. They successfully downloaded and installed Koha and then sang about it... you go girls!

Thanks to Kathryn Greenhill for blogging about this!

Europeana Library.


At the Bridging Worlds conference in Singapore last month, I was lucky enough to hear Fleur Stigler talking about her work with The European Library and Europeana site. You can access her paper from my post in Kete.

Well Europeana launched last week, with around 3 million digital items, including paintings, photos, films, books, maps and manuscripts from 1,000 museums, national libraries and archives across Europe. Unfortunately the site crashed only a couple of hours later. Turns out the response from the world was insane - 10 million hits and hour - and completely overwhelmed the system.

Fantastic I say. Simply proves the very real, global interest in such an initiative. Europeana will be up and running again sometime in December once they have revamped the technological problems.

Some interesting facts:
  • Content includes the full score of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, the French Declaration Human Rights of 1789, the English Magna Carta, Dante's Divine Comedy and the Gutenberg Bible.
  • Material is free of copyright.
  • Half of the objects are French more>>
  • Aim is to have 10 million objects by 2010.
Click here to view a video previewing the site.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Gorgeous digitized books from history


The British Library have made available digital copies of some of the most famous books of all times - stunning!
The technique of turning pages is pretty cool too... Click here

Monday, November 17, 2008

Yonsei Samsung Library, South Korea

This Library Link of the Day post is actually about a bunch of cool libraries, but the Yonsei Samsung Library is a cut above the rst in my book.

Tech features include over-sized touch screens for searching the catalogue, reading newspapers and fonding your way around the stacks.

Really liked the 'Lap Top Lane' too, whereby library clients stroll in with their lappies and connect... might have to pinch that name for our new library!

(PS. thanks Riss for this link .. all suggestions accepted for this blog, especially from our bright young in-training librarians who are being exposed to groovy stuff all the time!)

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Why I love Ancestry.com

Ancestry.com is proving an extremely popular subscription for the family researchers who visit Horowhenua Library Trust.

This link is for an article by Barb Kundanis that explains why she loves it as a reference librarian.

Wordle - its a fun thing


This is the coolest site if you have 10 minutes free for a wee play.... create a wordle!

A wordle is a toy for generating “word clouds” from text. The clouds give greater prominence to words that appear more frequently in the source text. You can tweak your clouds with different fonts, layouts, and color schemes.
Click here to view one I made from the Desiderata.

AVG file scanner removes a critical windows file

"The popular virus scanner AVG released an update yesterday that caused their software to mark user32.dll as a virus. Since this is a rather critical file, AVG's
suggestion to remove it caused problems for users around the world who are now advised to restore the file through the Windows Recovery Console. AVG just posted an update about this (FAQ item 1574) in the support section of their site. Their forums are full of complaints."


Source: http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/11/10/2319209&from=rss

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

TED Talks : Myths about the developing world busted

This video is astounding for 2 reasons: the message and the presentation.


"You've never seen data presented like this. With the drama and urgency of a sportscaster, statistics guru Hans Rosling debunks myths about the so-called
"developing world."

TED is an interesting site to keep an eye on fullstop. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design. It started out (in 1984) as a conference bringing together people from those three worlds. Since then its scope has become ever broader. The annual conference now brings together the world's most fascinating thinkers and doers, who are challenged to give the talk of their lives (in 18 minutes).

The TED site makes the best talks and performances available to the public, for free. More than 200 talks from our archive are now available, with more added each week. These videos are released under a Creative Commons license, so they can be freely shared and reposted.

Click here for more about Dr Roslin and to view his 2 TED presentations:

Friday, November 7, 2008

elgooG rules!


So some clever person has come up with Google for countries where Google is banned ...

elgooG has all the functionality of Google - but its a mirror image. You type in your search backwards, and low and behold, the results are displayed right way round!

elgooG received large usage in China as a bypass for Google itself, which has been blocked, and is also used to access other banned sites, such as BBC News.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Lawrence Lessig interview with Kim Hill.


Rosalie reports that Lawrence Lessig was a highlight of this week's LIANZA Conference in NZ - if you possibly can, HLT staff, try to listen to him on Saturday morning.


