Showing posts with label conferences. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conferences. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Daily Thoughts 2/15/2011(Advocacy, Conferences, the world in 2050)

Kannazuki, Print shows a man sitting on a veranda, reading, an incense urn next to him, and a woman standing at a door looking over his shoulder.  Date Created/Published: [1770, printed later]

Daily Thoughts 2/15/2011

I have been busy taking care of some personal matters.  I did get a chance to stop by my local library and pick up a copy of The World In 2050 Four Forces Shaping Civilizations Northern Future. It is about coming major population, climate, globalization, and natural resource use.  The author does not touch that deeply on the fifth technology.

Looking at O'Reilly Tools for Change Startup Publishing Showcase. There are quite a few interesting companies. http://www.toccon.com/toc2011/public/schedule/detail/17744

Web Bits

From Metro New York Library Council

Library Advocacy Needed: House Considering Two Amendments Critical to Future of Libraries
http://metro.org/en/art/271/  Please take some time to write your representative in support of libraries. I did.

Scott Turow, President Authors Guild,  Let-Them-Eat-Cake-Attitude Threatens to Destroy a Network of Public Assets http://www.huffingtonpost.com/scott-turow/letthemeatcakeattitude-th_b_823609.html%20

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Daily Thoughts 5/26/2010 (Book Expo America)

Emile Friant, Self Portrait, Oil on Panel, 1885


Daily Thoughts 5/26/2010 Book Expo America.

I am going to concentrate on walking the show floor of Book Expo America today. It should be interesting. I already printed up a list of booths which I plan on looking at. I also will probably stop by the Librarians Lounge and get coffee. I think I am ready for today.

I walked the show floor today. There were less publishers than the last time I went. In a way, this was better because the childrens books were on the main floor, and it was easier to talk to them. I also noticed that many of the publishers were not exhibiting they were doing business in private meeting rooms. Disney, Rodale, Macmillan and a few others had meeting rooms like this.

The printers and distributors had a very strong presence this year. There was also a very large booth for Overdrive which is the leading supplier for ebooks to libraries. In addition, ebook makers and electronic books were featured during the show. Diamond Comic Distributors was at the convention as well as BWI (Book Wholesalers Inc.), Baker and Taylor and Ingram. There were a lot less small presses on the exhibition floor than the last time I went.

There was a very nice comic book section with Marvel, Diamond Comic Book Distributors, Image, and other publishers. I picked up a lot of Marvel bookmarks for the Graphic Novels club for my library. There were still the big publishers out in force, Penguin, Harper Collins, Random House, Hachette Book Group and others. They were giving a lot of galleys out as well as original books.

I ended up shipping 72 pounds of books back to my library. This did not include galleys. I put a number of galleys aside and wrote down some of the titles. Yale University Press has a very nice biography on Joe Louis by Randy Roberts. There were a lot of university presses at the show. I also saw a lot of christian publishers, and politically oriented publishers.

I picked up a copy of Muhammad Yunus, Building Social Business The New Kind of Capitalism That Serves Humanities Most Pressing Needs published by Public Affairs. The Cato Institute which is a libertarian press was giving out a free booklet which contained the United States Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. They also had an interesting title called Terrorizing Ourselves Why U.S. Counterterrorism Policy is Failing and How To Fix It by Benjamin H. Friedman, Ed. For those of an even more conservative bent, there is a book published by Strang Communications, The Faith and Values of Sarah Palin, What She Believes and What It Means for America by Stephen Mansfield and David A. Holland

There was a lot of very interesting material. A title called The Bearded Gentleman The Style Guide to Shaving Face by Allan Peterkin & Nick Burns caught my attention. There are very few titles on this subject. There was also a title called Shamrock Alley by Ronald Damien Malfi about infiltrating the Westies, an Irish gang in New York.

Europa which is an international publisher recommended a book called A Novel Bookstore by Laurence Cosse. They compared it to The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery which was a bestseller. Another literary book which might be of interest is Dear Sandy Hello Letters from Ted to Sandy Berrigan by Ted Berrigan. This book is edited by Sandy Berrigan and Ron Padgett and published by Coffee House Press. Black Sparrow Press recommended a poetry book called Well Then There Now by Julia Spahr which is coming in Fall 2010. They had a chapbook of a poem in the book called Gentle Now, Don't Add Heartache.

Akashic Books is publishing a series of noir books based in specific cities. These are very popular at our library; Mexico City Noir, Indian Country Noir, San Francisco Noir, Orange County Noir, and Los Angeles Noir are some of the title in the series. In November, they are releasing Haiti Noir. Akashic books had a very interesting mystery written by Subcommandante Marcos of the Zapatistas and Paco Ignacio Taibo II who is a famous Mexican mystery writer titled The Uncomfortable Dead (What's Missing Is Missing) a novel by four hands.

