I’ve just returned after a complete whirlwind of a week. I spent 5 days in New Orleans at ALA, then drove to Columbus, OH for the Origins game fair, the second largest gaming convention in the country. So much stuff to talk about, but I’m completely exhausted. So instead of writing, you all get: My Week In Pictures!
ClaimID
If you are interested in Identity online (and I believe that this is the next big area of the net is identity management across platforms), ClaimID is now off beta, and available for signup. Check out Fred’s announcement for info on the launch.
I’ve been using ClaimID for some time now while it was in beta, and the development team has done an amazing job integrating information issues/needs into the tool. Take a look, play with it, and see if it does what you need.
Why Would Anyone Listen to These Three?
Originally uploaded by Wandering Eyre.
Great pic by Michelle Boule, just prior to the LITA presentation that she chaired and I, Karen Coombs (to stage left in the photo), and Steven Bell took part in. The presentation was titled “Next Step Blogging” and will be revealed in its entirety on LITABlog (as soon as Karen Schneider finishes it up…). My slides can be found here. It went remarkably well, with an absolute standing-room-only audience. Next time we need a bigger boat.
Blogger Bash 2006
President-Elect of the ALA, Leslie Burger, had a wonderful gathering last night for Library Bloggers and librarians from the Katrina effected gulf coast. Hearing their stories, seeing their faces, and hearing the statistics (millions of books lost, hundreds of people without jobs, dozens of libraries destroyed)…truly sobering. The recurring message:
Do. Not. Send. Books.
They have more books than they can process…if your library is doing a book drive, stop it. Instead, send money…for repairs, for staff, for new buildings. That’s the need, and after having driven through the affected area, the need is more than I can say.
IF, and only if, you have to buy books, you should use the Amazon wishlists they’ve set up:
Dewey Donation System
Gaiman!
ALA Day One – Google!
Tales, Tips and Tools: Book Search, Scholar and the Library Team
Ben Burnell, Google Library Partnerships
Once more: notes in the form of a bulleted list!
- Larry and Sergey’s idea started as a library concept…digitize the library, make it rankable.
- Google
PrintBook Search divides books into three main IP categories: Public Domain (hey, I won a hat for knowing who Emily Dickinson was!), In Print, and “other”. - Here’s a sobering thought: over the Google 5 (the five libraries in the Book Print project), 60% of the books in the libraries are held in only one of the participating libraries.
- Another sobering statistic: of the Google 5, only 20% of the books in the library are in the public domain.
- Example from Google Book Search: Earl Robichau, in a picture in a book, is discovered when his great nephew find his name in Google Book Search.
- 5% of books are currently in print.
- The “snippet” view is designed to legally display and make findable the other books…those not in print and those not in the public domain.
- So there are three ways to look at a book in Book Search: Full Book View (Public Domain), Snippet view (Unknown copyright status), Sample Pages view (In Print, agreement with publishers).
- Will provide article results, book results, and citation results.
- Great quote: It’s better to be frustrated than ignorant.
- At AASL, Google handed out 200 invitations to the Google Librarian Newsletter…and got 3000 signups in a week.
Google Scholar
More ALA love…
…over at LITABlog! We’ve got a veritable army of bloggers covering the convention, and we’ll have tons of info flowing in over the next 3 days.
ALA Day One – Website as a Branch
First program/panel: Website as a Branch. The room is standing room only, so I’m forced to sit way back on the floor, which limits my view of the slides. The notes below are largely from the verbal portion due to that.
Presentation by Broward County Library in Florida. Short bullet point summary:
- Put yourself in the user’s place when you start the redesign.
- Then ask your users what they want.
- Identify user sets that you want to focus the website towards.
- Struggle with IT on campus wide issues.
- Identify technology and how to best use it to present information to users.
- All users agreed that navigation is a key issue.
- Staff needs more efficient way to update site.
- Cross-referenced navigation…users don’t want to have to backtrack in order to go to another portion of the site (in web speak: multiple entry points for each piece of content).
- How do you usability test distance users?
- Update/discard content…not something that librarians are NOT very good at.
- Keep in mind that users only tell you when something is wrong. If no one complains about the website, it’s doing ok.
- Empower librarians AND make them responsible for the content…where they should be.
- Give users warning of change, and allow them options for some time.
Headin’ down to New Orleans…
As of tomorrow morning, I’ll be on my way to the Big Easy for the American Library Association conference. For those attending, if you see me, say “hi!” and make sure and attend the Monday 10:30 LITA Session “Next Step Blogging: Building a professional blog for your library” so that you may heckle me. It’s in the Convention Center Room 342. I’m also going to be out and attending a lot of the blogger shindigs, so I’m sure I’ll run into bunches of you.
I’m planning on blogging as much of the conference as I can, both here and over at LITABLog. There will be text, pictures, and other goodies…Stay tuned!
He of Books
Betsy just sent me the coolest thing…a translation of mayan glyphs that include the symbol for librarian!
It also translates as “one who keeps, guards, or venerates.” How cool is that? I think I’ve found my next tattoo….there’s also a female version:
These are from FAMSI, a great site dealing with the history and cultures of mesoamerica.
Any librarians heading to New Orleans for ALA this weekend that want to track down a tattoo shop and get inked?