If you missed him or want to hear him, Kim Hill is talking to him this Saturday at 9.05am on Radio New Zealand National. The interview will be available after the broadcast to listen online or podcast at


America's 10 coolest public libraries



Riss sent me this link to add to the blog - and its great! Gorgeous photographs of some truly beautiful and remarkable library buildings in USA. The one on the left is Salt Lake City in Utah. The article is from MSN City Guides:


"Throughout American history, the desire for libraries has inspired cities,
architects and robber barons to build, not just boxes for books, but secular
temples to the worship of words. Here are America's 10 coolest, from old school
Beaux-Arts beauties to the airy halls of contemporary architecture."


I wonder if we'll be allowed to build a "secular temple to the worship of words in Levin? (I just love that phrase!)

So where were you when USA elected her first black President?

I was sitting at home sharing 2 hours of jubilation with hundreds of strangers from all over the world... thanks to Twitter.

Odd concept really; an entire site built around answering the question: "What are you doing" in 140 characters or less. I had joined the Election 2008 group and was reading 'tweets' from people all around the world - so many different languages from so many different countries - and all sending warm wishes and congratulations to the Americans. And it was pretty damn special witnessing so many hundreds of people express their elation at the election result . . . over and over again as people awoke, logged in and yelped for joy.

Flickr is being used to gather together messages from all around the world for Barack Obama; really cool example of utilizing crowd sourcing to capture the spirit of our time - and this is history unfolding.

I was thinking about all this in relation to a long discussion I held with Deb and Pippa yesterday about the digital divide. And I got to thinking just how brilliantly the whole election experience with Twitter highlighted to me how technology is also being used to brilliantly bridge divides of geography, nationality and community - it truly was a global party! Brian Kelly blogged about this being a 'water cooler' moment and very cleverly took a screenshot before the group dissappeared (which I failed to do). Interesting too the comment from Kev Hickey on Brian's blog:


"As I posted on Jaiku this morning “Via Twitter I can see that Lee le Fever has a street party in Seattle, Stephen Fry is grinning in Madagascar & John Cleese is tapdancing”.

Glad too that a Facebook group has been set up to capture photographs from around the world depicting this momentous turning point in American history - thank you Jenny Levine. We posted an image of the 30minute updates we posted in Levin Library (yes America - the world cared about this election!)
PS Great post on BoingBoing.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Librarians vs IT Techies : why they just can't get along.

To my way of thinking you can't talk about libraries without talking about IT. So I was quite interested when Hazman Aziz pointed out this really interesting discussion thread which considers why Librarians and IT departments have so much trouble getting on. To view the Tech Therapy video which sparked the debate click here.

The discussion identifies the obvious differences between libraries and IT: predominantly female vs predonominatly male, long tradition vs relatively new and very mission-driven vs less so.

But there are similarities too, including the really funny one that only 3 major industries call their customers users: libraries, IT and illicit drugs! Going deeper, both IT staff members and librarians often feel like second-class citizens on university campuses, both groups inhabit a rapidly-changing work environment and thus both groups have insecurities about the future of their professions.

A few exerpts from the discussion:
"Our library and IT department have a very cordial and productive working relationship. I think the key to this is that we are lucky enough to have never had an administration that threatened to impose a merger on us. Rifts occur when there is talk of merging and you have to wonder ultimately who will call the shots."

"As far as I can tell, none of it is lack of cordiality; most IT departments and librarians get along just fine. It’s different worldview. Librarians have a tested model of service which needs to work reliably, and archivists have a definition of preservation which lasts decades or centuries. IT people think in the moment. Preservation means “until the next backup is made” or, at best, “until the next audit or company reorganization”. Service means “make sure the site is up and the backups get done”.

"..... The end result is that IT people don’t even realize that librarians have expertise in data description, storage, and reorganization, because librarians are too humble to volunteer and IT people are too arrogant to ask".

"Turf war. In an era when both parties feel uncertainty about the future of their jobs, both want to carve out as much of a space for themselves as possible."

