Computers In Libraries Conference : preconf: Web Services in Libraries (APIs)

Uncategorized

Gah- just deleted all sorts of links about what I am doing.

At an API workshop with Karen Coombes and Jason Clark. Tweeting on @libsmatter and CoverItLive is below:

Liveblog of Future of Libraries non-summit at Darien

Uncategorized

I hope to liveblog In the Foothills: A Not-Quite-Summit on the Future of Libraries at Darien Library tomorrow, 26 March 2009 from 9:30amish US Eastern Standard time. For Australians, that is 10:30pm Western Australian time.

I have embedded the CoverItLive window here and will also be tweeting from @libsmatter – wireless connection willing… If you are attending and would like to have your tweets pulled into the CoverItLive window, please let me know your twitter ID via the reader comment box in CoverItLive. I will also be pulling in all public tweets that are hash tagged#futurelibs09 .

Here is a picture of John Blyberg preparing for the day …

I will update this post with more details after the day, so you may want to check back if you are reading this via RSS.

I’m a LSW Shover and Maker 2009 .

Uncategorized

Well, it had to happen.

Carping Nerdboys, Josh Neff and Steve Lawson, with the cheering encouragement from the  Library Society of the World have created the award for the rest of us …. the 2009 Shovers and Makers.

I’ve got one..

You can be a Shover and Maker too. The rules are that you have to write and post your own nomination. No-one else can do it for you.

Just tell the world about something library-ish that you did of which you are proud. Of *course* you did something in 2009. Wouldn’t it be nice to make the “world” bit of the Library Society of the World ring true with a whole bunch of Australian awardees?

Library Camp Kansas 18 March 2009

Uncategorized

I’m at Kansas State University today, attending Library Camp Kansas.

CoverItLive coverage is below and I’ll be tweeting via @libsmatter also.

UPDATE: It was a very good, but very tiring day. If you seach for libcampks09, you will find more material.

I ended up facilitating two sessions – one on how to find a place for Open Source in our libraries and one on the future of libraries. I also attended a feedback session about Kansas’ plan to run a 23 Things program, and was in the audience at the start of the day to hear lightening talks about:

I was unsure of how to pitch the session on Open Source and how much people would know, so I opened up a whole lot of windows showing different types of OS library projects before we started. I offered to give some background to OS, but the best thing happened. Most of the staff were already implementing Open Source in their libraries, they knew what it was and had very useful and well thought out ideas –  so we cut straight to the chase and started talking. There is a avery good account of the conversation on Sharon‘s blog, Breakout sessions. There is also a very good summary of the session on it’s own page of the Library Camp wiki, Open Source .

I was so glad to have a chance to learn from the folk from North East Kansas Library System . They have implemented Koha and many have been using and preferring Open Source products for years.  They concluded that while not free, Open Source has been cheaper for them than proprietary software. The other compelling reason was the control that they now have over their system. They reflected that they needed to work differently and accept that the product will be updated and improved frequently. They think that the allocation of 2.5 FTE staff to the implemtation of the system was about right, but they hadn’t envisaged just how much work those people would have. They shared that it is important for any library implemention Open Source to ensure that they “find a good nerd” to tweak the system.

In the afternoon I led a session on the “Future of Libraries”. The group were very, very gracious when I explained that I was doing a similar session at Darien and wanted to see how it would go.  I suggested that we look at content, community, people and place. Content = our book stock , what we link to, archive, the “collection”. Place = our buildings and our online sites. People = library staff. Community = our users and what they can do now. We covered the first three very nicely.  Again, Sharon had a good summary, Breakout sessions .

I was also very, very happy to finally meet four of my “imaginary friends” – Josh, Erin, Bobbie and Royce.

The Trip Day 4: Lawrence Kansas USA

Uncategorized

Downtown Lawrence is like the American Dream – shops selling patchwork and antiques and beautiful things;  and everything decked out in the colours of the local university sporting teams -all known as the Jayhawks. Even the Police cars have cartoon characters of Jayhawks painted on the side.

There are genuine fraternity houses on the hill near the University of Kansas and today, a Saturday, students having cook outs on their front lawns. Navigation is easy as all the streets one way are named after US States and all the streets running in the other direction are numbered. I am staying on the corner of Ohio and 10th.

About a kilometre away, the strip mall is more like the American Nightmare – huge barn-like stores with names like “Hobby Lobby” and “Party America”, lots of cracked concrete and more pickup trucks than I’ve ever seen in one place. The drive-in bank autotellers are strangely fascinating.

Here there are squirrels playing in the trees, pavement bricks stamped with “Lawrence Kansas”, and the cars only have rear number plates.  The trees and gardens are bare, but there are tulips and daffodils beginning to show. The fields outside Lawrence are all dry in a way that I am only ever used to seeing in our Australian high summer.

I’ve learned that one “rents” a bicycle, not “hires” one; that I actually do say “G’day” as my normal greeting and that asking whether there are “vego” options on a menu will confuse people. I’ve learned that it is not easy for me to adapt to riding a bicycle on the right hand side of the road – I keep looking in all directions just in case someone is coming at me , and I’ll often look at a car’s driver and be astounded (again) to see an eight year old there. I also have to remind myself to walk on the other side on foot paths and going up stairs.

