Four Great Reports for Tracking Technology Trends | Ellyssa Kroski | OEDB.org


It’s not enough anymore for libraries to adopt new technologies and practices once they’ve been out for several years. It’s vital nowadays to know what’s on the horizon so that you can plan for it in your library including training staff, building related applications, and offering new services. One of the best ways to keep up with developments in the library, information, and technology fields is to follow and read trend reports.  

Read: Four Great Reports for Tracking Technology Trends | Ellyssa Kroski | OEDB.org.

News: Books & Publishing, Music & Film


Books & Publishing

Amazon signs up for ‘future of streaming’ ORBX | CNET – Amazon becomes the first major partner to agree to use lightweight new technology from Mozilla and OTOY for streaming games, video, and software. More Amazon news: Amazon employee rebukes wife over Jeff Bezos biography | the guardian. Also: Amazon Offers Kindles, Cut of E-Book Sales to Indie Bookstores | PCMag – another take: Amazon’s New Kindle Offer Rejected by Indie Bookstores | WIRED.

Confessions of a Booker Prize Judge | BookRiot
Stuart Kelly…offers Book Riot some insights into the pressures and the joys of choosing a Booker winner, why a graphic novel should win it one day, why The Luminaries changes what the novel can do, and what impact the Americans will have under the redrawn eligibility criteria for the prize.

Agatha Christie and Poirot scoop best ever status from Crime Writers | Telegraph
The Crime Writers Association crowned Agatha Christie best ever author and The Murder of Roger Ackroyd best ever novel, while Scandinavian crime missed out

Music & Film

Swedish Theaters Now Using Bechdel Test To Rate Films On Gender Bias
A group of four movie theaters in Sweden have adopted a new rating system to expose gender bias–if a film passes the Bechdel Test, it gets an A rating. Qualifying films must a.) have at least two women with names, who b.) talk to each other and c.) talk about something other than a man. The paradox of this test is that it seems simple enough to meet these requirements, and yet countless films fail to do so each year.

News: Education & Technology, Librarianship


Education & Technology

Web inventor Berners-Lee sounds alarm on mass spying | CNET
Sir Tim Berners-Lee says the activities of the NSA and its UK counterpart, the GCHQ, could warp his baby, making the Internet vulnerable to attack and depriving humanity of a “safe space” for problem solving.

The Amazingly Unlikely Story of How Minecraft Was Born | WIRED
Excerpt from new book.

Librarianship

Mom Complains About Library’s Porn Policy | NBC Chicago
A suburban mother is demanding the Orland Park Public Library ban pornography on its computers. More scandal: Library book overdue in Texas? Go directly to jail | Teleread

Links: Oyster (on iPad) Reviews


Oyster
Image Credit: oysterbooks.com

Watch A Drone Make A Masterpiece Of The New York Public Library | Co.Design


The New York Public Library is a stunning piece of architecture. Its Rose Reading Room has 51-foot ceilings and measures the length of a football field (that’s more than a Manhattan block), yet it has no columns, making it one of the largest open interiors in the world.

If you’re Nate Bolt–Facebook design researcher, amateur filmmaker, and friend of the NYPL’s skunkworks team–you get invited to fly a drone through the space. Bolt shot the video you see here using an ultralight setup–a DJI Phantom quadcopter drone loaded with a GoPro and aniPhone. That’s roughly $1,500 in equipment weighing just a bit over two pounds. It allowed Bolt to film with a god-like perspective as the camera floats over shoulders and through doorways to explore the nuance of such grand architecture.

Read more: Watch A Drone Make A Masterpiece Of The New York Public Library | Co.Design | business + design.

You Don’t Have Enough Tech | Roy Tennant | The Digital Shift


Full Article

You Don’t Have Enough Tech | Roy Tennant | The Digital Shift | November 5, 2013

I recently spoke at the Information Today “Library Leaders Digital Strategy Summit”, a mini-conference held in conjunction with the Internet Librarian Conference in Monterey, California. I was signed up to be on a library technology panel, and to focus on what library managers needed to know about technology. In the execution it was less formal, since the panelists were parceled out among the tables where the participants were sitting while Rebecca Jones and Mike Ridley plied us with questions.

In typical style, I didn’t like the first question, so I answered the question I wish I had been asked. I did this because whenever I address an audience I try to think about the most important thing they should hear and I focus on that. That’s what I told them, and then I said:

“I decided that the single most important thing I can tell you about technology in libraries is this: You don’t have enough techYou don’t have enough technical staff and the staff you have don’t have enough technical knowledge.”

Heads nodded all over the room. Apparently, as I often do, I had stated the obvious. But it opened up a rich vein of discussion that stretched into the buffet lunch that we brought back to our tables. While chatting with one library leader, we agreed that the best way to hire new staff wasn’t by specific experience, but personality characteristics. I even wrote a Library Journal column about it way back in 1998 (see the archived version).

The other part of this is that the day is long past when we should be hiring staff without any sort of technical capabilities. I mean, done. Fully baked. To help illustrate this, I related the fact that I had decided to go to library school to get my masters in the early 1980s. Even then, I knew that computers were going to be important to librarianship. I mean, srsly. However, since I couldn’t stomach the idea of spending years in a basement somewhere (where most computer science students were relegated back in the day), I majored in Geography and minored in Computer Science. I then went to library school to get my Masters, where I had already far surpassed the computer science requirements at the time.

