The Digital Museum Where Outdated Apps Can Live Forever | Gizmodo


There’s a crew of hero historians [and librarians!!] out there slurping up the Internet for posterity in case we want to see it later, but what about all the apps? Well now there’s a place for them too. Parts of them, at least.

Capptivate.co was put together by Alli Dryer of Bottle Rocket Apps, and serves as the realitely new resting place for apps of old. The site doesn’t index full copies of the apps, or provide any of their functionality, but instead it hosts a distinct kind of snapshot: a little five-second video that showcases each’s signature look and feel.

via The Digital Museum Where Outdated Apps Can Live Forever | Gizmodo.

Caaptivate.co

35 Free Live Webinars for Librarians in July | Ellyssa Kroski – OEDB.org


35 Free Live Webinars for Librarians in July | Ellyssa Kroski – OEDB.org

Ellyssa usually publishes a new list early every month. I highly recommend following her blog, the iLibrarian on the OEDb website.

25 Most Popular Apps Used By Librarians – Stephen’s Lighthouse


25 Most Popular Apps Used By Librarians – Stephen’s Lighthouse

Burma’s Lucky Bibliophile | The Irrawaddy Magazine


When the Ministry of Information’s director general visited Ye Htet Oo’s library in 2010, it could have been disastrous. Ye Htet Oo, then a recent college graduate, was running his new library in downtown Rangoon on the sly, without approval from the former military regime, and was told he could face three months in jail for every book he lent without permission from the censorship board. Unable to get a library license from the government, which saw libraries as a way to spread subversive ideas, he fronted his operation as a bookshop but kept a collection of unapproved library books hidden in a back room. Then one day, unknown to the young bibliophile, the ministry’s director general—who has since become the deputy minister of information and President Thein Sein’s spokesman—entered the “bookshop” and walked straight into the secret room.

For the full article and Q&A with Ye Htet Oo see:  Burma’s Lucky Bibliophile | The Irrawaddy Magazine.

Burma's Lucky Bibliophile

Fans of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice gather at Chatsworth House – Telegraph


Fans of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice gather at Chatsworth House – Telegraph.

See the link for the gallery of images. Fans all dressed up in Regency.

Fans of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice gather at Chatsworth House - Telegraph

 

Internet Book Fetishists Versus Anti-Fetishists | The New Yorker


A perennial topic of conversation among people who debate literature on the Internet is the relative importance of books as physical objects. Foremost among defenders of the printed book are those who extol the sensual pleasures of reading—the feel of the pages, the heft of the object, the smell of the paper—and maintain that it is impossible to experience those pleasures digitally. 

In a related, but separate, camp are those attracted not to the tactile pleasures of books but to their beauty as objects.

via Internet Book Fetishists Versus Anti-Fetishists | The New Yorker.

A Digital How-To for Disaster Preparedness | Mashable


A Digital How-To for Disaster Preparedness | Mashable

The article covers:

  1. The Basics
  2. Where Are Your Loved Ones
  3. The Necessities: Food, Water and Shelter
  4. Electricity, Light and Heat
  5. Stay Informed

See also:

Taking Embedded Librarianship To the Next Level | ALA TechSource


Taking Embedded Librarianship To the Next Level | ALA TechSource

Readers around the world | Russia Beyond The Headlines


Readers around the world | Russia Beyond The Headlines

Readers around the world

It would be interesting to see a comparison of genre popularity across the G20. Maybe I should ask my Russian friends if there is any meaning to the fact Russians love fantasy novels…spurred by Sputnik and utopian dreams??

You may also like: Russian science fiction and fantasy | Wikipedia and The Night Watch series by Sergei Lukyanenko, which has been translated into English.

Thousands of rare, second-hand books destroyed by Calgary flood waters | Calgary | News | Calgary Sun


Thousands of rare, second-hand books destroyed by Calgary flood waters | Calgary | News | Calgary Sun.