Juan Gomez-Jurado a writer from Spain is coming out with a thriller called The Moses Expedition which looks quite good in August. He did a reading and book signing at New York Public Library on May 26, at 6:00 p.m.

The amount of novels being given out was tremendous. The Romance Writers of America had a very nice selection of titles that they were giving away which they had collected from their membership. Also, The Mystery Writers of America had lots of people signing books. Ellen Datlow was at the Horror Writers of America booth.

2000 A.D., the English comic book writers who do Judge Dredd are coming back. There is a new Judge Dredd movie coming out done by the same people who did the film District 9. The film is being shot in South Africa. It appears that 2000 A.D. is going to have an American publisher other than DC or Marvel which understands their work. I also picked up a "weird western", called Rex Riders by J.P. Carlson, illustrated by J. Calafiore. There are not very many people who write this kind of book. I like the name of the publisher, Monstrosities Books. It is their first book. There was very little manga at this years show which surprised me.

The people at the show were very nice. Playaway has redesigned its cases for its electronic audiobooks. They are much more attractive. They also have a whole new set of marketing material to use with their audiobooks. They are calling it Circulation Station http://www.playawaylibrary.com/marketingtoolkit/

There were not a lot of pens or giveaways floating around the show. I saw some bookmarks. Also many more vendors were keeping their books as display copies or selling them at a discount rather than giving away copies. I did like the free bookmark given to me by Bookamajigs, LLC. It was quite pretty. http://www.bookamajigs.com/

Another thing which I liked was the American Girls Crafts booth. They had a lot of crafts designed to tie in directly with the American Girls books series which is a series of historical young adult novels based on different characters in American history. It is a very clean, well done popular series. I can see librarians using the crafts as part of a program with the books. http://www.americangirlcrafts.com/

Learning Express was at the conference. They run a database for civil service tests which our library subscribes to as well as print a number of titles for civil service exams. I hope they expand their coverage of civil service books. Their database is excellent and is used a lot. Also, Nolo Books which does self help legal titles was there. Their books are excellent.

On the way out, I picked up the book for the 6th annual new title showcase. I won't get a chance to look at it until tomorrow. I did not get to go to any conference sessions today. It was a quite busy day. Lots and lots of walking. I only took a few minutes to sit in the Librarians Lounge at the end of the day. It was relaxing and empty.

There was so much at the show, it is quite hard to even describe a fraction of it. Tomorrow, I am going to focus on going to a few panels and talking to a couple more publishers this time without the purpose of collecting books.

This is a summation of the Editors Pick panel from Day of Dialog between Librarians Publishers which I went to from Library Journal Online. http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6729118.html

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Daily Thoughts 2/19/2009


Der Arme Poet, Carl Spitzweg

Daily Thoughts 2/19/2009

The registration is open for Book Expo America for May 28-31. http://www.bookexpoamerica.com/Registration/Attendee-Registration/ They don't list their prices up front. I went in and checked for librarians it is $90 for three days. Last time I went, I got a discount from Westchester Library Association, it was $75 with the discount. I am very much looking forward to going to the conference.

Monday, February 9, 2009

O'Reilly Tools of Change For Publishing (Part 1)

The Allegory of Painting -or- The Art of Painting, Jan Vermeer van Delft, 1666


O'Reilly Tools of Change For Publishing

Good morning. I am sitting at my computer at 5 a.m. typing away. I am ready to go to the O'Reilly Tools of Change for Publishing Conference. It starts with a continental breakfast at 7:30 a.m. . This is the conference with the earliest start I have ever been to. I will be taking the train in a few moments. I am very much looking forward to going.

I read a bit more of Monster A Novel on the way to the conference. The train was not very full in the early morning hours. It was nice light entertainment.

I got to the conference at 7:00 a.m. at the Marriott Marquis Hotel on 1545 Avenue of the Americas. The continental breakfast was quite pleasant. I talked to a lady from New Zealand who was there to learn about what was happening with the web. The breakfast was pleasant and the coffee was good.

I went to the first panel by Chris Brogan who has a blog at http://www.chrisbrogan.com/ . The title of the panel was Blogging and Social Media. His blog looks very well put together.

His presentation reminded me of someone who had very deep web knowledge like http://www.searchlores.org/ (Fravia) or Shally Steckerl http://jobmachine.net/shally/ (Recruitment), or David Carpe, http://clewllc.com/ (Business Research). I realize these are research oriented people with a different focus, but the knowledge is there.

The panel started at 8:30 a.m. in the North Ball Room. Apparently, Chris Brogan likes libraries, bookstores, and comic books something I can very much relate to. He chatted with me for a few moments before the panel started.

He had a very open ended discussion that was not in a particular order. It was spoken extemporaneously with lots of questions from the audience. I am rearranging what I think I learned from his talk to the audience. It was quite enlightening. This is more an arrangement of thoughts than anything else. Everyone sees the world differently, so what I remember may not exactly mirror the words of the speaker, but they should be somewhat similar.

