Saturday, December 30, 2006
Changes to this blog and advanced apologies
When it's done, I'll do a couple of big posts on the lines of "Wow..THESE are the plugins to use if you're going to do THAT" and "Welcome to my new place, here's the details".
Here's a sneak preview of the header:
If I've previously linked to any posts on your blog, you may notice new pingbacks from my new domain. That happens when my old posts get imported to Wordpress.
Posts from the new blog should just appear in the Feedburner feed, without you having to do anything. If you don't subscribe through the feedburner feed, here's the details: http://feeds.feedburner.com/LibrariansMatter. I'm guessing that when the new blog is fed in, the 111 previous posts from this blog will show up in your aggregator. Apologies for this in advance.
I'm busy, busy, busy and having fun, fun, fun so will update more soon.
New job descriptions for libraries
When people ask me "what do you work as?", I can easily say "Reference Librarian and Philosophy Subject librarian". The other bit of my job, which is looking at emerging technologies and how we can use them in our library, doesn't have an official label or job title.
Back in June, when thinking about what Librarian 2.0 jobs would look like for Australian libraries, I said:
I suspect Librarian 2.0 positions will be created as people in existing positions redefine their jobs and add a bit here, drop a few responsibilities there.I'm really excited by a trend in the US, one that I hope will hit here. Entire postitions are being created for librarians to do tasks that didn't even exist 2 or 3 years ago. I'm encouraged by the Emergent Technology Librarian at East Michigan University Library and the ten (yes, ten!!) new positions being funded at the Albany Library at the State University of New York.
1. EMERGENT TECHNOLOGIES LIBRARIAN at the East Michigan Univeristy Library
I chuckled when the ad posted on Web4Lib said they were looking for an applicant with "mad skillz". Made me feel about 100 years old and terribly unhip.Position Description:
The Eastern Michigan University Library seeks a proactive, creative, service-oriented individual to play a key role on its Information Services Team. The Emergent Technologies Librarian will serve as an explorer of and advocate for the use of emergent technologies to support online learning and enhance the effectiveness of library information and instructional services . The Emergent Technologies librarian will coordinate virtual/chat reference initiatives and provide scheduled reference assistance (face-to-face, email, telephone, virtual/chat).Responsibilities:
- Explore, evaluate, and encourage the deployment of emergent technologies to engage library users and staff in new waysProvide training and support for other librarians on emergent technologiesExplore and develop opportunities to integrate library resources and services into course management, online learning, and other campus software initiativesCollaborate with other librarians to develop online learning initiativesCoordinate, assess, and work with other librarians to evolve virtual/chat reference initiativesProvide scheduled reference desk and virtual/chat reference service, including some evening and weekend hours
- Social Networking Support Librarian
- Collaborative Publishing Librarian
- Multimedia Publishing Librarian
- Coordinator of Student Participation
- Programming Risk Taker
- OPAC Transformation Librarian
- Testbed Technologist
- Remote User Librarian..
9. Exploration and Training Librarian:Does what all librarians should do but wlll get to do it full time: read, experiment, play, develop skills, listen to conference and training broadcasts, imagine and ruminate. Will develop a seminar program to present colleagues with the results of these efforts. Will assist colleagues in determining new ways of doing things based on these explorations. Will recommend readings, Web sites, podcasts, RSS feeds, etc., to assist in staff education. Establishes a culture of fun-loving, beta-craving, humorous attitude toward change.
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Let go of the past
UPDATE: A couple of hours after I wrote this, into my aggregator popped an article from Michael Stephens on ALA Techsource that nicely summarises the last year of Librarian2.0 job descriptions in the US. Desperately seeking the adaptive librarian: on the 2.0 job description (part 3).
How my local library is getting it right for me
They’ve upgraded their website and a new feature caught my eye. New users can create a temporary membership online. This allows them to reserve items today, and provide their ID when they come to collect the item. A quick trawling of the web reveals this is probably “bog standard” with the Spydus ILS. I also liked the “item not in our library - fill in this request form and we’ll try to get it” option.
As someone who once joined up 4 family members at a loans desk, while trying to control a bored two year old, I applaud this. I would have loved to have entered our family’s details at my leisure and then known that what I wanted was ready for pickup BEFORE I ventured to the new library.
