Microsoft Will Soon Bring Back The Start Menu In Windows 8.1 | TechCrunch


Microsoft’s Terry Myerson today announced that Microsoft is “all-in” with the desktop. Indeed, while he wasn’t quite ready to announce Windows 9, he did show off how Windows 8.1 will soon get a new version of the beloved Start menu back.

When Microsoft removed the Start menu, quite a few of its users were upset, and this move did indeed make Windows 8.1 harder to use for many. The new Start menu will combine live tiles and other Metro-influenced UI elements, as well as most of the features still available in the Windows 7 menu.

In the future, all of Microsoft’s Universal Windows apps will also run in a window. That sounds like the company is backing off a bit from its Metro interface on the desktop.

It’s unclear when exactly Microsoft will launch these features, though. As far as we are aware, it will take another update to Windows 8.1 and it’s unclear when exactly this will happen. Read more: Microsoft Will Soon Bring Back The Start Menu In Windows 8.1 | TechCrunch.

This is great news! I provide volunteer computer coaching at my community library and I groan every time a patron comes in for help with Windows 8 (which is often!). The interface is problematic, so bringing back the start button (and hopefully making the metro interface optional) is a very welcome improvement. 

London book benches: are you sitting comfortably? | The Guardian


Visitors to London will able to enjoy books in a new way next summer – by sitting on them. Benches resembling giant open books, the volumes ranging from Kenneth Grahame’s Wind in the Willows to George Orwell’s 1984, will be installed at various sites in the capital for a stretch of 10 weeks.

London Book Benches

Read: London book benches: are you sitting comfortably? | Books | The Guardian.

News: Education & Technology, Librarianship


Education & Technology

The LA Times Trolls Innocent Teachers | TechCrunch
The once-respectable LA Times is leveraging its dwindling platform to attack individual teachers under the guise of data transparency. The editorial board won a court case allowing them to use a highly contentious, self-designed algorithm to rank the best and worst teachers in the Los Angeles Unified School District. Neither the suicide of one of the shamed teachers, nor the widespread criticism of the statistical methods have aroused the editorial board’s better judgment.

Google Earth Tour Builder lets you tell stories through maps | Engadget
Google has used Earth and Maps to tell tales of unfolding tragedies and soldiers fighting for our country. Now its opening up those tools to the public, allowing users to build what they’re calling “Tours” through Google Earth. Tour Builder was released in honor of Veterans Day and it allows users to create narratives tied to points on a map. More Google news: Google Quick Actions Let Users Act on Emails Without Opening Them | MashableYour Face and Name Will Appear in Google Ads Starting Today | Gizmodo and Apple maps: how Google lost when everyone thought it had won | theguardian

Librarianship

Mozilla Promotes ‘Web Competency’ with New Standards | The Digital Shift


 The Mozilla Foundation has launched a new  Web Literacy Standard intended to serve as a roadmap for competent Web use and comprising “the skills and competencies people need to read, write, and participate effectively on the Web,” according to Mozilla’s site.

Launched during the nonprofit organization’s October 25–27 Mozilla Festival, the Standard features recommendations for proficiency in three main categories: Exploring (navigating for the Web), Building (creating for the Web), and Collecting (participation on the Web).  The release of the Standard follows months of development and community feedback since the project was inaugurated in February 2013.

Read: Mozilla Promotes ‘Web Competency’ with New Standards | The Digital Shift.

Skilled for Life – Key findings from the survey of adult skills | OECD Education


Kobo and Free the Children Partner to Advance Literacy of Aboriginal Youth Across Canada | Kobo Cafe


“Toronto, September 17, 2013 – Kobo, a global leader in eReading, and Free The Children, today announced a year-long partnership focused on supporting literacy among Aboriginal youth in Canada. Both organizations share a commitment to making Reading more accessible and are working together to support literacy programs in Aboriginal communities across the country. Kobo has donated 3,500 of its award-winning Kobo Touch™ eReaders as well as $100,000 to develop a program designed to cultivate a love and passion for reading. The program includes a speaking tour to educate youth about literacy in Aboriginal communities and encourage them to explore their own culture through digital reading.”

The Full Story: Kobo and Free the Children Partner to Advance Literacy of Aboriginal Youth Across Canada | Kobo Cafe.

Robert Darnton: The Library in the Digital Age…08.30.13 | The Proverbial Lone Wolf Librarian’s Weblog


Robert Darnton: The Library in the Digital Age…08.30.13 | The Proverbial Lone Wolf Librarian’s Weblog

Woman wants changes at library after grandson checks out erotic novel | Fox 59 News


Story about a woman challenging adult materials in a library’s collection. This incident would make a great case study for a course assignment in LIS school.

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.– The library is a great place for children to explore new books and learn to love reading. However, what if your child came home from the library with an erotic romance novel?

Snips

Deeren said she followed library protocol in an attempt to get books like this removed. “This is what I did. I went through three different people, filled out paper and then they sent this back,” Deeren said, referring to a letter that was sent back to her.

The letter indicated that Night Games has been nominated for several awards and that it’s the guardian’s responsibility to monitor a child’s book selection, which is indicated in the library application for people 18 and younger.

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“There is a place for these books and that’s an adult book store. If they want to keep it at a library, I want them to keep it behind a door,” Deeren said.

She is not giving up.

“I want to get this (Night Games) out of there. I want to just keep talking to people about getting these kinds of books out or putting them behind closed doors. One or the other,” Deeren said.

There is much more content to this story. See the full article:  Woman wants changes at library after grandson checks out erotic novel | Fox 59 News – fox59.com.

Beach Reads: A Library Pops Up In The South Of France | Co.Design


Staring down an expanse of vast and powerful ocean in late summer is guaranteed to make you question two things: your own sense of self-worth, and that of your e-reader. Nothing like the glare, the saltwater, the sunscreened fingers, the sand to recommend a hard-copy book. But the closest thing to literature on pages you can see is the bulk of September Vogue.

Now imagine, dear beach reader, that you’re lying underneath a soft, fabric-covered alcove on a breezy stretch of South of France coastline, the sound of Mediterranean waters lapping at the shore. Behind you is a library with up to 350 books–real-life, paperback books–at your curious disposal.

This is the precisely the dreamy vacation scenario that French industrial designer Matali Crasset fulfilled by creating a mobile library (yes, it actually exists) for the town of Istres. Located on the beach of Romaniquette, the freestanding steel literary haven is open to readers through September. “This project interested me for its relationship with real life,” Crasset tells Co.Design. “It is a dynamic object. I was able to develop a project that meets, in terms of usage scenarios, a logic and a demand that is very present, human, and alive.”

The Bibliotheque de Plage is stocked with titles ranging from classic Jane Austen to works chosen by the designer herself, those that provided inspiration through the course of the project’s execution. It was also essential to Crasset that the temporary beach library was a tribute to the importance of maintaining physical, personally curated collections of books. She collaborated with the town’s municipal library to establish “a comprehensive cultural policy of access to the books.” Her summer structure, she says, “brings books to the population to encourage the practice of not only reading, but of lending.”

Popup Beach Library

via 1 | Beach Reads: A Library Pops Up In The South Of France | Co.Design: business + innovation + design.

Books about Bullying | Stephen’s Lighthouse


Books about Bullying | Stephen’s Lighthouse.

A list of 33 resources including suitable grade range for each.