Gender in Tech Librarianship | Roy Tennant | The Digital Shift


One of the avenues by which this issue could be improved would be to hire more women into library tech positions in the first place. In my experience there is definitely a barrier to getting hired into these positions, or even interviewed. I was the only graduate in my cohort with a focus in information technology and it was lonely. Whenever I introduce myself to others in my field and I say I specialize in tech, I usually see the same expression, a little confused, a little flabbergasted. Its disheartening. On the flip side, patrons are hugely appreciative of someone they can connect with who can help them with computer literacy and device support.

I’m glad women in librarianship who specialize in tech have professionals in our field like Sarah Houghton and Ellyssa Kroski to, if not wave the banner for our gender, then at least illustrate definitively how intelligent, skilled and multifaceted women can be in library tech. Raising awareness is of utmost importance and this is why I’m lending my own comment to this story. 

Gender in Tech Librarianship | Roy Tennant | The Digital Shift.

Certainly I’ve written about this issue before, and I will keep writing about it until there are no more reasons to do so. But the reason why I’m writing about the issue of gender imbalance in library tech is because I was recently at the Internet Librarian Conference in Monterey, CA, where my esteemed professional colleague and completely famous Sarah Houghton, “Librarian in Black” had organized a panel on this very topic.

The panelists all gave a brief statement from their own experience and perspective (a mix of both women and men), then a microphone was carried around the room for the attendees to provide their own perspectives and stories. And the stories of harassment, put-downs, insults, marginalization, and worse, just rolled right in.

Unfortunately, I was surprised. Surprised because these were not the kind of subtle kinds of discrimination that I knew went on and that I try to prevent or alleviate. For example, packing a speaking panel with men, which happens all to often and a reason for which I have refused to participate at times. No, these stories were much more obvious, egregious, and, in some cases, breathtaking — and not in a good way.

At the end of the program I left depressed. Depressed that such things were happening on a regular basis — not yesterday, not a long time ago, but today. Depressed because since I’d never witnessed anything near what many of the stories related, I was mystified about how I could help prevent them.

But at least getting this out in the open is a start. The unfortunate thing is that those who really needed to be there most likely weren’t, nor will they ever be. So it’s up to us who were in the room, or would have been had they had the chance, to work harder to make all of our workplaces welcoming to all. Until that day arrives, we will soldier on.

At this conference we had the opportunity to have the necessary information sharing. Perhaps at the next one (and ongoing throughout the year in virtual form) we could share some strategies for making things better. That’s a program I could get behind.

Facebook Launches Open Academy To Give Kids College Credit For Open Source Contributions | TechCrunch


A perfect GPA isn’t cool. You know what’s cool? Advancing an open source project. To help computer science students prepare for jobs (and boost its own recruiting efforts) Facebook today publicly launched Open Academy. The partnership with premier CS universities sets up a special class where students get college credit for contributing to open source projects.

Read: Facebook Launches Open Academy To Give Kids College Credit For Open Source Contributions | TechCrunch.

Snail Mail vs. Email | ivancash | Vimeo


I went around San Francisco asking random people on the street how they felt about email versus handwritten letters. This video was created to help promote the Snail Mail My Email project and its third annual event, going on November 11 – 17, 2013.

Snail Mail My Email (snailmailmyemail.org) is a collaborative art project I founded where volunteers handwrite strangers’ emails and send physical letters to the intended recipients, free of charge. The project has since transitioned to a week-long annual event.

via Snail Mail vs. Email from ivancash on Vimeo.

The 10 Fastest-Growing Job Titles Are All in Tech | Mashable


Technology jobs have replaced those in middle management as the positions employers are trying to fill most, new research shows.

A study by job-matching service TheLadders revealed that the fastest-growing jobs shy away from management, and instead require deep educational qualifications and specific skills in the areas of science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

Of the fastest growing job titles over the last five years, seven of the top 10 are technology positions that necessitate specific technical skills for developing software and mining data. Based on their data, the fastest-growing job titles between 2008 and 2013 were:

  • DevOps engineer

  • iOS developer

  • Data scientist

  • UX designer

  • Staff accountant

  • Paralegal

  • UI developer

  • Administrative assistant

  • Android developer

  • Business intelligence developer

Read More: The 10 Fastest-Growing Job Titles Are All in Tech | Mashable.

A Glowing Book That Illuminates More Than Just Your Brain | Gizmodo


Max Gunawan’s wonderful Lumio accordion book lamp has been popping up on design sites for the past year or so. But after a successful Kickstarter campaign earlier this year, it’s finally available for purchase, bringing its soft glow to home libraries around the world

Read: A Glowing Book That Illuminates More Than Just Your Brain | Gizmodo

Book Lamp

8 Treasures That Are Too Precious To Display In Museums (PHOTOS) | Molly Oldfield | HuffPo


I traveled the globe to the world’s most interesting museums, bypassing the main galleries in favor of the things you can’t usually see. The things I found were astounding; in the basement of the Royal Society in London, I put my eye to Newton’s telescope, just as he did centuries ago in his lab in the Tower of London; in Edinburgh I pored over the original draft of Auld Lang Syne, now sung all over the world at New Year; at the New York Public Library I held a letter opener which belonged to Dickens — the handle was made the paw of his beloved cat Bob; and in the Vatican observatory in the countryside outside Rome, I marveled at pieces of Mars.

Two years of adventures later I had written the stories of sixty objects, their hidden location and the curators who care for them. These tales of hidden treasures make up The Secret Museum. It’s impossible to pick a favorite because I love them all, but here’s a taster to get you started. Hopefully you’ll dip into your own copy and find personal favorite treasures to enjoy.

See them all: 8 Treasures That Are Too Precious To Display In Museums (PHOTOS) | Molly Oldfield.

Flag from the Battle of Trafalgar

MIT Invents A Shapeshifting Display You Can Reach Through And Touch | Co.Design


We live in an age of touch-screen interfaces, but what will the UIs of the future look like? Will they continue to be made up of ghostly pixels, or will they be made of atoms that you can reach out and touch?

At the MIT Media Lab, the Tangible Media Group believes the future of computing is tactile. Unveiled today, the inFORM is MIT’s new scrying pool for imagining the interfaces of tomorrow. Almost like a table of living clay, the inFORM is a surface that three-dimensionally changes shape, allowing users to not only interact with digital content in meatspace, but even hold hands with a person hundreds of miles away. And that’s only the beginning.

Read more: MIT Invents A Shapeshifting Display You Can Reach Through And Touch | Co.Design | business + design.

25 Awesome Social Media Tools Your Brand Should Be Using [Infographic] | Marketing Technology Blog

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25 Awesome Social Media Tools Your Brand Should Be Using

News: Education & Technology, Librarianship


Education & Technology

With MakerBot Academy, the 3-D Printing Movement Aims for Schools | AllThingsD
The company announced on Tuesday an initiative to begin seeding its Replicator 3-D printing machines inside of K-12 schools across the U.S. The effort comes in partnership with DonorsChoose.org, a site that allows public school teachers to make online requests for classroom projects, which are then backed by a Kickstarter-like funding drive.

Twitter goes for the masses with new storytelling feature | CNET
Twitter excels in capturing the “moment” as events happen, but it isn’t great at telling a story. With custom timelines, the company hopes to lure a broader audience by giving it coherent narratives rather than just the raw materials.

Librarianship

How Iran Uses Wikipedia To Censor The Internet | BuzzFeed
A new study from the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School claims that Wikipedia might hold the key to understanding how Iran censors, and controls, the internet. The answer, in four words: with a heavy hand.

News: Books & Publishing, Music & Film


Books & Publishing

Music & Film