I registered both kids for an interactive storytelling of Charlotte’s Web with riveting “get-em-up-off-their-bums-and-moving” storyteller, Glenn Swift, next month. Having visited Narnia with him last year and re-enacted the battle scene in the library with spaghetti string and balloon swords, they can’t wait (OK…me neither!).
Mr 9 also joined in the Australia wide Summer Reading Club..after seeing at the front door the cool prizes he could win. He received a very nice “showbag” of reading related activities, including a “choose your book type” flowchart quiz, that steered him toward book choices that would suit him. He gets to go to a party where they dish out the prizes at the end of January.
The library also had very bright new signage - not just a small part of the shelf labelled, but large cardboard cutouts taking up the entire side of the shelf, top to bottom. Very clear and made each shelf feel individual, and like it held an adventure.
I left the library as one happy user.
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Gentle Okayness
Thursday, December 28, 2006
The "To Be Read" Challenge
This looks like fun, so I'm doing it. The "To Be Read" Challenge from MizB of Literary Cache. I found it via Wanderings of a Student Librarian.
The idea is that before 1 January 2007, you list in your blog 12 books that have been on you TBR list for more than 6 months. Then, you read one per month. And..there's a sweetener from MizB:Every 3 months, for the duration of the challenge, I will pick one challenge participant's name from a "hat". That person --if they've read the amount of books for that time (ie: 3 books in 3 months; 6 books in 6 months, etc)-- will receive a small gift (via snail-mail) from me.If you have a "Staff's favourite picks" list on your website or posted in your library, why not add a "Staff's TBR list"? It would be great to share with your users, they'd get to know a bit more about you, about some of your bookstock and it would provide such an interesting talking point.
As I wrote the last paragraph, I thought "of course, this would only apply to public libraries". But I'm wondering...."Why couldn't we do it in an academic library?". Too worried about our credibility as a research institution, or that our users don't come to us for THAT kind of thing. If not, why not?
Here's my list. It turned out to be harder than I thought. I've just found out that I'm pretty good at following up and reading books on my TBR list:- A delicate balance - Rohinton MISTRY
- Tipping point:how little things can make a big difference - Malco
- Born on a blue day - Daniel TAMMET
- A spot of bother - Mark HADDON
- Martini: a memoir - Frank MOOREHOUSE
- A prayer for Owen Meany - John IRVING
- The night watch - Sarah WATERS
- I know why the caged bird sings - Maya ANGELOU
- The tent - Margaret ATTWOOD
- The bone people - Keri HULME
- One hundred years of solitude - Gabriel GARCIA MARQUEZ
- History of Western Philosophy - Bertrand RUSSELL
- The inheritance of loss - Kiran DESAI
- Chart throb - Ben ELTON
- Moral disorder - Margaret ATTWOOD
UPDATE 29.12.06: This one has been sitting on my bedside table so long that it's become part of the furniture, so I owe it a mention to prod me into finishing it:
- Johnathon Strange and Mr Norrell - Susanna CLARKE
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
5 things you didn't know about Kathryn Greenhill
- Neither my husband nor I were born Greenhill. It's the family name we chose when our first child was born. We changed our names by deed, then registered the birth.
- I've just come out of 9 years of looking after small children and dying parents, so the opportunity to choose what I do with some hours of my day is novel and exciting. I'm like a kid in a lolly shop.
- In 1991, I was removed by police from a public bar in Swansea, Tasmania, making the front page of the Mercury. I was having a quiet drink with some other women the night after the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission had ruled that the RSL could not legally continue to exclude women from the bar. The RSL President was drunk and belligerent and removing us was how the police kept the peace.
- I have a morbid fear of beetroot. The smell, the stains, the texture, the taste, the look...all spine-chilling.
- I am very good at yoyo tricks. I had pneumonia when I was 11, during a yoyo craze. While I was off school recovering, I put the time to good use.
Sunday, December 24, 2006
YouTube and I say "Happy holidays".
Friday, December 22, 2006
Only 9 more days to help Peter pick his glasses.....