I’ve learned that I need to understand a bit more about Electricity, as I have spent a couple of days trying to work out why my PCs and appliances all went flat. I isolated it to the Australian to US power adapter and ordered three from California via express post yesterday. Imagine my horror when I discovered this morning that an adapter lent by another Australian guest caused the same problem.

After spending six or so hours researching and phoning around this morning, I rode to Uni computers – pronounced “You an I”, not “Uni” – where I had resigned myself to buying an Acer Aspire One. No power inverter or replacement power brick could reach me by Monday when my meetings start, and I’m a couple of days behind already. Imagine my surprise when the computer guy pulled out a universal cable to connect to my power brick and it worked. Does it have Magic Voltage Converting wire in it or something? I don’t know, just am grateful that it only cost me $15.

I seem to have avoided jetlag. I took travel writer Peter Greenberg’s advice, How to avoid jetlag – except the minute I took on the plane I ate and slept as though I was already on Kansas time. Staying awake on the 11pm – 9am flight from Perth to Tokyo took some doing, but was worth it.

The OLE Project meeting starts on Monday at 8am and I expect to either be at the meeting or interviewing people for my thesis all week without a break. (Well except for Wednesday and Library Camp Kansas ).

A small suitcase, the bookshop cat and in the foothills

Uncategorized

In the last thirty six hours or so, I’ve gone from this (10pm and around 32 degrees C in Fremantle, Western Australia ):

68/365 All Packed. No room for anything else.

To this ( 5:30pm and around -5 degrees C in Lawrence, Kansas)

70/365 With Alice the Bookshop Cat at the Dusty Bookshelf , downtown Lawrence, Kansas

And Library Camp East has morphed into a one day non-summit on the future of libraries (In the Foothills: A Not-Quite-Summit on the Future of Libraries),  and  I’ve agreed to do this:

At many Library conferences these days, we focus on technology so intensely that often we forget to consider the larger work for which technology is just a tool. And perhaps not the most important tool.

Yet, information technology has proliferated and become “humanized” over the last dozen years to the extent that we are now in the midst of revolutionary change. Some even see that change as a threat to the existence of libraries.

As information professionals, we occupy a significant amount of space at the epicenter of that change–but how are we really doing? Are we helping to direct that change or merely responding to it? Are we leveraging change, or simply managing it? As the world of information production and consumption undergoes a complete transformation, how is our place in society affected and what are our responsibilities? How do we justify our existence?

Please join us on Thursday, March 26th at the Darien Library for a conversation with John Berry (Editor-at-large, Library Journal, New York, NY) and Kathryn Greenhill (Emerging Technologies Specialist, Murdoch University Library, Perth Western Australia) about revolutionary change, youth, service, and civic responsibility, and the future of libraries.

Come prepared to participate in group discussion following both speakers. In fact, come prepared to help sketch out the role librarians should play in defining the future of libraries.

Coffee and bagels will be served at 9:00 and we will begin the program at 9:30. Lunch will also be served and we will go until we’ve exhausted the topic (around 5:00). This event is co-sponsored by Darien Library and Connecticut Library Consortium. Attendance is free but please sign-up in advance on the futurelibs09 event wiki: http://futurelibs09.wikispaces.com/Attendee+List

I think I’ll go and get some sleep…

Now access your Zotero library from any PC or from the web

Uncategorized

Oh Hooray. Now Zotero can synchronsise from my laptop PC to my desktop PC to the web. This feature is currently in Beta.

The fact that Zotero was previously limited to just Firefox on one PC was what was stopping me from using it as my major tool to organise and store research citations.

Zotero still automatically extracts bibliographic detail from any page online. It still allows me to save the entire page, article or pdf. It still indexes it for easy retrievability and allows me to tag it and make notes. It still spits out citations in many different formats, and inserts them appropriately in my writing.

I don’t *think* it will write my paper for me yet…

This screencast explains some of the new features: Zotero 1.5 Screencast . This page lists and explains many of the new features: Zotero 1.5 Beta Released: Join Us In The Clouds

I like the (new?) slogan: The web now has a wrangler .

We are all making new media: what libraries need to know

Uncategorized

Here are my slides from this afternoon’s presentation at the Loclib 2009 Biennial Conference : Libraries Transform Communities called We are all making new media: what libraries need to know .

It is nifty that Slideshare now allows embeds of YouTube videos. It is not nifty that they a only work sometimes.

The screencast that shows how to create a digital story using Windows Movie Maker is here, Using Windows Media Maker to create a digital story .

Liveblog: Loclib 2009 Conference: Libraries Transform Communities

Uncategorized

I will be presenting at the Loclib 2009 Biennial Conference : Libraries Transform Communities tomorrow here in Perth. After the conference I will post my slideset for my session: We are all making new media: what libraries need to know

If my wireless connection is willing, I will liveblog the sessions I attend – from breakfast at 7:30am(!!) onward. You can watch the little window in this post to see it update at the same time as I post, or you can follow it via my tweets at @libsmatter on Twitter .
.