I took notes in long hand on a pad of paper. I like writing and taking notes in long hand because the physical act of writing helps me remember what I am writing. I also rearranged what I heard so I could make sense of it.

More than one person should work on a blog in a company. The primary purpose of blogging is communication. The first thing that a person should see on the top of a blog is how to communicate with the author. The purpose of social media is to have presence and communicate with people. Social media is two way communication.

The currency of blogging and social media is trust and attention. This means not just using things like twitter, but combining them with older methods like email marketing. If you want a successful blog you should make things easily accessible and help people. Also, you should give a reason for people to visit your blog. Part of that reason it to point to places where people can find useful information.

Most blog and web tools are free and cheap. It is more important to invest in educating yourself in how the tools work than buying very expensive technology. Most of the tools he demonstrated on the screen like http://www.twitterfall.com/ and http://www.wordpress.org/ are free.

He mentioned a software application for annotating different locations in the world called Bright Kite using an Iphone. You can say things about specific locations when you visit them. He compared this to William Gibson's science fiction novel Spook Country where the main character used virtual reality to annotate different physical locations. He called this ARG (Alternate Reality Games). It sounds like one of those classic techie things where you can do unusual things with the internet.

Another idea he expressed was that publishers were becoming information brokers. A book is a package or bundle of information. He said that if he buys a book, he should be able to read the physical copy, listen to it in the car, and read it on his iphone on the way into the office. It should be a complete experience. I rather liked this idea. I can see this happening easily in the not too distant future.

Twitter was a large part of the conversation and tools built around Twitter. He compared Twitter to the phone of the future. I rather like Twitter, I was very impressed with his over 30,000 followers on his Twitter feed. I intend to read his tips for blogging on his blog to figure out how to improve what I am currently doing.

Part of this conversation which was all over the place was about authors. One of the authors he mentioned was Neil Gaiman who has a blog at http://www.neilgaiman.com/ and a twitter feed at neilhimself. Although, he did not mention it, the author who I most think of in connection with Neil Gaiman is Jonathan Carroll http://www.jonathancarroll.com/

I asked him about social networks. He pulled out a few suggestions, Shelfari, Librarything, and http://blog.bookoven.com/ An audience member mentioned a site called Red Room. I have Shelfari on my website. I have never heard of Red Room or Book Oven. I also learned about another social networking site for books later in the day, Authonomy. There is also http://www.aalbc.com/ African American Literarature Book Club, http://www.litminds.org/ Lit Minds.

There was the classic mention that people are no longer just consumers of content, they are now producers. A Flip Mino for the price of $100-120 can produce cheap web video. You can buy a domain and very easily redirect content to it through one of the many different sites: ustream.tv, blogtv.com, blogtalkradio.com, blip tv, and viddler.com.

Another theme was something he called, "Cafe Shaped Conversations," or small focused discussiions that relate directly to the reader.

The talk was very open ended, but I can remember large amounts of it still because the speaker was quite vivid. There were other things being discussed, but these are the things which I remember the most from the talk.

I will continue describing the second session after I take the time to rearrange my notes. The second session was as deep as the first session.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Daily Thoughts, New York Comic Con

Pierre-Auguste Renoir Madame Monet Reading Le Figaro, 1872, 54x72cm. Lisbon, Fundacao Calouste Gulbenkian Museu.


Daily Thoughts

I am going to the Jacob Javits Center in Manhattan for New York Comic Con this morning.

On the way to the conference, I finished reading Halo, The Cole Protocol by Tobias Buckell. Then I started reading Six Hours Past Thursday by Jack Payne. There is an inscription inside the front cover of the book dated 3/11/05 "To the staff, friends, and patrons of the Stonehill College Library. I am honored by your invitation to join your circle. Thank you for welcoming me"-- Jack Payne. The book came all the way from Eastham, Massachusetts.

The conference was at the Jacob Javits Center, because I was going on my own time, I decided to skip the panels and just walk around and look at the conference floor. There was a nice professional lounge in back with coffee and popcorn and tables to sort through things. I picked up a variety of buttons and similar things to use as giveaways for the young adult programming.

There was a very long line of professional attendees. I had to wait about an hour to get in. The conference floor was packed with people. I was surprised by some of the things I saw. There were a lot of video games being displayed that are based on comics, as well as several films based on comic books. In addition, there were a variety of different collectible card games other than Magic the Gathering being promoted.

Many people were in costume. Lots of Star Wars costumes, some Otaku (manga costumes), some video game costumes (Halo was popular) and a few character costumes from comic books. A lot of people had light saber props or futuristic science fiction weaponry toys. People were taking pictures of people in costume. There were a lot of people wandering around with video cameras as well.



There were many vendors selling comic books. Some of them were selling $1 comics, and 3 for a $1 comics. Lots of the older comic books were being deeply discounted up to 50% off. There appears to be a huge glut of superhero comics from the 1980s and 1990s which makes most of them not worth anything. This is good if you just want to read comic books or get something as a present, but not so great for people who are hoping to make money off of old comic books.