One of the students at my uni needs help picking his new glasses frames. The terms of his health insurance means he has to do it by 31 December. On his blog, he's posted pictures of himself wearing different frames and would like people to use comments to vote on the best.
He's shortsighted, so can't see what he looks like in the mirror..without his glasses.
Give him your opinion as a Christmas present......
Pick my glasses.
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Oh you cain't getta man with a booooook!
The State Library of Victoria is running "Text appeal" bring-a-book speed dating sessions. I can't explain it any better than the library itself:
Love is in the air at the State Library of Victoria this summer.Text Appeal is a new take on the traditional dating formula. Each person brings a book they love, loathe or have recently read to act as a conversation starter. Jane Austen may find Patrick O’Brien, Salman Rushdie could be captivated by Zadie Smith, and JK Rowling - can take her pick. The books people bring may reveal who they are, who they aren't and perhaps who they are looking for, all in a three-minute conversation.
Text Appeal will run once a month from December 2006 to February 2007, with the final event being held on Valentine’s Day.
Time 6 Dec 2006, 17 Jan & 14 Feb 2007; 7-9.30pm
Venue Experimedia
Bookings Registration is essential. Fill in the form below, tel 03 8664 7555 or email learning@slv.vic.gov.au
Cost $20 per session - drinks, entertainment and the promise of a bookish romance included (a three-for-the-price-of-two discount applies to group bookings
Now, I'm not looking for love..but I am really nosy about other people's reactions to their reading. I'd love to take part in something like that, particlularly listening to those who just hate my favourites.
My Co-Pilot has pointed out that if I did go along, I'd probably end up with my nose in the book and ignoring the person on the other side of the table. Hmmmm...after that comment, maybe I am in the market for lurve!
Monday, December 18, 2006
Skype and google..they're talking!!!
My vague and not-so-tech-savvy-this-morning-brain thinks....."is this something to do with microformats, and should I find out more about them...they look fun".
Sunday, December 17, 2006
Hey Jude! Congratulations
Hey Jude! won in the "Best Library/Best Librarian Blog" category. I'm hoping she'll answer a few questions I emailed her so that we can publish them on LINT tomorrow.
For a heartwarming ...aaaahhhhh... kind of moment, check out Duck Diaries. This won the convenor's prize, awarded by Josie Fraser who tabulated the scores. It's the story of a duck which built a nest in the playground of a school..told by the kids in pictures and words.
Skype high and Edublog awards night
Why? A nifty llittle email arrived in my gmail box this morning reminding me that the 2006 Edublogger awards are being announced tonight at 11pm Western Australian time.
LINT (librariesinteract.info) has been nominated in the "Best Library/Librarian blog 2006" category. There are 5 entrants in all, three from Australia.
The awards are being transmitted directly from the chat room and Skypecast. It is also streamed live into the Worldbridges building on Info Island in Second Life. A text chat room ran at the same time so people could paste in links and accept awards via text if their microphones didn't work.
Here's how it looks live with a skype window open and the chat window open:
Results were updated live on the blog as announced.
Saturday, December 16, 2006
If you love something, set it free...
- What if users don't care where their library material comes from?
- What if they are happy if they get what they want, when they want it, in a timely and friendly manner?
- What if users don't care where our catalogue records come from?
- What if instead of a "no holdings" screen, we told users if an item existed in another library and gave them a "yes/no" option to start an interlibrary loan?
- What if individual libraries got out of the business of running catalogue information, centralised that bit..and then we focussed on just getting the material to user?
- How many people work at Amazon keeping their bib data accurate? Could we harness the hours and hours of people power, chewed up in library cataloguing departments, to keep centralised records accurate?
- What extra could we do for our users if, instead of just interrogating and uploading/downloading our own data from union catalogues, we could manipulate and repackage records from other libraries too?
I've already admitted to not fully understanding the implications of this. Although the podcast made a few things clearer, I think that I need to see more from Casey about what his plans are, and whether he plans to value add, before I really "get" it.
Some of the points I noted were:
- The barrier MARC poses to sharing our records with "non library" people. Converting the records to XML would be make them much more accessible.
- Libraries could probably have shared records in this way before, but just haven't.
- What would be the motivation for an agency with lots of data to share it? ...there was a long silence and then someone tentatively suggested..."Hugs??"
