Last Thursday I asked my Twitterverse if anyone was compiling a list of blog post links from CiL, hoping to take a look at posts from some of the sessions I was considering but didn't end up attending. Such a list can also be useful for those who didn't attend at all.
My tweet only got responses from non-attendees who thought such a list was a lovely idea.
So I made one and just posted it on the Computers in Libraries wiki: http://cil2009.pbwiki.com/Blog-Posts-List
Hopefully the pages are fairly straightforward (if not, edit them! I love wikis for that reason).
As far as the methodology goes, I used several resources from the CiL wiki, including the Technorati link to CiL2009-tagged posts and the list of Bloggers at the conference. Aside from that, I trolled my Google Reader for anyone else and included my notes on this blog and the posts on the InfoToday Blog. I've started going back through the #cil2009 Twitter feed, but thus far haven't seen much of anything that wasn't found already, so I'm making the list available and will add any links from Twitter as I find it.
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Friday, April 3, 2009
B303: Mobile Library Apps
B303: Mobile Library Apps
Handhelds at UCHC School of Medicine (UConn) -Sheryl Bai, Benjamin Smith
Library PDA Program
-have supported handhelds since 2001
-library purchased PDAs for staff
-in-service amongst librarians to learn abt PDAs and the databases
-offered first PDA class in 2002
-faculty champion program -hand-selected faculty loaned PDAs loaded w/ databases
-student champion program -loaned PDAs to students for a semester
-in 2004, medical students req'd to purchase PDA & download library material
-PDA clinic
-PDA tune-ups
-provide PDA syncing station
-create PDA website & tutorials
-participate in problem-based learning courses
-licensing of PDA software
current PDA initiative
1. PDA requirement
2. meet w/ faculty -what databases?
3. test handhelds (handouts online: http://www.infotoday.com/cil2009/day.asp?day=Wednesday#session_B303)
4. create instructions
5. letters to students -recommended PDAs
6. PDA champions -meet w/ select group of students, instruct on installing dbs, so they can help others
7. PDA clinics
8. demo databases
9. orientation
some considerations
-handheld platform
-windows mobile 2003 or mobile 5
-version of windows mobile (in-house application needs windows)
-smartphones
smartphones
-two devices in one
-cheaper
-phone contract
-screen resolution (can be lower than on PDA)
-touch screen (not all have the capability)
-windows
pocket pc software utilities (handout)
-dotpocket.com
-faronics deepfreeze (faronics.com)
DCPL Mobile Library Apps -Chris Tonjes, Aaron Schmidt
[I left during this part of the session -my brain was getting too overloaded]
Handhelds at UCHC School of Medicine (UConn) -Sheryl Bai, Benjamin Smith
Library PDA Program
-have supported handhelds since 2001
-library purchased PDAs for staff
-in-service amongst librarians to learn abt PDAs and the databases
-offered first PDA class in 2002
-faculty champion program -hand-selected faculty loaned PDAs loaded w/ databases
-student champion program -loaned PDAs to students for a semester
-in 2004, medical students req'd to purchase PDA & download library material
-PDA tune-ups
-provide PDA syncing station
-create PDA website & tutorials
-participate in problem-based learning courses
-licensing of PDA software
current PDA initiative
1. PDA requirement
2. meet w/ faculty -what databases?
3. test handhelds (handouts online: http://www.infotoday.com/cil2009/day.asp?day=Wednesday#session_B303)
4. create instructions
5. letters to students -recommended PDAs
6. PDA champions -meet w/ select group of students, instruct on installing dbs, so they can help others
7. PDA clinics
8. demo databases
9. orientation
some considerations
-handheld platform
-windows mobile 2003 or mobile 5
-version of windows mobile (in-house application needs windows)
-smartphones
smartphones
-two devices in one
-cheaper
-phone contract
-screen resolution (can be lower than on PDA)
-touch screen (not all have the capability)
-windows
pocket pc software utilities (handout)
-dotpocket.com
-faronics deepfreeze (faronics.com)
DCPL Mobile Library Apps -Chris Tonjes, Aaron Schmidt
[I left during this part of the session -my brain was getting too overloaded]
B302: Mobile Usability: Tips, Research, & Practices
B302: Mobile Usability: Tips, Research, & Practices
Mobile Phone Reference 101 -Michael Sauers, Christa Burns
not going to talk about the iPhone b/c not all of us own one! ;)
most users have traditional phones (flip-phones, etc)
Google via SMS; text to 46645 (e.g. weather 22202)
SMS via email -text goes to your email address
if you have a smartphone & use non-phone functions, make sure you have a data plan, preferably an unlimited data plan
mobile amazon.com; can now buy books via text message, too
library thing mobile (can look up what you own while at bookstore)
mobile wikipedia (mobile.wikipedia.org)
not everyone is comfortable installing apps on their phone
-m.ebuddy.com gives mobile interface to access IM services (AIM, MSN, etc.)
google maps app, incl. streetview (has screen 'please don't use while driving!')
Mobile Informatics -Jim Hahn
PPT: http://www.infotoday.com/cil2009/day.asp?day=Wednesday#session_B302
Mobile Phone Reference 101 -Michael Sauers, Christa Burns
not going to talk about the iPhone b/c not all of us own one! ;)
most users have traditional phones (flip-phones, etc)
Google via SMS; text to 46645 (e.g. weather 22202)
SMS via email -text goes to your email address
if you have a smartphone & use non-phone functions, make sure you have a data plan, preferably an unlimited data plan
mobile amazon.com; can now buy books via text message, too
library thing mobile (can look up what you own while at bookstore)
mobile wikipedia (mobile.wikipedia.org)
not everyone is comfortable installing apps on their phone
-m.ebuddy.com gives mobile interface to access IM services (AIM, MSN, etc.)
google maps app, incl. streetview (has screen 'please don't use while driving!')
Mobile Informatics -Jim Hahn
PPT: http://www.infotoday.com/cil2009/day.asp?day=Wednesday#session_B302
C301: CM Tools: Drupal, Joomla, & Rumba
C301: CM Tools: Drupal, Joomla, & Rumba
How to not have to use drupal: taking Joomla and Drupal to task with ModX CMS -Ryan Deschamps
CMS: something to develop a website w/o having to do straight code
should do three things:
-facilitate division of labor (code vs. content vs. design)
-support the overall development of the site
-ensure best practices/standards
Halifax public libraries
it's not about the front end -can/will look the same no matter the backend
-it's all about the cockpit
idea is to make the experience easier for staff so they can do what makes your clients/patrons happy
why joomla?
-#1 in terms of market share
-huge community of support
-templates can be edited from the Admin utility
-overall kinder interface on the backend
-rated highly on OpenSourceCMS website (opensourcecms.com -demos, ratings, etc)
-we didn't know better
(drupal a little more 'gnome-ish')
why we switched
-ultimately it wasn't working
-painful upgrade from 1.0 to 1.5, so looked at the other products as alternatives
-learned a lot of things about CMSs in developing on Joomla; it's not that great for some things
-difficult to assign specific areas -couldn't limit access, gave access to more than just one area
things I like about ModX
-has fine-grain user access -set up groups of people w/ access to only specific sections
-template is html w/ bits of syntax to define what will be brought in (menu, etc.)