Most of the publishers were focused on seling book length graphic novels more than anything else as well as books on how to draw, write comics, draw manga, animate films, and the history of comics. I think they are finding this much more lucrative than selling individual comic books.

I spent a little bit of money and bought a few comic books, Death Rattle 1, 2, and 3 by Kitchen Sink and a few copies of Max Allan Collins hard boiled detective comic Ms. Tree.

I had a chance to go to the artists corner. I did not see Kyle Baker. The artist who I was most interested in seeing Colleen Doran who writes A Distant Soil, was packed with people. Also Peter David, a writer who started out with Star Trek had quite a few people at his table. I bought #1-5 of Death Dealer published by Image Comics for $10. The artist and the writer signed the copies on the front cover. In total, I spent $15 buying things and got into the conference for free.

There was a lot of original artwork being sold. They had a very large set of artists tables. Most of the artists were freelancers who worked for a variety of companies. I did not see as many older artists as you might expect. Most of the artists were professionals in the twenty to fifty age range. There wasn't a lot of x-rated material. There was some cheesecake, things like Betty Page, and pinup girl books. Some people were dressed up a little bit in that style, but not overly revealing.

The major publishers were there, Dark Horse, Top Shelf, DC, Marvel, NBM, Fantagraphics, Oni, Tokyopop, Del Rey Manga, along with a variety of minor and independent publishing houses. There were also quite a few science fiction publishers, Tor, Bantam Spectra, Bantam Del Rey, Wiley, Avon Eos, and many others.

I picked up a variety of publishers catalogs, Rosen Graphics, NBM Spring 2009, Papercutz, Abrams Comic Art, Disney, Titan Books, Top Shelf, and Dark Horse. I also picked two advanced reading copies for me to read, Linnea Sinclair, Hope's Folly and A. Lee Martinez, Monsters A Novel.

I am also donating six new paperbacks which were given as freebies, as well as a graphic novel, Method Man and a trade paperback, Iron Man Beneath The Armor by Andy Mangels to the library which were free.

I got a chance to ask about a few things which I saw, A Dance With Dragons by George R.R. Martin probably won't be out until past Fall 2009. Also, there will be a new League of Extraordinary Gentlemen graphic Novel, 1901, probably in September of 2009. They are releasing it in March of 2009 in the United Kingdom.

I was hoping to see some of my colleagues, but there were so many people that it was hard to recognize anyone. I recognized a few of the vendors from other conferences I had been at.

I enjoyed my brief stay at the conference. I spent about five hours there which was enough. Some of it can be a bit odd. Sometimes you wonder about all the different little figurines and statues which people buy. One of the most interesting products I saw at the conference were personalized computer thumb drives in the shape of different cartoon characters.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Good Morning, Conferences


Isaac Asimov in his younger days. Did you know the early term for science fiction in 1925 was scientifiction?

Good Morning

On the train to work I started reading Getting Results For Dummies by Mark H. McCormack. This book is really interesting because the author is in sports management. When he gives examples he uses famous sports figures like Tiger Woods and Arnold Palmer. He also uses a lot of anecdotes and real world examples. I rather like this quote, "A pen, a legal pad, and a plan are all you need to get organized."

When I came into work the book Copyediting and Proofreading for Dummies was waiting for me. I think that will be the next book which I read.

I organized the main display on the floor, did some weeding in the social sciences, and made a phone call to confirm that Westchester Residential Opportunities was going to do a "Foreclosure Information Workshop" at the library on January 29, 2008. I am looking forward to seeing this done. I have also contacted the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America about doing another workshop on foreclosure as well.

Today was a snow day. City employees got to go home early. I rushed to finish another set of orders for mass market paperbacks from Baker and Taylor's Paperclips and finished an order with ten minutes to spare before one o'clock.

Then it was into the snow and freezing rain. The trains were very slow and crowded, but I still had a chance to read some more of Getting Results for Dummies. I also had a large cup of coffee to keep my insides warm. I am enjoying the book despite the mundane subject. The author is a surprisingly good writer.

Conferences

I am hoping I can attend a wide variety of conferences this year.

On February 6-8, 2009 is New York Comic Con at the Jacob Javits Center. It looks to be a very good conference this year. I look forward to going there. Hopefully, I will collect a lot of material for the library there. http://www.nycomiccon.com/App/homepage.cfm?moduleid=2577&appname=100453

On Friday, May 8, 2009 is the Westchester Library Association. I am going there as well. The conference is titled: Making A Difference: Changing Libraries for Changing TimesDoubletree Hotel, Tarrytown NY

On May 28-31, 2009 is Book Expo America at the Jacob Javits Center. I am definitely going to try and be there as well. Book Expo America is held every other year in New York. I plan on collecting a very large amount of publishing catalogs when I go there as well as requesting to put our library on publishing mailing lists.