- Often in-house standards or the ILS used determines which fields of a MARC record are loaded on a library's system. Often data that cannot be immediately used is not uploaded, so restrospective use is impossible.
- What if libraries just went ahead and pooled our records, and then coped with legal ramifications later?
- Why do bloggers link book references to Amazon and not a library?
- The United States does not have a National Library like we have in Australia. The Library of Congress is there foremost to serve the elected members.
- What we could do with pooled records remains to be discovered.
Friday, December 15, 2006
Pimp my PC
I was interested that many people had loaded in a favourite background image. Our electronic services librarian says this reminds her ...and others...that she has a life outside work.
10 years ago, I customised my first work laptop with the album cover for Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
Instead of the Windows close down noise, I had Bollywood. I sampled in Sri Devi singing the "awi wiwi wiwi wiwi wiwiw wi" bit of Hawa Hawaii from Mr India.
I think I must have got it out of my system, because after that I haven't really fiddled with my PC settings too much... I just make everything a subltle shade of lilac, nowadays. And set the default browser to Firefox.
But.. I think I might be expressing myself outside my PC, at least at home....
Thursday, December 14, 2006
Caught out at the library....
"If they had more brains, they'd probably be in a different business".
Here's further proof... Prison Escapee cought after checking MySpace.
Darren Bates had escaped from a Georgia county jail and was arrested in Philadelphia after checking his Myspace account. Bates accessed the page from a public computer at the main branch of the Philadelphia Free Library.Yep..just what every crim. who's been deprived of the joys of society does...visits his public library.Authorities say Bates regularly checked into his account from the library and used his real name. Police aren't saying exactly how Bates was caught, but most websites regularly track visitors by the IP address and those addresses can be traced back to a physical location.
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Librarian's pyjamas
Poor pus-y pierced punk puss
Poor Nougat had a grass seed surgically removed from her ear a couple of weeks ago. On Tuesday I noticed a lump on her cheek on the same side. Took her into Dr Jess, our neighbourhood vet.
Jess saw that Nougat had been fighting and picked a very small scab off the top of the cat's head. She then gently pressed on the cat's cheek.
A lava flow of greeny smelly pus poured out of the little puncture in the top of the cat's head, and flowed down. Jess kept pushing. I'd say about one and a half teaspoons of gunk came out. Exorcist city!
Nougat had to stay in the night and Jess operated the next day. After Nougat's cheek was drained, it had to be kept open. She now has a piece of fishing line looped inside her head...entering through the wound at the top of her cheek, through the cheek and out the hole at the bottom of it.
For the next week or so, we have to pick the scab off the top of her head, wash off the ooze and turn the string to keep the wound open. And wrap her in a towel to stop her clawing us and stick an antibiotic down her throat twice a day.
So..girls and boys, if you want a nice fluffy kitten for Christmas, just ask yourself....are you prepared for it all to turn out like this??
Look listen read
So...will blog again when I have time. Meanwhile, if you want to know some of what I've been doing:
- read this
- listen to this and/or;
- look at this
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Fulfilment
Thursday, December 07, 2006
Bloglines..you are sooooo dropped!
It's over between us.
You were my first serious aggregator relationship. I know I flirted with RSS Reader and RSS Popper, but I settled on you.
I loved checking in on you and how you responded with new and exiting feeds. I loved those extras you did for me...like providing a blogroll on my sidebar and letting me see what others subscribed to. The "Sub with bloglines" button. Ahh..memories.
I used you as my first blogging software. I know I was misguided and you just couldn't fulfil that need...but I thought your great aggregation made up for it.
I used to visit you regularly and you were always ready with an update. Recently, you've just not been up for RSS fun when I drop by. Your performance is.....slow. I know some users want intimacy and a bit of teasing with their updates, but for me it's all about frequency, frequency, frequency.
I'm sorry, but I've been dallying with google reader. It's not quite as fancy as you are, and doesn't have all the features you have..but it can give good update.
I hope you understand. It's time for me to move on. I hope to keep in touch through my sidebar, but for now I just don't want more than that.
Goodbye and good luck.