-community support more engaged & helpful -size of community isn't as important
-lot of flexibility -not getting in the way as much
-template variables -could use to put in CC license, for example
things I don't like about ModX
-still needs some work -documentation issues (have to learn & ask questions a lot)
-labels not the greatest
-some syntax knowledge required
final analysis:
-go to open source CMS
-joomla: great for an intranet
-community engagement > community size
-future: "application framework" rather than "content management system"
Drupal -open source CMS (John Blyberg)
open source CMS of the year for past two years (PACT publishing?)
-commitment to building loyal & passionate community
~250,000 websites sonybmg, theonion
scales really nicely -out of the box, will work for 100,000+ records
key features:
-not as easy as Joomla -steep learning curve (photoshop elements vs. full-blown photoshop)
-content
-every piece of content called a "node"
-associates bits of info w/ that node
-blog post = content type (title, body, tags)
-content construction kit (CCK) -create new content types, modules from admin interface
-taxonomy
-can do different classification systems for different content types
-can use taxonomies to set up structure of site (can put content in more than one place)
-templating system
-PHP template (industry standard PHP templating)
-if you don't like how something looks, you can make it look how you want it to
-allows for aggregation
-API system
-the crux of drupal
-drupal is built on its own API
-api.drupal.org
-drupal.org/handbooks
--drupal is extremely well-documented
they built SOPAC on top of drupal; represents great investment of time and work and assessment that drupal will be around for a long time
How to not have to use drupal: taking Joomla and Drupal to task with ModX CMS -Ryan Deschamps
CMS: something to develop a website w/o having to do straight code
should do three things:
-facilitate division of labor (code vs. content vs. design)
-support the overall development of the site
-ensure best practices/standards
Halifax public libraries
it's not about the front end -can/will look the same no matter the backend
-it's all about the cockpit
idea is to make the experience easier for staff so they can do what makes your clients/patrons happy
why joomla?
-#1 in terms of market share
-huge community of support
-templates can be edited from the Admin utility
-overall kinder interface on the backend
-rated highly on OpenSourceCMS website (opensourcecms.com -demos, ratings, etc)
-we didn't know better
(drupal a little more 'gnome-ish')
why we switched
-ultimately it wasn't working
-painful upgrade from 1.0 to 1.5, so looked at the other products as alternatives
-learned a lot of things about CMSs in developing on Joomla; it's not that great for some things
-difficult to assign specific areas -couldn't limit access, gave access to more than just one area
things I like about ModX
-has fine-grain user access -set up groups of people w/ access to only specific sections
-template is html w/ bits of syntax to define what will be brought in (menu, etc.)
-community support more engaged & helpful -size of community isn't as important
-lot of flexibility -not getting in the way as much
-template variables -could use to put in CC license, for example
things I don't like about ModX
-still needs some work -documentation issues (have to learn & ask questions a lot)
-labels not the greatest
-some syntax knowledge required
final analysis:
-go to open source CMS
-joomla: great for an intranet
-community engagement > community size
-future: "application framework" rather than "content management system"
Drupal -open source CMS (John Blyberg)
open source CMS of the year for past two years (PACT publishing?)
-commitment to building loyal & passionate community
~250,000 websites sonybmg, theonion
scales really nicely -out of the box, will work for 100,000+ records
key features:
-not as easy as Joomla -steep learning curve (photoshop elements vs. full-blown photoshop)
-content
-associates bits of info w/ that node
-blog post = content type (title, body, tags)
-content construction kit (CCK) -create new content types, modules from admin interface
-taxonomy
-can use taxonomies to set up structure of site (can put content in more than one place)
-templating system
-if you don't like how something looks, you can make it look how you want it to
-allows for aggregation
-API system
-drupal is built on its own API
-api.drupal.org
-drupal.org/handbooks
--drupal is extremely well-documented
they built SOPAC on top of drupal; represents great investment of time and work and assessment that drupal will be around for a long time
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Evening Session: Dead & Innovative Technologies
Evening Session: Dead & Innovative Technologies
Marshall's view of library technology
-pragmatic approach -adopt technologies that support the strategic mission of the libraries
-"help libraries be better libraries"
-long view of the impact of technology on libraries
-not so much a mover and shaker but a survivor
urgency for innovation
-libraries are good at taking the tech of the current gen and applying it to the reality of their last gen & calling it next gen
-not so great track record at moving forward at the pace of change of society, media, and tech
-transition to electronic content has been underway for a decade, yet we still lack effective tools to manage them effectively
-need to have a mastery of search and delivery that surpasses the commercial realm, yet we continue to cling to hopelessly ineffective tools
life cycles
-dead -we know that it's dead, not good investments
-should be dead -continues to be used, but holds libs back
-emerging & innovative
computer architectures
-dead: mainframe, proprietary platforms
-dying: client/server computing
-emerging & innovative: web-based computing, cloud computing, service-oriented architecture
library automation deployment models
-dead or dying: standalone lib automation
emerging & innovative: shared automation implement (consortia, regional, state, nat'l), new models of collaboration, resource sharing among groups of peer institutions
library interfaces
-dead: text-based interfaces, any non-web interface
-emerging: rich internet applications
dead
-libary interfaces designed to make librarians happy...
emerging
-library interfaces designed to make our users happy
dying
web 2.0
-libs have latched on to web 2.0 as an almost fixed model to shape their understanding of the computing, while the rest of the world has pushed forward
-we've taken web 2.0 and shoved it into a silo
-we have not brought the concepts into the fundamental infrasturcture that powers libs. it's an add-on
-web 2.0 apps often jettison users away from library's web site. counter to the strategy of funneling users in to the web fabric that delivers its content & services
emerging & innovative
-socially aware, enterprise-level lib auto.
-lib auto. frameworks built from the ground up as a collab app
-social interaction not an afterghought
-treats user-supplied data as assets that we organize, manage, and preserve
Dead/Alive -Amanda Etches-Johnson
5 things -technologies, ideas- are they dead or alive?
blogs are dead
-as soon as something gets on whitehouse.gov, it's not trendy anymore (jessamyn)
-engaging, authentic blogs are alive and well
Twitter is dead
-as soon as your cable company friends you, the technology is at least not trendy, if not dead
Information Architecture is dead
-it's all about user experience right now
-it's not about building that great taxonomy or a foolproof nav, it's about the user experience
Second Life is dead
-no, seriously, there's like nobody there
usability is alive and well
-doesn't have to be big & expensive -can be as simple as card sorting or doing rapid prototypes on paper
-can be as simple as writing content that your users "get"
test your f***ing labels ->Karen Coombs
Your spime is in my library -Aaron Schmidt
post-desktop situation
ubiquitous computing -ubicomp; everyware, internet of things, ambient intelligence
-your banana's gonna have a URI and be able to talk to your car
?UI -no one knows what the user interface is gonna look like
analog -> digital
there's a lot of money to be made
RFID chips are becoming really cheap -pennies per chip rather than dollars
old people -home is aware of your health status?
RFIP dust -smart dust, MEMs
QR codes
netflix, hulu, kindle & kindle iPhone app
dropbox -efficient distribution
andriod operating system from google -set top box for TV?