"As many institutions are merging undergraduate libraries and computer center into learning commons, who should head such a hybrid? As the focus moves from providing information to enhancing learning, are those trained in library science best equipt for this mission or might a new bred of IT staffers serve student learning needs more effectively in this technological age?"

"IT see the world in terms of “us” and “them” which breeds hostility to “stupid” questions."

"Librarians would never host a group called the Daily WTF to discuss the stupid user questions we’ve hosted that day"

"Librarians constantly tell our patrons “there is no such thing as a stupid question.” Have you ever had an IT say that to you?"

"IT folks tend to prefer a chain of command. They like reporting to one person and getting their assignments from one person. Librarians, on the other hand, are very anti-authoritarian and independent when it comes to their daily tasks and much more collegial in terms of the sources of their job assignments."

"IT people are not taught to communicate; they are there to fix problems. Librarians, especially public service librarians, have a customer (or patron or user) service orientation and are taught carefully how to draw patrons out in terms of their information needs, and to explain carefully how to find and use the resources appropriate for their information needs."

".... a cultural clash – IT people often come from the for-profit sector, expecting special bonuses and the like that don’t exist in the non-profit world. You don’t get special compensation for doing your job well, you get your paycheck."

"I cringe to think how many times I’ve complained about a technology design (be it networked printers, web pages, whatever) being confusing to users and given the reply “they’ll figure it out”. That’s not acceptable to a librarian,"

"IT is regularly left out of planning and decision making processes until such time as the work is ready to be dumped on them during implementation. If you want a better working relationship, invite some IT staff to your planning meetings and listen"







Monday, November 3, 2008

Gaming and Libraries

This post has been copied entirely from the blog Citegeist, written by Cindi Trainor, Coordinator for Library Technology and Data Services at Eastern Kentucky University Libraries. I met Cindi at the Bridging Worlds Confeence in Singapore where she presented a paper entitled "Open source, crowd source : harnessing the power of the people behind our libraries". This was a session I was particularly sad to miss, but it clashed with the session by Joe Pagano on web analytics, a subject important to have a handle on when arguing for funding and justifying my existence!

The post that follows is about the virtues of gaming written by Eli Neiburger, Ann Arbor District Library, and will help inform my future thinking around gaming in libraries; which will have to be worked through in the next year or so as we plan our new Young Adult library. Jenny Levine is another uber-librarian with a strong interest in libraries and gaming so her blog is worth following too: The ShiftedLibrarian and if you click here you can read the Library Technology Report, Gaming and Libraries : Intersection of Services (pictured above) written by Jenny .

Anyway, Cindi's blog is thoughtful and a must-read I have decided, and since I can't say it better than her here is the copied post:

Eli Neiburger, Assistant Director at Ann Arbor District Library, on gaming and libraries. This presentation concentrates on learning that happens in games (not on games designed for learning).

Games

  • Require advanced literacy (words and interface)
  • Help users overcome achievement gaps
  • teach reading comprehension
  • teach skills useful in the workplace
  • teach search skills
  • teach that success requires risk
  • teach delayed gratification
  • teach perseverance with little risk of failure

Gaming events in libraries teach kids

  • that the community supports them
  • that the community values youth
  • constructive use of their time

Gaming events in libraries teach kids (in a world where athletic ability is valued in schools more than anything)

  • commitment to learning
  • positive values (caing equality social justice, integrity, honesty)
  • social competencies (planing & decision making, interpersonal competence, resistance skills, peaceful conflict resolution (peer pressure working for you: “shut up so we can play” rather than against you: “let’s see if we can get kicked out.”)
  • positive identity: personal power, self-esteem, sense of purpose, positive view of failure

They are gaming among you: 72% of Americans play video games. more adult women than kids.

Where are people spending their money: music $21B; DVDs $23B; $24B games; books highest. media almost exactly divided, percentage-wise.

What is at stake if we don’t do this? ask a travel agent. our collections will become irrelevant if we can get veryting ever printed with an ebook; all networked information with an implant

Libraries = conversations through content. we take content that is normally consumed individually and make a social event out of it. Library is adding value to content; it’s what we’re here to do. Games are only a new format.