Monday, May 19, 2008

Thoughts For Today, Conferences And Expos

The Puck Building Where the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art (MOCCA) Art Festival will be held.


Two books came in for me today, Steve Resnick Tem and Melanie Tem, The Man on the Ceiling. The Man on the Ceiling is a novel based on the World Fantasy Award winning Novella of the same title. I hope it is interesting. The other book that came in for me to read today is Jeffrey D. Sachs, Common Wealth, Economics For A Crowded Planet. It was on the bestseller list.

I saw two titles that seemed rather interesting to me that the library does not have. The first is The Last Wish by Andrzej Sapkowski. It is a series of novellas set in a Polish fantasyland. It was very popular in Poland. The novel is the basis for the computer roleplaying game, The Witcher. The story is about a person who hunts monsters. I am hoping this will be a little bit different than the run of the mill fantasy stories. My understanding is that it is not written for children, it is a fairly mature story.

The other title was Cash & Carry by Tim Broderick. It is a noire graphic novel. I think it is still advertised in my Project Wonderful adspace. He is getting a bargain 4 cents a day for an ad on a website.

I was fooling around with more social networking software and I came across a rather interesting social networking site called, Upcoming, http://www.upcoming.yahoo.com/ . It is a social networking site that functions as an event listing service. The events listed reminded me of the dot com boom. It was like the dotcommies were coming out of the word work. You sometimes wonder where they are hiding.

The listings seemed to be somewhat similar to the type of thing you might see on Bernardo's List http://www.bernardoslist.com/ . I find Bernardo's List to be quite entertaining and somewhat odd. It is fun to read even if you don't go to the events.

It seems that if I really wanted to I could go on a flashback trip to the dotcom boom with its weirdly titled companies and excessive venture capital. The first week of June in New York is Internet Week. I feel like I could stand around drink beer, and have nachos in the staff lounge while watching foosball at an odd little company. There is something seriously nostalgic about this series of events. http://www.internetweekny.com/schedule/list. I haven't decided whether I want to try any of them out yet.

I feel the call of tech howling in the wind. There are a few other events which I am in the shadow of. Next Week on May 30, 2008, they are holding Enterprise Search Engine Summit. I really do like search engines. But, it costs over a thousand dollars to attend this thing. I am not even sure where I would fit in with this crowd. It has that vague feeling of somehow being mildly attached to librarianship in an outre fashion.

There are so many fascinating and odd conferences floating around New York. If you haven't found out by now, I rather like conferences and expo. I find them to be quite entertaining. There is also the Linked Data Planet Expo at the Roosevelt Hotel on June 17 and 18th. In an odd way, again, I can claim this is vaguely related to librarianship, they are after all talking about metadata, searching for things, and linking data.

Finally, there is another conference that looks rather confusing but might be entertaining, The Media Bistro Circus. I am not sure how I could justify this to my boss. Look, I am going to the circus, it doesn't have any elephants but it has plenty of clowns. Chris Andersen, Editor-in-Chief of Wired Magazine will be there. I think it looks like something I can somehow relate to librarianship. They are after all talking about how traditional media meets the new media. It is even at the Skylight Studio, tomorrow May 20 and May 21. http://www.mediabistrocircus.com/
The event costs $545 which is more than the price of a cup of coffee in New York.

New York is just a happening place, but all these things cost money and time which I don't have a whole lot of right now. Instead I am probably going to spend my $10 entrance fee and go to the MOCCA Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art Art Festival in the Puck Building on June 7. Something which is affordable and just in my price range. Internet Week might also have something in the mish mash, it is also free. Maybe someone can get me a volunteer pass for the Media Bistro Circus or let me help out at a booth. But, I doubt it.

Friday, May 9, 2008

Westchester Library Association Conference

On May 9, 2008, I attended the Westchester Library Association one day conference held in Tarrytown. I took the Metro North up to Tarrytown. It was a long slow ride. On the way up, I read some more of Robert Grave's The Reader Over Your Shoulder. I am almost done reading it. The conference registration started at 8:00 a.m. which was quite early. I had time to get some grapefruit juice, coffee, and minimuffins.

I got a chance to look at the vendors in the morning. Archie Comics was there. They have a new design for their title Betty & Veronica. I actually like the new style of drawing, it is much cleaner and easier to look at. It looks a lot less cartoonish and the characters are a bit more diverse than before. The vendor gave me a free sample copy. The title is Betty & Veronica, Bad Boy Trouble. I think teenage girls will probably like this in a library setting.



I also picked up a discount sheet for Pimsleur language learning tapes-- 50% off.

The name of the conference was Sparkle, Dazzle, Shine.

The opening speaker was Jeff Connell, The Deputy Commissioner of Cultural Education of New York. His office is in Albany. He is governed by the Board of Regents. He talked about his position in the library world. His responsibilities include educational tv, the state museum, the state archives, and the state library in Albany.