Extended Environments Markup Language (EEML) -pachube
ipso
mobilizy -app for google phone -can tell you info about where you are (tourists, etc.)
ambient umbrella -lets know you if there's rain in the day's forecast
space in time object (SPIME) -meat package w/ RFID tag, know history of your food
question for libraries: what are we supposed to do?
-if everything has a URI, what are the catalogers going to do?
Books: Everyware -Adam Greenfield
Shaping Things -Bruce Stirling
Darlene Fichter
everything needs a tag!
Predictions
mass media revolution -> personal media revolution
-end of rabbit ears? or the decline of TV as we know it?
"Farewell Information, it's a Media Age" -Paul Saffo, table 1
things I know
#1 technology can actually hurt you sometimes
#2 the forecast is cloudy (cloud computing, tag cloud)
-time to open the adult collection in your library and generate revenue!
-how in the hell is putting more computers & gaming systems into the library 'green'?
-cloud computing is going to be like a tornado for your library
-it's time for one catalog to rule them all -should be a service in the cloud
-one database to rule them all ->google scholar will be gone if the economy continues as it is -won't generate enough revenue
-reference -don't want to talk about that (it's one thing to pick on cataloging people...)
#3 these technologies MUST die
-Windows Vista ::won't miss this view:: 2005-2009
-power cords -never want to have to plug anything in again in my life
Stephen Abram
in dog years, I'm dead
using the hyatt as a model for library land
-keep the bar closed all day
-never make eye contact with customers
-keep the coffee counter closed most of the day
-staff should move as slowly as possible, backwards in time as possible
-if you feminize the mens' room, don't make your sign say where men should go
-"putting the frown in out logo every day!"
public library: like wikipedia, only it takes 4 hours (comic)
what's dead? -vinyl
watching change
-kids, seniors, zoomers
-election polling
-olympics yahoo vs. nbc
-telephones, readers
-the economy -nuff said
-newspapers-Detroit cancelled home delivery two days ago & Sun Times Media Group today
-Encarta died yesterday (oct 31, 2009)
-kindle & skype for iPhone
-Wikia search-dead pooled today by Jimmy Wales
what is the deadest tech for libraries?
-people with their heads up...
when your kids' stuffed animals have a social life on the internet, it's no longer a fad
are going to a totally build it yourself world? imagine IKEA merging with GM...
-when journalism goes away, assemble your own newspaper
will reading matter? audiobooks and eBooks... and google
it's reading that matters, not books -don't worry about the container (it's about knowledge, not the container)
what does your best borrowed report look like?
how do your community content reviews do?
do you offer podcasts?
are your content displays (physical or virtual) innovative?
can you circulate books from anywhere?
are we going to be the tree falling in the forest?
can the modern director use data?
the people in charge of leading school organizations into the 21st century often are the least knowledgeable about the 21st cent
how are our libraries evolving?
top 10 unintentionally worst URLs
whorepresents.com
expertsexchange
penisland.net
therapistfinder.com
powergenitalia.com
molestationnursery.com
ipanywhere.com
cummingfirst.com -First Cumming Methodist Church
speedofart.com
gotahoe.com
Favorite filtering disasters
specialist
middlesex county
PDF -portable document format
magnum cum laude
canadian business and current affairs
inner tube
president bush
fcuk
what's your bread and butter? it's not about storing the stuff like we're an inventory
Stupid librarian tricks
-my education was substandard
-the OPAC sucks
-come for books!
-market to our cardholders
-open source is free
-we can protect children
Getting their attention? Fuck Google, Ask Me! -advertisers ultimately control what shows up on the first page of results
[I thought this was a great, entertaining-and-thought-provoking session. And the desserts provided were good, too!]
Marshall's view of library technology
-pragmatic approach -adopt technologies that support the strategic mission of the libraries
-"help libraries be better libraries"
-long view of the impact of technology on libraries
-not so much a mover and shaker but a survivor
urgency for innovation
-libraries are good at taking the tech of the current gen and applying it to the reality of their last gen & calling it next gen
-not so great track record at moving forward at the pace of change of society, media, and tech
-transition to electronic content has been underway for a decade, yet we still lack effective tools to manage them effectively
-need to have a mastery of search and delivery that surpasses the commercial realm, yet we continue to cling to hopelessly ineffective tools
life cycles
-dead -we know that it's dead, not good investments
-should be dead -continues to be used, but holds libs back
-emerging & innovative
computer architectures
-dead: mainframe, proprietary platforms
-dying: client/server computing
-emerging & innovative: web-based computing, cloud computing, service-oriented architecture
library automation deployment models
-dead or dying: standalone lib automation
emerging & innovative: shared automation implement (consortia, regional, state, nat'l), new models of collaboration, resource sharing among groups of peer institutions
library interfaces
-dead: text-based interfaces, any non-web interface
-emerging: rich internet applications
dead
-libary interfaces designed to make librarians happy...
emerging
-library interfaces designed to make our users happy
dying
web 2.0
-libs have latched on to web 2.0 as an almost fixed model to shape their understanding of the computing, while the rest of the world has pushed forward
-we've taken web 2.0 and shoved it into a silo
-we have not brought the concepts into the fundamental infrasturcture that powers libs. it's an add-on
-web 2.0 apps often jettison users away from library's web site. counter to the strategy of funneling users in to the web fabric that delivers its content & services
emerging & innovative
-socially aware, enterprise-level lib auto.
-lib auto. frameworks built from the ground up as a collab app
-social interaction not an afterghought
-treats user-supplied data as assets that we organize, manage, and preserve
Dead/Alive -Amanda Etches-Johnson
5 things -technologies, ideas- are they dead or alive?
blogs are dead
-as soon as something gets on whitehouse.gov, it's not trendy anymore (jessamyn)
-engaging, authentic blogs are alive and well
Twitter is dead
-as soon as your cable company friends you, the technology is at least not trendy, if not dead
Information Architecture is dead
-it's all about user experience right now
-it's not about building that great taxonomy or a foolproof nav, it's about the user experience
Second Life is dead
-no, seriously, there's like nobody there
usability is alive and well
-doesn't have to be big & expensive -can be as simple as card sorting or doing rapid prototypes on paper
-can be as simple as writing content that your users "get"
test your f***ing labels ->Karen Coombs
Your spime is in my library -Aaron Schmidt
post-desktop situation
ubiquitous computing -ubicomp; everyware, internet of things, ambient intelligence
-your banana's gonna have a URI and be able to talk to your car
?UI -no one knows what the user interface is gonna look like
analog -> digital
there's a lot of money to be made
RFID chips are becoming really cheap -pennies per chip rather than dollars
old people -home is aware of your health status?
RFIP dust -smart dust, MEMs
QR codes
netflix, hulu, kindle & kindle iPhone app
dropbox -efficient distribution
andriod operating system from google -set top box for TV?
Extended Environments Markup Language (EEML) -pachube
ipso
mobilizy -app for google phone -can tell you info about where you are (tourists, etc.)
ambient umbrella -lets know you if there's rain in the day's forecast
space in time object (SPIME) -meat package w/ RFID tag, know history of your food
question for libraries: what are we supposed to do?