Kathrynarium
Sunday, December 03, 2006
My Life-hacks
Among her life-hacks are:
- getting a career coach
- using Remember the Milk
- chunking her tasks
- Ensuring that her extra-curricular activities match her long term goals
I'm mum to 2 little boys, work 2 days a week looking at new web tools for my library, and do professional development many, many hours more. My trap is that my employer lets me do half my work from home, around the household chaos.
Thing 1. For me, it's the maxim "SLEEP COMES FIRST". Sounds simple, but every time things go out of whack with us, it's because I'm not sleeping enough. With babies, that meant restructuring so I slept when the baby slept, no matter what else needed doing, or other interesting adult fun was to be had.
Now, it's turning the PC off at night so I get enough sleep. I've not been doing it in the last few weeks (working on projects, having too much fun) and am a gumpy messy b*tch. I know I need to go back to that first principle for my life to work.
Thing 2. I live by my PDA. Have bought one for my Co-Pilot and we sync. to the home PC, so I can share the load by putting tasks on my calendar I know he'll pick up.(They have his name next to them - he has to :))
Thing 3. I've been experimenting with saying "yes" more. When I did that, I realised that most of the things I'd been saying "no" to were things that I said I couldn't do because I had a family. I was saying "yes" to baking cakes for the kids' schools, but "no" to professional opportunities and fun nights out. Worth the experiment. I've become happier, but now need to re-tweak my life to get it back in balance (see Thing 1.)
Thing 4. Exercise. It works. I sleep better and have more energy, so the time pays for itself by making my other hours much more fun and productive. Now, after a 5 week family holiday, I have to get back into it. (see Thing 1)
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Rest.
(Oh, now you will think I'm making them up..but they ARE random. Honest)
Saturday, December 02, 2006
Power of one....
Enthuser 1 - LORI BELL
Lori always seems to be online when I visit Second Life. She was showing librarians around Info Island 10am Western Australian time this morning, yet when I just emailed her (about 9pm my time), she replied straight away. She's getting out of bed at 3am her time to show us around as part of our LINTy party.
She is co-ordinating countless projects in Second Life, creates a Real Life buzz around her project and is a hub around which many folk are empowered to try out skills in Second Life. She's part of a team but she works many extra hours and brings extra ooomph to it.
Enthuser 2 - WARREN HORTON
Director General of the National Library of Australia, 1985 - 1999. I've been doing a bit of reading about Aurora and discovered that the foundation is self funded due to a legacy he left on his death in 2003. He believed in empowering future librarians, and was deeply involved in Aurora's inception and running until he died.
I've been reading how he scrutinized the applications and took delight in matching applicants with mentors. He was affectionately called the "Grand Poo-bah" by participants and mentors when he joined in each 5 day live-in course. He let down his guard and talked frankly about some of his best and worst decisions. He had an extensive knowledge of who was where in the library world, and apparently a talent for suggesting who should be where.
Enthuser 3 - RICHARD RENNIE
Richard runs the Fremantle Light and Sound Museum. He's not a librarian, but a passionate ex-science teacher who won the Premier's Award for Science Communication 2006, He single-handedly runs his collection as a volunteer, in a small room in our local museum..and always seems to be there when we visit. He lets us play with his stuff collected over 40 years, talks to us about it and we leave thinking about it for days afterward.
The last few times we visited, we
- Played "Pong" on an old tele-tennis machine hooked up to a portable black and white TV
- Ran our fingers along a string dangling from a christmas card and heard it play a tune due to the friction of our fingers over the special bumps in the string
- Used a magnet to distort the picture on an old black and white TV set
- Wore special red and blue specs and goggled at Michael Jackson and Dr Who in 3D
- Placed our $50 notes under ultraviolet light to reveal the anticounterfeiting marks on it
- Used a typewriter - a highight for Mr4 who now wants to get one.
- Debated whether the baffles on a gramaphone really made the sound quality better
- Looked through periscopes and kaleidoscopes and stroboscopes.
Enthuser 4 - REG BOLTON
I've previously blogged about Reg Bolton. He packed an entire circus into his suitcase and inspired and taught thousands of children that they had the power to amaze. He had a few "circus swear words" that he banned from his Big Top
"No, Can't, Impossible, Embarrasing, Difficult"
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Face the situation.