He quoted Thomas Jefferson, "Information is the currency of Democracy." Then he gave a long rambling speech about his experiences as a librarian before he became a deputy commissioner. A lot of it was about merchandising books and improving circulation statistics.

The good news from him is that the state is not cutting the baseline funding of $14 million dollars from the New York State Library, but they are cutting 2% from additional requested funds.

There is also a position open for a new state librarian in Albany, New York..

The reason I was there more than anything else was because of a session called. "May I Please Blow Up The Reference Desk." by Traci Hall, Assistant Dean of Dominican University library. The main point was that the reference desk created physical and cultural barriers to doing reference work. Traci Hall claimed that the reference desk was a symbol of the 19th and 20th century, not a symbol of the 21st century.

She further claimed that the job of the librarian was to help the patron at their point of origin not make them go back to a reference desk. She was quite lively and stated that she was aiming to stir up a bit of trouble. She brought out the example of libraries failing and having to recreate themselves. For example in England, in some of the more troubled libraries, they were renamed as "Idea Stores."

She also used another example of the Infoplank, or Swedish cataloging system that is multilingual. She said we are no longer living in a monoculture, the world is changing into a multicultural, mobile, globalized world.

She then brough up ten key points. I am rewriting them in my own language because, there was a lot of jargon used which might not be understandable for people outside of libraries or in general.

1) We have a diverse multicultural, multilingual, globalized world.

2) People are dropping out of school early, and prolonging their college education. The educational system is failing. We have help people get educated.

3) People learn in groups.

4) People use informal peer review systems like Amazon.

5) We want have things customized for us personally.

6) We want things brought to us instead of having to go there.

7) An immediate human voice is preferable to a computer intermediary.

8) There are gatekeepers to peoples needs.

9) People using social networking want immediate sensation and results.

10) People are trading on popularity and empathy.

After this she started talking about how we need a new kind of librarian. It was kind of interesting. It was also a little overblown. The constant focus on the new was distracting. The message seemed to be teach people how to learn. This was the original basis for building the Carnegie Libraries. Libraries were not originally built for entertainment. They were built for self-education.

This is a summary of her ideas. Because, I am paraphrasing her, I am not sure that this is the exact meaning of what she said. I think it is close. One website which I found interesting that she mentioned was http://www.aadl.org/ Ann Arbor District Library which has their library website completely redesigned as a blog.

After the opening speech and the first lecture, we broke for lunch. I sat with my colleagues and gabbed for a little bit. The lunch was quite nice. I had the vegetarian plate which was vegetables with tofu, a salad, and an apple tart for dessert. They held a raffle, but I had already gone downstairs for the next lecture.

After lunch was over and coffee was served. Traci Hall gave the keynote speech which was on diversity. It was called Library 911. The key points she brought up were that libraries are diverse institutopms with a wide variety of people using them and libraries should be embedded in their communities. They should participate in things like the chambers of commerce and community events. She gave a brief quote from John D. Rockefeller, "I will pay more for the ability to deal with people than for any ability under the sun."

The last lecture I attended was "From Dress Casual to Eye Candy, Outfitting Our LIbraries For Online Social Networking." The librarian giving the lecture said her favorite library web site on Myspace was http://www.myspace.com/brackenlibrary . The library website which she ran on Myspace, Brooklyn College Library had 3980 freinds. It also had music, photographs, and instructional videos. It was very interesting to look at.

Following the Myspace examples, she gave examples of Librarians using facebook. One librarian facebook page which she said stood out was Gerry McKiernan.

One site which she mentioned teaches a free course for librarians on social networking called, "Five Weeks To A Social Library."
http://www.sociallibraries.com/course/

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Thoughts for Today

On Friday, May 9, from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. , I will attending the Westchester Library Association conference. http://www.westchesterlibraryassociation.org/Registration.pdf

I plan on attending the sections:

A) May I please blow up this reference desk?

This session is already causing some interesting reactions and consternation at work. To say it mildly, my attending this session should be quite controversial. I think it is about social and cultural changes which are affecting reference. There might be a dose of 'multicultural' style thinking.

H) From dress casual to eye candy: Outfitting our libraries for online social networking.

This also should shake things up a bit. It might make me a bit on the sharp end of things at work as well. There is nothing quite like taking a little bit of risk. I am afraid, I can't stick my head in the sand this time. I might get blindsided.

In a way, I am looking forward to this. It will be a challenge to my way of thinking. I will be thinking on how to both refute and support the points being made. Also, with the social networking, much of it is very nonsensical. I am hoping that people use some common sense with this kind of thing.

Today was a busy day. I mostly made sure a lot of the things in reference were in order. I ordered some law books, made some suggestions for new law titles, checked the new books and other every day tasks.