-if everything has a URI, what are the catalogers going to do?
Books: Everyware -Adam Greenfield
Shaping Things -Bruce Stirling
Darlene Fichter
everything needs a tag!
Predictions
mass media revolution -> personal media revolution
-end of rabbit ears? or the decline of TV as we know it?
"Farewell Information, it's a Media Age" -Paul Saffo, table 1
things I know
#1 technology can actually hurt you sometimes
#2 the forecast is cloudy (cloud computing, tag cloud)
-time to open the adult collection in your library and generate revenue!
-how in the hell is putting more computers & gaming systems into the library 'green'?
-cloud computing is going to be like a tornado for your library
-it's time for one catalog to rule them all -should be a service in the cloud
-one database to rule them all ->google scholar will be gone if the economy continues as it is -won't generate enough revenue
-reference -don't want to talk about that (it's one thing to pick on cataloging people...)
#3 these technologies MUST die
-Windows Vista ::won't miss this view:: 2005-2009
-power cords -never want to have to plug anything in again in my life
Stephen Abram
in dog years, I'm dead
using the hyatt as a model for library land
-keep the bar closed all day
-never make eye contact with customers
-keep the coffee counter closed most of the day
-staff should move as slowly as possible, backwards in time as possible
-if you feminize the mens' room, don't make your sign say where men should go
-"putting the frown in out logo every day!"
public library: like wikipedia, only it takes 4 hours (comic)
what's dead? -vinyl
watching change
-kids, seniors, zoomers
-election polling
-olympics yahoo vs. nbc
-telephones, readers
-the economy -nuff said
-newspapers-Detroit cancelled home delivery two days ago & Sun Times Media Group today
-Encarta died yesterday (oct 31, 2009)
-kindle & skype for iPhone
-Wikia search-dead pooled today by Jimmy Wales
what is the deadest tech for libraries?
-people with their heads up...
when your kids' stuffed animals have a social life on the internet, it's no longer a fad
are going to a totally build it yourself world? imagine IKEA merging with GM...
-when journalism goes away, assemble your own newspaper
will reading matter? audiobooks and eBooks... and google
it's reading that matters, not books -don't worry about the container (it's about knowledge, not the container)
what does your best borrowed report look like?
how do your community content reviews do?
do you offer podcasts?
are your content displays (physical or virtual) innovative?
can you circulate books from anywhere?
are we going to be the tree falling in the forest?
can the modern director use data?
the people in charge of leading school organizations into the 21st century often are the least knowledgeable about the 21st cent
how are our libraries evolving?
top 10 unintentionally worst URLs
whorepresents.com
expertsexchange
penisland.net
therapistfinder.com
powergenitalia.com
molestationnursery.com
ipanywhere.com
cummingfirst.com -First Cumming Methodist Church
speedofart.com
gotahoe.com
Favorite filtering disasters
specialist
middlesex county
PDF -portable document format
magnum cum laude
canadian business and current affairs
inner tube
president bush
fcuk
what's your bread and butter? it's not about storing the stuff like we're an inventory
Stupid librarian tricks
-my education was substandard
-the OPAC sucks
-come for books!
-market to our cardholders
-open source is free
-we can protect children
Getting their attention? Fuck Google, Ask Me! -advertisers ultimately control what shows up on the first page of results
[I thought this was a great, entertaining-and-thought-provoking session. And the desserts provided were good, too!]
B205: Open Access: Green & Gold
B205: Open Access: Green & Gold
Green Open Access -Shane Beers
-unfortunately, far more complex than one might expect
What is green open access?
-making a digital document freely available on the Web -frequently referred to as "self-archiving"
-most frequently peer-reviewed research journal & conference articles
-first explicitly proposed in 1994
-important: NOT self-publishing
Why care about green OA?
-OA repositories allow institutions to manage, store, & showcase research
-potentially maximizes the usage & impact of univ research output
-potential new ways to monitor metrics for promotion & tenure
advangates of green OA
-making preprint OA before publication may hasten & increase citations
-OA postprints immediatly upon publication can do the same
-an OA document is frequently downloaded more often
methods of green OA
-locally hosted repository software (DSpace, Fedora, EPrints)
-externally hosted repositories utilizing same software
-subject-based repositories (Arxiv, RePec, E-LIS)
who is using OA content
-other researchers!
-"serials crisis" makes it difficult or impossible for libs to afford every sci journal
-developing countries lack funds for expensive journals
-people outside academia -OA material can be accessed by anyone
lack of adoption
-2008 study stated 19.4% of 346,000 sci articles published in 2006 were either gold or green OA
-about 15% of institutional research is spontaneously self-archived
-even incentives only increase self-archiving to about 30%
external barriers to adoption
-researchers themselves ->traditions, slow to change, competitive environment, may not care about OA
-copyright complications ->concerns researchers, large amount of work for staff, post-print legal issues
-publishers fear OA threatens them ->concern for loss of income, viability
internal barriers to adoption
-repositories are NOT self-sustaining
-requires top-down dedication from administration
-costs: internal management vs. external hosting
-staff to support IR: single "repository rat" model is RARELY SUCCESSFUL (Dorothea Salo)
-software platforms rarely meet needs
open access mandates
-only way to guarantee 100% self-archiving is to require it w/ a mandate
-first OA mandates in 2003
-RORAMAP (registry of open access repository material archiving policies)
-[missed]
-important US mandates: Harvard & MIT faculty, NIH Open Access made permanent
-some international surveys indicate 95% of faculty would comply w/ a self-archiving mandate, 80% willingly
future of green OA?
-hopefully more mandates
-peer-reviewed green OA repositories
-experts providing peer-review service for fees paid for by participation institution or authors
-repositories becoming sets of services rather than silos of material
-integrating green OA repositories into researcher workflow
conclusions
-growing trend of green OA awareness & support
-even w/ institutional repositories, subject-based repositories, & mandates, not even 20% of research OA
-library's role not straightforward, but certainly play a substantial part in supporting OA
Open Access & Academic Libraries -Amy Buckland
gold open access
-no price barriers
-no permission barriers
open journal systems
-part of the Public Knowledge Project
-journal management system
-locally installed
-chock full o' metadata
e.g. First Monday, McGill Journal of Education, Library Student Journal
library student journal
-open access, peer-reviewed, international
-hosted at LISHost
-run by volunteers (all currently in LIS programs except Amy)
in your library
who
-publisher: your library (everything is running & the bills are paid)
-editors/editorial board: faculties, deptartments, centres, associations
-authors/reviewers: not your concern (you just help put together)
when/where
-now
-your library
why
-publication models are changing
-many granting agencies require gold or green publishing practices
-makes the research output of your university available to everyone
how
-digital collections/services group
-install is easy (OJS in an Hour)
-getting the word out is hard
-coordinate the installation
-make MARC records available
-ensure journals are indexed in the Directory of Open Access Journals
so what?
-build relationships between faculty & the library
-direct involvement in research output
-great marketing tool
-OA publications have no barriers
-future: collaboration with university presses?
Green Open Access -Shane Beers
-unfortunately, far more complex than one might expect
What is green open access?