This means that even 30 years ago the handwriting was on the wall. Tech was our future. It still is, only more so. If you are a children’s librarian your charges shouldn’t know more about how to use an iPad than you do. If you fancy yourself a public service librarian you had better know how to troubleshoot public computers and printers.  If you are an archivist you are (or should be) at Ground Zero of your institution’s digitization plans. There are, in other words, no professional positions in a modern library that lack a technical component.

Also, the more technical abilities you bring to your position — any position — the more valuable you will be to your organization. So you decide: how valuable do you want to be?

Meanwhile, as the sun rose higher in the Monterey sky and we looked out from our perch at the top of the Monterey Marriott overlooking the bay, we perhaps could be forgiven for thinking we could see farther than we really could. Today’s world was at least 30 years in the making. We had a warning. We knew this was coming. We have no one to blame but ourselves. You don’t have enough tech.

News: Books & Publishers, Music & Film


Books & Publishers

Forgotten Books, Discovered | HuffPost
Pacing through the website of Forgotten Books, an online library with hundreds of thousands of titles, is like walking through the aisles of a favorite bookstore.

The Library Vending Machine | BookRiot
Changing demographics and difficulty securing new funds for new libraries, The Pioneer Library System in Norman, Oklahoma decided to to use technology to meet its patrons needs. So last week, it opened the first 24-hour library vending machine in the United States. Built by EnvisionWare, this fully automated machine will be able to to dispense more than 400 pieces of media (books/DVDs/audiobooks) and store more than 1000 returned items.

Music & Film

News: Education & Technology, Librarianship


Education & Technology

Startup Gives Free Stuff to Student Influencers | Mashable
Sumpto, a startup that identifies top social-media influencers at colleges across the country, sends students free gifts from brands in hopes that they will tweet, post and share photos of the free swag on their social-media accounts.

Twitter strives to explain itself to the public | CNET
A new “About Twitter” page attempts to describe the social network and explain how and why people tweet.

Bill Gates Believes Human Health Is More Important Than Tech | Mashable
In a wide-ranging interview with the Financial Times, which focused primarily on his work to bring health aid to the world’s impoverished regions, Gates offers a glimpse into how much his views have changed regarding the importance of technology in our lives.

E Ink Looks Beyond E-Readers | MIT Technology Review
Facing a declining market for e-readers, E Ink’s new R&D facility is trying out some different ideas.

Lenovo pursued BlackBerry bid, but Ottawa rejected idea | Globe & Mail
[T]he Canadian government told the smartphone company it would not accept a Chinese takeover because of national security concerns.

Apple: “Our Business Does Not Depend on Collecting Personal Data” | AllThingsD
Apple published a formal report on federal government data requests and in so doing became the first tech company to disclose such inquiries by both account and device.

Librarianship

Museum of Science Fiction might be coming to DC | CNET
Trekkies and wanna-be Mars colonists might soon have a permanent brick-and-mortar site for sharing their love of all things science fiction

Illinois Library Comes Under Fire | American Libraries Magazine
“Sometimes libraries that are doing ‘all the right things’ pay a price for their excellence through uncivil attacks and attempts to dismantle their work,” Barbara Jones, director of ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF), told American Libraries. She is referring to Orland Park (Ill.) Public Library (OPPL) in south suburban Chicago, which has endured several intellectual-freedom challenges over the past few months.

MELSA, 3M Develop New Ebook Sharing Feature for Consortia | The Digital Shift

The Library Vending Machine | BookRiot
Changing demographics and difficulty securing new funds for new libraries, The Pioneer Library System in Norman, Oklahoma decided to to use technology to meet its patrons needs. So last week, it opened the first 24-hour library vending machine in the United States. Built by EnvisionWare, this fully automated machine will be able to to dispense more than 400 pieces of media (books/DVDs/audiobooks) and store more than 1000 returned items.

Marvel Muslim Girl Superhero Kamala Khan Destroys Bad Guys As Well As Stereotypes | HuffPost


Kamala Khan isn’t your average teenage Muslim girl. Though she lives in New Jersey and juggles the identity crisis that’s often part-and-parcel of growing up Muslim-American, her shape-shifting is of a literal sort. That’s because Kamala Khan is a superhero, code-named Ms. Marvel.

In February, Marvel Comics will launch a series featuring the shape-shifting Khan, who fights family expectations as well as supervillains, reports The New York Times.

Read more: Marvel Muslim Girl Superhero Kamala Khan Destroys Bad Guys As Well As Stereotypes | HuffPost.

Ms. Marvel

 

Alberta commits $85.8M to new library for Mount Royal University | Calgary Herald


Construction on a desperately needed library and learning centre at Mount Royal University is scheduled to begin in the spring of 2014 following an $85.8-million commitment from the Alberta government and an undisclosed donation from Calgary’s Riddell family.

Staff are elated that construction will soon begin on the four-floor, stand-alone library, which, at 16,000 square metres, will be four times the size of the institution’s existing library.

Read: Alberta commits $85.8M to new library for Mount Royal University | Calgary Herald.