I have been reading a little bit more of The Reader Over Your Shoulder by Robert Graves and Alan Hodge. Reading this book is like eating bread putting, it is slow to chew, and takes a long time to digest. I think I can handle about thirty to forty pages at a sitting. It will take a while for me to read this book.

I tried reading Harald by David Friedman, but I could not get into it. It is a middling medieval fantasy, not great not bad, but it just could not capture my attention.

I also have read a few pages of V.S. Naipaul, A Writer's People Ways of Looking and Feeling which so far is enjoyable reading. It is a memoir of Naipaul's life as a writer. Maybe I am reading too much at once.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Thoughts For Today




I haven't been doing a huge amount lately. I cut up scrap paper into small pieces for patrons to take notes on and picked up some reserve slips for people calling in to make reserves for items to be held at the front desk. It has been a quiet day so far.

On the train in I read a little bit more of Victory Conditions by Elizabeth Moon. So far, it has been light entertaining space opera with a military touch. I rather like Elizabeth Moon's writing because she has had some military experience as a United States marine and is definitely interested enough in her subject.

Having read a whole bunch of books on grammar and writing recently has changed my reading experience. Now, some books seem much less well put together; others seem to be much better crafted. Reading about writing changes the readers experience.

Sometimes small things of interest pop up in the regular news. Apparently, a Finnish person returned their library book 100 years later anonymously. It is a nice light article. This seems to happen occassionally. People sometimes return their grandparents books which they had laying around the house.


http://uk.reuters.com/article/oddlyEnoughNews/idUKL1180241320080312

I have been getting various emails from New York Comic Con updating me about what is happening at the convention. If you are a librarian in New York, you can register to attend the conference for free as a professional. I am going on April 18. They had panels on manga, anime, and comics librarianship which were going to the last time I was there. They have been sending me various free movie offers for forthcoming films which are interesting. Unfortunately, I don't have time to go to the films. I saw a really interesting article in Library Journal online. Neil Gaiman is doing an evening to support the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.


Book News: Neil Gaiman NY Comic-Con Reading To Benefit Comic Book Legal Defense Fund

http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6540270.html?desc=topstory
I took some time to read a little bit of professional literature. I went through my stack of four publishers weekly. The March 10, 2008 Publishers Weekly is especially interesting. It is a green publishing issue. On Pp. 26-32 there is an article called Toward A Greener Future by Jim Milliott. I found it very interesting. Some of the initiatives including e-galleys, and giving editors ebook readers to limit paper use sounded effective. There is also a push to use more recycled paper in books. For example, Random House intends to use 30% recycled paper by 2010.

The sponsor of these changes is an organization called the Green Press Initiative; http://www.greenpressinitiative.org/ I think this is a step forward. I saw, no surprise, Gary Hirshberg, advertising his book Stirring It Up, which I reviewed earlier in the March 10,2008 issue of Publishers Weekly.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Google and Libraries One Day Conference

Hello, today, I went to a one day conference. Google and Libraries, An International Conference Sponsored by the International Information and Analystical Center (ILIAC) at the Harriman Institute and Columbia Libraries. I took the #2 subway train up to Columbia University around West 118th street. Columbia University in New York is an edifice of brick and stone with very little greenery. It is in an exclusive area in the upper west side of New York.

The conference was on the fifteenth floor. They had coffee when I got there at 8:45 a.m. in the morning. The Metro New York Library Council listed the event. http://www.metro.org/

When I got there the room was full. It was rather interesting, because many of the people were from Russia or other European Union countries. There were four speakers that day. They covered a huge amount of material. I won't be able to even finish writing about it in this post, there was so much material covered. The four speakers were Yakov Shraiberg, Jill Cirasella, Laura Quilter, and Siva Vaidhyanathan.

They all managed to hold my interest for the whole conference. I found these particular things which they talked about in each session to be the best parts of the sessions.

Yakov Shraiberg in his session, Google and Libraries of Russia & the CIS quoted Larry Page with the following quote, "The best working search engine is the one that comprehends what the user is seeking and provides him/her exactly what he/she wants." In Russia, Google is the third most used search engine after Yandex and Ramber. http://www.yandex.com/ is completely in Russian, so is http://rambler.ru/

Jill Cirasella in her session, Reference Retooled: How Google Tools Strengthen and Streamline Reference basically spoke an ode to how useful Google tools are for the reference librarian. She mentioned a couple of new tools which I hadn't heard of, Google Suggestions http://www.google.com/webhp?complete=1&hl=en, a tool which comes up with suggested endings for searches, and Google Sets http://labs.google.com/sets, a tool which identifies words that part of a set. These are both example of where Reference often fails to clarify a question. They are both experimental search engines part of the Google Labs website http://labs.google.com/sets. I am not quite sure what this means.