-making a digital document freely available on the Web -frequently referred to as "self-archiving"
-most frequently peer-reviewed research journal & conference articles
-first explicitly proposed in 1994
-important: NOT self-publishing
Why care about green OA?
-OA repositories allow institutions to manage, store, & showcase research
-potentially maximizes the usage & impact of univ research output
-potential new ways to monitor metrics for promotion & tenure
advangates of green OA
-making preprint OA before publication may hasten & increase citations
-OA postprints immediatly upon publication can do the same
-an OA document is frequently downloaded more often
methods of green OA
-locally hosted repository software (DSpace, Fedora, EPrints)
-externally hosted repositories utilizing same software
-subject-based repositories (Arxiv, RePec, E-LIS)
who is using OA content
-other researchers!
-"serials crisis" makes it difficult or impossible for libs to afford every sci journal
-developing countries lack funds for expensive journals
-people outside academia -OA material can be accessed by anyone
lack of adoption
-2008 study stated 19.4% of 346,000 sci articles published in 2006 were either gold or green OA
-about 15% of institutional research is spontaneously self-archived
-even incentives only increase self-archiving to about 30%
external barriers to adoption
-researchers themselves ->traditions, slow to change, competitive environment, may not care about OA
-copyright complications ->concerns researchers, large amount of work for staff, post-print legal issues
-publishers fear OA threatens them ->concern for loss of income, viability
internal barriers to adoption
-repositories are NOT self-sustaining
-requires top-down dedication from administration
-costs: internal management vs. external hosting
-staff to support IR: single "repository rat" model is RARELY SUCCESSFUL (Dorothea Salo)
-software platforms rarely meet needs
open access mandates
-only way to guarantee 100% self-archiving is to require it w/ a mandate
-first OA mandates in 2003
-RORAMAP (registry of open access repository material archiving policies)
-[missed]
-important US mandates: Harvard & MIT faculty, NIH Open Access made permanent
-some international surveys indicate 95% of faculty would comply w/ a self-archiving mandate, 80% willingly
future of green OA?
-hopefully more mandates
-peer-reviewed green OA repositories
-repositories becoming sets of services rather than silos of material
-integrating green OA repositories into researcher workflow
conclusions
-growing trend of green OA awareness & support
-even w/ institutional repositories, subject-based repositories, & mandates, not even 20% of research OA
-library's role not straightforward, but certainly play a substantial part in supporting OA
Open Access & Academic Libraries -Amy Buckland
gold open access
-no price barriers
-no permission barriers
open journal systems
-part of the Public Knowledge Project
-journal management system
-locally installed
-chock full o' metadata
e.g. First Monday, McGill Journal of Education, Library Student Journal
library student journal
-open access, peer-reviewed, international
-hosted at LISHost
-run by volunteers (all currently in LIS programs except Amy)
in your library
who
-publisher: your library (everything is running & the bills are paid)
-editors/editorial board: faculties, deptartments, centres, associations
-authors/reviewers: not your concern (you just help put together)
when/where
-now
-your library
why
-publication models are changing
-many granting agencies require gold or green publishing practices
-makes the research output of your university available to everyone
how
-digital collections/services group
-install is easy (OJS in an Hour)
-getting the word out is hard
-coordinate the installation
-make MARC records available
-ensure journals are indexed in the Directory of Open Access Journals
so what?
-build relationships between faculty & the library
-direct involvement in research output
-great marketing tool
-OA publications have no barriers
-future: collaboration with university presses?
C204: Evaluating, Recommending & Justifying 2.0 Tools
C204: Evaluating, Recommending & Justifying 2.0 Tools [very crowded session!]
Marydee Ojala
slides are on CiL site or in notes book p. 115
some social tools are very useful for research purposes
new tech should solve a problem, not provide a solution to a problem your org doesn't have
Marydee Ojala
slides are on CiL site or in notes book p. 115
some social tools are very useful for research purposes
new tech should solve a problem, not provide a solution to a problem your org doesn't have
C203: Web 2.x Training for Customers & Staff
C203: Web 2.x Training for Customers & Staff
Beth Tribe
web 2.0 isn't a thing... it's a state of mind
notatech.wordpress.com
Michael Sauers
http://www.slideshare.net/travelinlibrarian/web-2x-training-for-customers-staff
Nebraska Learns 2.0 http://l2ne.blogspot.com/2008/09/home.html
23 things, 16 weeks [15 CE credits for completion]
what did we learn?
-you need to do this program
-better organization of participants (didn't have everyone's email addys, for one)
Bobbi Newman
staff training =/= patron training
the worse you are at something, the less important you generally consider it to be
the more familiar we are with something, the more we like it. This is the mere exposure effect.
staff are still sharing even after program ended
(some of her patron training class slides: http://www.slideshare.net/librarianbyday/slideshows)
Beth Tribe
web 2.0 isn't a thing... it's a state of mind
notatech.wordpress.com
Michael Sauers
http://www.slideshare.net/travelinlibrarian/web-2x-training-for-customers-staff
Nebraska Learns 2.0 http://l2ne.blogspot.com/2008/09/home.html
23 things, 16 weeks [15 CE credits for completion]
what did we learn?
-you need to do this program
-better organization of participants (didn't have everyone's email addys, for one)
Bobbi Newman
staff training =/= patron training
the worse you are at something, the less important you generally consider it to be
the more familiar we are with something, the more we like it. This is the mere exposure effect.
staff are still sharing even after program ended
(some of her patron training class slides: http://www.slideshare.net/librarianbyday/slideshows)
C202: Social Network Profile Management
C202-Social Network Profile Management
Who are you online? -gregschwartz
Identity: what I say about me; what others about me
Digital Identity Mapping -expression, publication, profession, opinion, details, reputation, hobby, certificates, purchase, knowledge, etc.
What your identity looks like to your next employer : your name on Google
you don't own your online identity
Managing the online
1. own your username -checkusernames.com
2. join the conversation -you need to say something; develop your identity by participating in social networks
3. follow what others are saying about you
4. be authentic -don't have to assume a persona online -it's all about connecting the digital identity with the real one
amanda clay powers (amandaclay)
What are we doing here anyway? creating and managing identity in social networks
development cycles -creating identity -> growth -> managing information -> growth -> [creating identity]
"social metadata" -what we're managing
our place is to educate people about what they're doing with this information about themselves
we can be the answer -they're drowing in information
manage social metadata
-using friend lists (on Facebook)
-adjusting privacy settings
Library social network profiles: the good, the bad, and the ugly (sarah houghton-jan)
Sarah's rules
The Good
Identity
1. register w/ uniform usernames
2. register w/ uniform generic email
3. profile info on site is current
Communication
1. quick replies to users' messages/comments
2. personal in tone
3. keep it open to all (minus ads/spam)
The Ugly
Identity
1. register w/ random strange usernames
2. register w/ individual emails
3. profile info on site is outdated
Communication
1. slow or no replies to users
2. institutional in tone
3. selectively friend people
over- and under-management of library social network profiles
-disperse responsibility & you'll end up with better results
-these tools can be used in ways we don't really think of initially
resources
checkusernames.com
openID and claimID
ping.fm or hellotxt.com -simultaneously update all social network status updates
atomkeep
Michael Porter (WebJunction.org)
community site for libraries & library staff
-all fields can be shown only to who you choose
Do
-show your personality
-share your success stories on social networks
Don't
-be mindful of how your images will be interpreted
-nothing implying nakedness is definitely recommended
what if you want to keep two different identities?