Good games for libraries: Wii: rock band, big brain, wii sports, super smash bros, pokemon, DDR

GTsystem.org - online tournament scoring and management tools

  • includes blog, event registrations, brackes, generates leaderboards (local, regional, national)
  • GTsystem wiki for rules and history
  • synchronzed tournament days with online finals. winners play off each other online.

eli at eliworks dot com

Q&A: board games are really niche entertainment; video games have a larger draw

Rosalie Blake awarded a LIANZA Fellowship

We are so proud of our boss!

Our illlustrious leader has been awarded the highest professional award in New Zealand librarianship.

The full citation can be read here but she has been awarded the award for
... her sustained and energetic contribution to the development of public libraries, for her innovative leadership and contribution to the world of open source library information systems and for outstanding contribution to the profession during her long career.
Rosalie led Horowhenua Library Trust through the development of Koha in 2000, the world's first open source library management system, and more recently Kete in 2007, an open source digital library which employs many so-called web 2.0 technologies. Both of these awards won the 3M Award for Innovation in Libraries in their respective years.

We are so proud of our boss - well done Rosalie, we love working for you.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Keeping track of blog posts

I love Bloglines! I find it the easiest way to quickly keep track of whats happening in a bunch of different places on the internet and an important way to keep developing professionally. I love the way I can scan hundreds of entries and either read them there and then, or tick the ones I want to look at later. I do this a lot as I usually check my bloglines account while watching TV (do any public librarians get time to do this during their work day?).

Bloglines works by adding 'RSS feeds' to your account. As new posts are added to the source site the headlines are fed through to the Bloglines account.

Some of my feeds are library related, some techie, and some just plain quirky. Here is a list of my favourite RSS feeds:

Boingboing, Citegeist, ComputerWorld, CoolTools, Digg, Fresh and New, Information Literacy meets Library 2.0, Koha Community, Libraries Interact, Library Journal, Library Link of the Day, Library Tech NZ, McGovern Online, PC Magazine, Programmable Web, Read Write Web, The Shifted Librarian, Slash Dot, TEDtalks, The Thinking Blog, UK Web Focus and Wired.

SimCity now free software

My kids - well 10 yr old Mr L really - loves gaming. All kinds: Xbox, PC, PS2, online - don't matter which - hes not fussy. Spends hours at a time (days if I would let him!) Fortunately my 4 cherubs have to share the hardware so they tend to be limited to an hour a day... kids are extremey good at self policing when it comes to rationing scarce resources!

Surprisingly to me, he is into SimCity at the moment. I don't know why but I always imagined Sims was for girls - like playing dolls houses for big girls. Habbo Hotel used to be a favourite in our family - introduced by Miss M (now 13) - but she's moved onto Bebo which is all consuming!

Actually its amazing how many kids use Bebo as their primary source of communication - email is just so over. My kids all have Bebo accounts, as do all their cousins, and I love the way they all keep in touch, make plans, share photos and support each other.

Anyway, back to my starting point for this rambling ... SimCity has been released under a GPL licence! How cool is that! I got this news from boingboing which is one of my favourite blogfeeds. Quoting straight from Cory Doctorow:
"SimCity has just been released as free software under the GPL version 3 license (though the name has been changed to Micropolis for trademark reasons; it was the original working title). This was precipitated by the inclusion of SimCity on the One Laptop Per Child XO machines, but no reason the kids should have all the fun. Can't wait to see the SimCity hacks that emerge now."

Man in the dark (go on - just take a look . . . )

This is the coolest thing ...

not gonna say too much - just go have a look.

Friday, October 31, 2008

How to hack LEDs into Lego minifigures.

Ok - so this post is not about Library matters but this story is cool anyway and my wee Mr C, an electronics nut at the age of 10, will love this! As will a certain librarian at Murdoch University for her boys.

LED lights fit perfectly into the head of a Lego minifigure. It's that easy: grab an LED and a head, slip it in, and it fits perfectly. Click here to get step by step instructions.