She also showed the video which I have seen at many conferences, Information Revolution by Michael Walsh. The video is available on the internet, however, he specifically asks that you not post it on your website if you sell anything. I am not posting it here because of this. With this, she suggested that people read the article "Ontology Is Overrated" by Clay Shirky. http://www.shirky.com/writings/ontology_overrated.html

At this point after the first two speakers we had lunch. I chose vegetarian, because most take out vegetarian is better than ham and cheese sandwiches. They had a mozzarella, red pepper, and eggplant sandwich for vegetarians.

The third speaker,

Laura Quilter talked about Google, Digitalization Projects, and Library Contracts.

A lot of this was about how Google often presented difficult contracts for libraries to follow for digitization of their books. There are numerous lawsuits going on against Google Books, specifically, the Association of American Publishers, and the Publishers and Authors Guild concerning copyright. The lawsuits are focused on Fair Use. Google is claiming that Google Booksearch is a form of Fair Use, while others are claiming it is not.

In response to the Google Digitalization Projects, Microsoft has formed the Open Content Alliance, another digitalization project for public domain materials.

Apparently, many libraries that participated in the Google Digitalization projects are having difficulties with the contracts. There are often exclusivity clauses on how the scanned materials can be used. Also many libraries are reacting against the idea of turning what they consider public domain use over to a private company like Google. The issues presented were interesting. To find out more please look at her website http://lquilter.net/index.php

The last speaker was Siva Vaidhyanathan, whose presentation was The Googlization of Everything. What was very interesting was that he said that Google personalizes all of its searches to the individual based on the IP address or the log in to Google of the person in question. This mean different people get different results based on their search histories.

Siva talks about how Google is trying to become a "Universal library." Their mission statement is very similar to what librarians normally do. He quotes Google with this "To organize the world's information and make it universally accessible." He also quotes the famous line attributed to the unofficial byline of Google, "Don't Be Evil."

He is also is quite critical of Google in some ways. He thinks of them as a private company moving into an excessively public space. The Google definition of "Fair Use" is quite expansive.
He has a blog http://www.sivacracy.net/ . Unfortunately, it was down today, Monday, while he was at the conference. He was taking notes though. I think he will post quite a bit.

I was surprised. You could almost say that Wikipedia is becoming all things to all people. It is part of the universal library concept. I have noticed that Wikipedia is increasingly showing up at the top of Google searches. They are becoming more and more popular. I like to think that some of the original founders who were part of the Dorsai Embassy, http://amanda.dorsai.org/ decided to get together and build the "Final Encyclopedia," a concept forwarded by Gordon R. Dickson as part of his Childe Cycle in science fiction. This is of course a silly rumor. Still, I hope it spreads a bit.

I use both Google and Wikipedia regularly. Google is my favorite for general searches, but for directory searches, I still like Yahoo. For concise searches, I often use Mamma. They are different tools used for different purposes. If I want to find web sites with databases built into them I use Complete Planet which is a site listing over 70,000 searchable databases. http://aip.completeplanet.com/

The one disappointment I had with this conference is that they did not provide me with a permanent name badge with the name of the conference. I would have added it to my bag of conference buttons. I got a staples peel off to put my name on. I have the conference program, I may save it. They also had a nice wall calendar in russian and english as a free giveaway.

I am very surprised at the quality of the conference. Very few one day conferences have interesting speakers for all four sessions.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Morning Thoughts

A visitor at Googleplex in Mountainview, California signing in.


Right now, I am reading Sunshine by Robin McKinley, it is a Mythopoeic award winner. I am enjoying it tremendously. I am waiting for Stardust by Neil Gaiman. I was hoping that I could get the movie and the book so I could compare them. I will probably have to wait a couple months, I am number 142 for the waiting list on the film. Neil Gaiman is very popular.

He is so popular that people will treasure his signature on paper napkins and wait hours in line to see him read his book. I think he is one of those people who also conserves his signature, not giving it to anyone and everyone.

I have stacks of books at home waiting to be returned to the library. I have to be careful that I return everything. While fines sometimes are excused for people who work in the library, lost books are still charged to library workers. So, we do have to return books or end up paying for them eventually.

I read two professional journals online in addition to the ones in print. Reading Library Journal online lead me to this blog entry. Apparently it is not allowed to lend out Kindle ebook readers. I can't imagine we' ll have any reason to get kindle ebook readers. But, we do have laptops.
http://rochellejustrochelle.typepad.com/copilot/2008/01/loaning-kindle.html#comment-98970820

I also sometimes read Bookselling This Week, mainly for the book reviews.
http://news.bookweb.org/

I am looking for a good excuse to get away from my library for a day. I looked at Metro, the Metropolitan Library Council for New York and they have a really interesting one day conference next month called "Google & Libraries", I think it will be both entertaining and on some levels very useful. I am going to try and go there. It may take some doing for me to convince them to let me go to this thing. On Monday, I am going to ask my supervisor if I can go to this thing. I hope they give me a badge so I can add it to my badge collection when I go.
http://www.metro.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=215&Itemid=424