-they start to bleed together over time, so it's ultimately easier/more authentic to combine them
-as the tools evolve, we'll see levels of relationships that you can define to help with keeping things separate when you want them to be
institutional profiles vs. personal profiles? (Twitter, Facebook, etc.)
advocate aggregating your lifestream
Who are you online? -gregschwartz
Identity: what I say about me; what others about me
Digital Identity Mapping -expression, publication, profession, opinion, details, reputation, hobby, certificates, purchase, knowledge, etc.
What your identity looks like to your next employer : your name on Google
you don't own your online identity
Managing the online
1. own your username -checkusernames.com
2. join the conversation -you need to say something; develop your identity by participating in social networks
3. follow what others are saying about you
4. be authentic -don't have to assume a persona online -it's all about connecting the digital identity with the real one
amanda clay powers (amandaclay)
What are we doing here anyway? creating and managing identity in social networks
development cycles -creating identity -> growth -> managing information -> growth -> [creating identity]
"social metadata" -what we're managing
our place is to educate people about what they're doing with this information about themselves
we can be the answer -they're drowing in information
manage social metadata
-using friend lists (on Facebook)
-adjusting privacy settings
Library social network profiles: the good, the bad, and the ugly (sarah houghton-jan)
Sarah's rules
The Good
Identity
1. register w/ uniform usernames
2. register w/ uniform generic email
3. profile info on site is current
Communication
1. quick replies to users' messages/comments
2. personal in tone
3. keep it open to all (minus ads/spam)
The Ugly
Identity
1. register w/ random strange usernames
2. register w/ individual emails
3. profile info on site is outdated
Communication
1. slow or no replies to users
2. institutional in tone
3. selectively friend people
over- and under-management of library social network profiles
-disperse responsibility & you'll end up with better results
-these tools can be used in ways we don't really think of initially
resources
checkusernames.com
openID and claimID
ping.fm or hellotxt.com -simultaneously update all social network status updates
atomkeep
Michael Porter (WebJunction.org)
community site for libraries & library staff
-all fields can be shown only to who you choose
Do
-show your personality
-share your success stories on social networks
Don't
-be mindful of how your images will be interpreted
-nothing implying nakedness is definitely recommended
what if you want to keep two different identities?
-they start to bleed together over time, so it's ultimately easier/more authentic to combine them
-as the tools evolve, we'll see levels of relationships that you can define to help with keeping things separate when you want them to be
institutional profiles vs. personal profiles? (Twitter, Facebook, etc.)
advocate aggregating your lifestream
C201: Best of the Web
C201- The Best of the Web, Aaron Schmidt
Firefox!
-greasemonkey
-customizegoogle
-bettergmail2
-google reader skin -helvetireader
[personal rec: AdBlock Plus]
Images
wikimedia commons
flickr image search
pictobrowser
skitch.com -screenshot tool; add arrows, etc.
jing -screenshots, video of screen action
screentoaster -web-based screencasting
vimeo -youtube, but cleaner, and with less insulting comments ; easy & fun signup process
postrank -put in blog feed address & it tells you what posts are more popular
copypastecharacter.com (characters you can copy & paste so you don't have to remember the code)
today'smeet -temporary online space for people to gather & discuss things
doodle -meeting scheduling online
whenisgood -diitto
letmegooglethatforyou.com
color savers.com
tagcrowd -input block of text & it pulls out tags
wordle -similar
qapture -realtime of what's going on on twitter
search.twitter.com
tweetdeck
vyew -free online webconferencing; share desktops, chat, video, PPT presentation
bacolicio.us -puts a piece of bacon on a webpage (e.g. vegetarianism page on wikipedia)
wordpress -thematic
TED talks
google voice
google forms (via google docs)
lizania.net... bookbag
netnewswire -RSS feed reader (Mac only)
prezi -not exactly intuitive; presentations (invite only)
280slides -online presentation maker
lovelycharts
typetester -experiment with typography
Audience suggestions
evernote
zotero
worldtimeserver.com
tadalist.com -can share via RSS
hulu.com
toodledo -list
senduit
emic4all
remote support -logmein.com
dropbox
xobni -outlook search
google chrome (browser)
[I'll come back later and add URLs for everything]
Firefox!
-greasemonkey
-customizegoogle
-bettergmail2
-google reader skin -helvetireader
[personal rec: AdBlock Plus]
Images
wikimedia commons
flickr image search
pictobrowser
skitch.com -screenshot tool; add arrows, etc.
jing -screenshots, video of screen action
screentoaster -web-based screencasting
vimeo -youtube, but cleaner, and with less insulting comments ; easy & fun signup process
postrank -put in blog feed address & it tells you what posts are more popular
copypastecharacter.com (characters you can copy & paste so you don't have to remember the code)
today'smeet -temporary online space for people to gather & discuss things
doodle -meeting scheduling online
whenisgood -diitto
letmegooglethatforyou.com
color savers.com
tagcrowd -input block of text & it pulls out tags
wordle -similar
qapture -realtime of what's going on on twitter
search.twitter.com
tweetdeck
vyew -free online webconferencing; share desktops, chat, video, PPT presentation
bacolicio.us -puts a piece of bacon on a webpage (e.g. vegetarianism page on wikipedia)
wordpress -thematic
TED talks
google voice
google forms (via google docs)
lizania.net... bookbag
netnewswire -RSS feed reader (Mac only)
prezi -not exactly intuitive; presentations (invite only)
280slides -online presentation maker
lovelycharts
typetester -experiment with typography
Audience suggestions
evernote
zotero
worldtimeserver.com
tadalist.com -can share via RSS
hulu.com
toodledo -list
senduit
emic4all
remote support -logmein.com
dropbox
xobni -outlook search
google chrome (browser)
[I'll come back later and add URLs for everything]
Tuesday Keynote
Keynote: Library without Walls: meeting place of and for people!
-Paul Holdengraber; Erik Boekesteijn
people are hungry for substance -they don't want to be fed, they want to be nourished
librarians need to be 'life'-brarians
"the items are there. wunderbar! what should I do with them?"
-make people deeply desire them
-libraries are places of desire
digression is the sunshine of narrative
I'm in the job of hospitality -of making people feel at home
-welcoming you to the home I work in
-Paul Holdengraber; Erik Boekesteijn
people are hungry for substance -they don't want to be fed, they want to be nourished
librarians need to be 'life'-brarians
"the items are there. wunderbar! what should I do with them?"
-make people deeply desire them
-libraries are places of desire
digression is the sunshine of narrative
I'm in the job of hospitality -of making people feel at home
-welcoming you to the home I work in
D103: Moving Libraries to the Cloud
Session D103
Roy Tennant -Moving Libraries to the Cloud
What are you talking about? A cloud is a common metaphor for the Internet
Cloud computing: style of computing in which dynamically scalable and often virtualized resources are provided as a service over the Internet (Wikipedia)
incorporates the concepts of:
-infrastructure as a service (hardware capacity)
-platform as a service (OS, "solution stacks")
-software as a service (applications)
moving "to the cloud" means moving computing tasks from in-house hardware & software to resources on the net
potential benefits
-low barriers to entry
-pay as you go instead of capital investment
-no need to have local server capacity
-software upgrades are automatic
-saves staff
potential drawbacks
-lack of complete control
-reliance on network connectivity and speed
the cloud from a business perspective
-Amazon simple storage service (Amazon S3)
-Amazon elastic compute cloud (Amazon EC2)
so what about libraries?
an example: cataloging
OCLC's "expert community" experiment -allowing "wiki-like" editing of WorldCat records
machine services for libraries in the cloud
API-based applications (techessence.info ; worldcat.org/devnet)
ways libraries are benefiting from moving data to the cloud
WorldCat search API and Facebook
WorldCat citations in Facebook (citemeapp)
terminology services for smarter searches -adds other terms to searches that are from controlled vocabulary
WorldCat WordPress widget (Karen Coombs)
mobile web applications
Android application: CompareEverywhere (compare item prices)
Building Webscale for Library Management -Andrew K. Pace
jet lag is a lot like drunkenness, but without the confidence.
introduction to "webscale"
Library Scale
Practical webscale
webscale : the web is all about scale, finding ways to attract the most users for centraolized resources, spreading those costs over larger and larger audiences as the technology gets more and more capable
resource sharing
cataloging
licensed journal literature
consortial
webscale value proposition: on average, businesses spend 70% of their time building and maintaining and worrying about infrastructure, and 30% of their time focused on the ideas that propel their business forward -web-scale computing can reverse the ratio
web 2.0?
there is a major theme of web 2.0 that people haven't yet tweaked to. It's really about data and who owns and controls, or gives access to a class of data
repository?
shared discovery layer (shared catalogs, worldcat local)
ERM/knowledge base
library management
Libraries Scale
if only circulation were like buying & selling on eBay...
annual transactions
-libraries worldwide 1,212,383
-transactions per year, about 5,000 transactions per second
not talking about software as a service
Practical webscale for libraries
looking for efficiency in mgmt workflows
-libraries have a fragmented face on the web
a webscale strategy would provide libs w/ computer hardware & software infrasturcture on the web, where they could use the workflow apps they need
why do it? potential benefits of network-level lib inventory control & coll. mgmt incl. patron satisfaction & library visibility on the web, staff worklfow improvements, & financial savings.
network effects
-shared cataloging & resource sharing & imagine it in the context of lib mgmt (single networked source for vendors/providers, e-resource identities, and bibliographic item-level details; etc.)
It is not necessary to change. Survival is not mandatory. -W. Edwards Deming
Roy Tennant -Moving Libraries to the Cloud
What are you talking about? A cloud is a common metaphor for the Internet
Cloud computing: style of computing in which dynamically scalable and often virtualized resources are provided as a service over the Internet (Wikipedia)
incorporates the concepts of:
-infrastructure as a service (hardware capacity)
-platform as a service (OS, "solution stacks")
-software as a service (applications)
moving "to the cloud" means moving computing tasks from in-house hardware & software to resources on the net
potential benefits
-low barriers to entry
-pay as you go instead of capital investment
-no need to have local server capacity
-software upgrades are automatic
-saves staff
potential drawbacks
-lack of complete control
-reliance on network connectivity and speed
the cloud from a business perspective
-Amazon simple storage service (Amazon S3)
-Amazon elastic compute cloud (Amazon EC2)
so what about libraries?
an example: cataloging
OCLC's "expert community" experiment -allowing "wiki-like" editing of WorldCat records
machine services for libraries in the cloud
API-based applications (techessence.info ; worldcat.org/devnet)
ways libraries are benefiting from moving data to the cloud
WorldCat search API and Facebook
WorldCat citations in Facebook (citemeapp)
terminology services for smarter searches -adds other terms to searches that are from controlled vocabulary
WorldCat WordPress widget (Karen Coombs)
mobile web applications
Android application: CompareEverywhere (compare item prices)
Building Webscale for Library Management -Andrew K. Pace
jet lag is a lot like drunkenness, but without the confidence.
introduction to "webscale"
Library Scale
Practical webscale
webscale : the web is all about scale, finding ways to attract the most users for centraolized resources, spreading those costs over larger and larger audiences as the technology gets more and more capable
resource sharing
cataloging
licensed journal literature
consortial
webscale value proposition: on average, businesses spend 70% of their time building and maintaining and worrying about infrastructure, and 30% of their time focused on the ideas that propel their business forward -web-scale computing can reverse the ratio
web 2.0?
there is a major theme of web 2.0 that people haven't yet tweaked to. It's really about data and who owns and controls, or gives access to a class of data
repository?
shared discovery layer (shared catalogs, worldcat local)
ERM/knowledge base
library management
Libraries Scale
if only circulation were like buying & selling on eBay...
annual transactions
-libraries worldwide 1,212,383
-transactions per year, about 5,000 transactions per second
not talking about software as a service
Practical webscale for libraries
looking for efficiency in mgmt workflows
-libraries have a fragmented face on the web
a webscale strategy would provide libs w/ computer hardware & software infrasturcture on the web, where they could use the workflow apps they need
why do it? potential benefits of network-level lib inventory control & coll. mgmt incl. patron satisfaction & library visibility on the web, staff worklfow improvements, & financial savings.
network effects
-shared cataloging & resource sharing & imagine it in the context of lib mgmt (single networked source for vendors/providers, e-resource identities, and bibliographic item-level details; etc.)
It is not necessary to change. Survival is not mandatory. -W. Edwards Deming
D102: Digital Rights Management (DRM), Copyright, & Creative Commons
Session D102: Digital Rights Management (DRM), Copyright, & Creative Commons
West, Collins, Movafaghi & Chan slides available on the CiL site or p. 72 in notes book
Michael Sauers-Participating in the Creative Commons
copyright.gov
copyright = set of restrictions
what about fair use?
section 107 of copyright law
section 108 -libraries
section 113c -can use book cover to advertise
common sense may say fair use, but then the lawyers get involved...
fair use has a long tradition, and not just used by individuals (Disney/Hans Christian Andersen; even Mickey Mouse isn't original)
clearance culture / permission culture -afraid to do anything with anything unless we get permission first
fair use = right to hire a lawyer & defend yourself
'Happy Birthday' is being held hostage
Creative Commons -licensing that adds on to copyright (creativecommons.org)
-allowance-based way of looking at things
cc = allow
Choose...
attribution -use it, but give me credit
use content in non-commercial manner (don't sell it)
no derivative works -use it, but don't change it (cropping is considered derivative for photos)
share-alike -if you use mine, license your stuff in a similar way so others can use it
get...
icon you can put onto your page/item, links to creative commons 'deed'
there are lawyers behind all this -has an extensive code; very well-written (has been challeneged in other countries)
Flickr, slideshare, Cory Doctorow licenses all his works under cc
search.creativecommons.org ; google adv. search, yahoo adv search
any problems?
"once you choose a license for your work, it's irrevocable."
negative market effect? (stock photo sites complain about Flickr freely-available images)
what is "non-commercial"? Google ads alongside count as 'commercial use'?
unintended use
right of publicity -separate section of law (image of another person)
West, Collins, Movafaghi & Chan slides available on the CiL site or p. 72 in notes book
Michael Sauers-Participating in the Creative Commons
copyright.gov
copyright = set of restrictions
what about fair use?
section 107 of copyright law
section 108 -libraries
section 113c -can use book cover to advertise
common sense may say fair use, but then the lawyers get involved...
fair use has a long tradition, and not just used by individuals (Disney/Hans Christian Andersen; even Mickey Mouse isn't original)
clearance culture / permission culture -afraid to do anything with anything unless we get permission first
fair use = right to hire a lawyer & defend yourself
'Happy Birthday' is being held hostage
Creative Commons -licensing that adds on to copyright (creativecommons.org)
-allowance-based way of looking at things
cc = allow
Choose...
attribution -use it, but give me credit
use content in non-commercial manner (don't sell it)
no derivative works -use it, but don't change it (cropping is considered derivative for photos)
share-alike -if you use mine, license your stuff in a similar way so others can use it
get...
icon you can put onto your page/item, links to creative commons 'deed'
there are lawyers behind all this -has an extensive code; very well-written (has been challeneged in other countries)
Flickr, slideshare, Cory Doctorow licenses all his works under cc
search.creativecommons.org ; google adv. search, yahoo adv search
any problems?
"once you choose a license for your work, it's irrevocable."
negative market effect? (stock photo sites complain about Flickr freely-available images)
what is "non-commercial"? Google ads alongside count as 'commercial use'?
unintended use
right of publicity -separate section of law (image of another person)
D101: Digital Preservation, E-Government & ERM
Session D101: Digital Preservation, E-Government & ERM
National Defense University -preserving government policy documents
slides on CiL site or p. 68 in notes book
ERM -Anna Creech, Cindi Trainor
capturing data that is necessary and/or will enhance user experience
ERM data useful for librarians
what about users?
users are confused by...
-multiple points of access
-terminology (database, A-Z list)
-vanishing full-text (how do librarians know when changes are taking place?)
-different user interfaces between databases
what do they want? hint: it begins with a G
data elements + user needs = awesome!
-trial fields populate public list or RSS (free trials, new resources, cancellations, etc.)
-usage stats for ranking search results
-license terms in plain English
but wait, there's more....
commercial ERMs are expensive & don't interoperate well with library systems
-free alternatives: wikis, libguides
-make sure these can do what you need for pushing the info out to users
National Defense University -preserving government policy documents
slides on CiL site or p. 68 in notes book
ERM -Anna Creech, Cindi Trainor
capturing data that is necessary and/or will enhance user experience
ERM data useful for librarians
what about users?
users are confused by...
-multiple points of access
-terminology (database, A-Z list)
-vanishing full-text (how do librarians know when changes are taking place?)
-different user interfaces between databases
what do they want? hint: it begins with a G
data elements + user needs = awesome!
-trial fields populate public list or RSS (free trials, new resources, cancellations, etc.)
-usage stats for ranking search results
-license terms in plain English
but wait, there's more....
commercial ERMs are expensive & don't interoperate well with library systems
-free alternatives: wikis, libguides
-make sure these can do what you need for pushing the info out to users
CiL2009: Monday Keynote
I'm inaugurating my shiny new blog with the notes I took during Computers in Libraries 2009 earlier this week. Mostly they're what was up on the screens with supplemental comments when I had time to fill things in.
Monday Keynote
Friending Libraries: The Nodes in People's Social Networks
Lee Rainie (lrainie on Twitter) from Pew Internet & American Life Project
2000-slow, stationary connections built around my computer
2008-fast, mobile connections built around outside servers and storage
ecosystem changes
1. volume of info grows
2. variety of info increases -many alternatives available
3. velocity of info speeds up -more stuff coming at you in more ways (info you care about)
4. times and places to experience media enlarge
5. people's vigilance for info expands (when you care, you can dig more deeply) AND contracts (set up more rigorous screens -people exist in continuous state of partial attention)
6. immersive qualities of media are more compelling
7. relevance of info improves
8. number of info "voices" explodes-and becomes more findable (~50% of adults & 2/3 of teens have created content)
9. voting and ventilating are enabled
10. social networks are more vivid (people fall back on their friends when encountering something they don't understand, etc.)
-institutions can be actors in people's networks in ways they never were before
behold Homo connectus
a different species with a different sense of
new tech-user typology
"The Mobile Difference" -assets, actions, attitudes
39% are motivated by mobility
61% are tied to stationary media
Motivated by mobility
friending libraries are 5+ things...
Monday Keynote
Friending Libraries: The Nodes in People's Social Networks
Lee Rainie (lrainie on Twitter) from Pew Internet & American Life Project
2000-slow, stationary connections built around my computer
2008-fast, mobile connections built around outside servers and storage
ecosystem changes
1. volume of info grows
2. variety of info increases -many alternatives available
3. velocity of info speeds up -more stuff coming at you in more ways (info you care about)
4. times and places to experience media enlarge
5. people's vigilance for info expands (when you care, you can dig more deeply) AND contracts (set up more rigorous screens -people exist in continuous state of partial attention)
6. immersive qualities of media are more compelling
7. relevance of info improves
8. number of info "voices" explodes-and becomes more findable (~50% of adults & 2/3 of teens have created content)
9. voting and ventilating are enabled
10. social networks are more vivid (people fall back on their friends when encountering something they don't understand, etc.)
-institutions can be actors in people's networks in ways they never were before
behold Homo connectus
a different species with a different sense of
- expectation about access to info
- place and distance
- presence with others
- opportunities to play
- time use
- personal efficacy
- social networking possibilities
new tech-user typology
"The Mobile Difference" -assets, actions, attitudes
39% are motivated by mobility
61% are tied to stationary media
Motivated by mobility
- Digital collaborators (8%)
- Ambivalent networkers (7%) -"obligation", can't afford to be off the grid, even thought they want to be; 30% students
- Media movers (7%) -share info more than create it, though like dig. photog.
- Roving nodes (9%) -56% female; 100% have cell phones; heavy internet use; tech gives them control
- Mobile newbies (8%) -act of getting a cell phone was like a conversion experience for them in the way it opened up the world; 55% female; median 50 (oldest MBM group); none create internet content
- Desktop veterans (13%) -55% male; skews white -mobiliity doesn't matter, use computer while sitting down
- Drifting surfers (14%) -52% female, tech doesn't help much
- Information encumbered (10%) -suffer from info overload; skews white; 67% male (highest)
- Tech indifferent (10$) -not heavy internet users; 55% female; least likely users of everything
- Off the network (14%) -no cell phones or internet access; 57% female, oldest (67 median); see no lifestyle improvements w/ tech
friending libraries are 5+ things...
- pathways to problem-solving information
- pathways to personal enrichment
- pathways to entertainment
- pathways to new kinds of social networks built around people, media, and institutions
- pathways to the wisdom of crowds, so you fill your own future here...
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