Thursday, November 30, 2006
Just missed a classic moment in kiddie rock.. Greg the Yellow Wiggle quits
For the last couple of years, we joined the pilgrimage of parents and kids worshipping at the alter of The Wiggles for their annual concert in Perth. If we'd been there this morning, we would have been part of kiddie rock history. Greg Page, the Yellow Wiggle, announced he's quitting the group due to health problems.He has a condition called Orthostatic intolerence, which Dr Kathryn understands is "falling over when you stand up".
The official announcement states that understudy, Sam Moran, will take his place. I'm imagining an update of The Red Shoes called The Yellow Skivvy.
After hearing that Steve Irwin had died the day before we visited the Australia Zoo, and then the Big Red car breaking down in the middle of the Wiggle's house at Dreamworld, I'm kind of glad we weren't there, or we would have felt strangely responsible.
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Guilt.
(Honestly, these are randomly selected from over 100 cards)
Wednesday, November 29, 2006
Meme-y begging
Please see below.
Via Ruminations:
Scott Kaufmann's trying to measure the speed of memes.
If you'd like to help out, follow these steps, and I quote:
1. Write a post linking to this one in which you explain the experiment. (All blogs count, be they TypePad, Blogger, MySpace, Facebook, &c.)He'll be reporting on what he finds at the forthcoming MLA convention.
2. Ask your readers to do the same. Beg them. Relate sob stories about poor graduate students in desperate circumstances. Imply I'm one of them. (Do whatever you have to. If that fails, try whatever it takes.) [I have no sob stories: do it if you want to?]
3. Ping Technorati.
Via Bitch Ph.D.
Monday, November 27, 2006
Speaking in tongues: Libworm and VLINT
1. Libworm: describes itself as:
"the librarian RSS engineI still subscribe to feeds for individual blogs, rather than feeds for searches. I've noticed that some more techno-savvy bloggers are tending toward the latter. This may just be the tool that makes me switch - but I doubt it, I'm too attached to connecting with people's voices and their individual lives
over 1000 RSS feeds go in
exactly what you need comes out!"
2. VLINT (Virtual.librariesinteract.info: blog central for Australian Libraries in Other Worlds)
Since Lorelei Junot very nicely offered me a building in Cybrary City for Australian Libraries to share, we've been pottering about the building. VLINT started as a place to record the nuts and bolts, daily operations of the project. This gives whoever takes on the project (soon I hope) a history to work with.
snail suggested that we could broaden it to include Australian Libraries in all "Other Worlds". Great idea. I really hope someone interested in virtual library branches or gaming in libraries starts posting.
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Let go of the past
Keep "Library2.0" in Wikipedia
Initial proposal says that it is...
"A neologism coined by a blogger and used by bloggers, not notable Lurker "
The people I'd expect have jumped in and defended it, using the arguments I'd expect. They cite legitimate academic articles to show how the term has escaped the bilbioblogosphere. It is now being used by librarians who have never read a blog in their lives, to describe a change in our profession.
In itself, it's an interesting debate about the "Library 2.0" concept ...is it just the "2.0" label whacked on the end of another concept, to form a buzzword...or is it a shorthand to describe a new way of serving our clients?
I'm also enjoying learning about how Wikipedia works as a living, breathing "debate" and reflecting about what this means for "set truths" found in an encyclopedia like Wikipedia. I don't remember any entry in my print version of Encyclopedia Britannica changing from one reading to the next. Does this lead to more or less certainty about the veracity of the facts?
I was just as fascinated watching the "discussion" page for Steve Irwin's entry immediately after his death.
found via Panlibus...
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Wake Up
Friday, November 24, 2006
Oil your bras...
When it was my turn, LB who knows how to do this type of thing, attached the radio mike to my shirt and I smiled and spoke into the camera. I felt like a prize 'nana.
Half way through.."STOP..the mike's picking up a squeaking noise". Mike clipped higher up. Still squeaking. Shoes removed. Still squeaking. Chair changed. Still squeaking.
"It's happening when you move forward".....
Finally worked out it was the underwire from my bra. Or underplastic in this case.
MY LIBRARY 2.0 TIP FOR THE DAY:
Before you try videoblogging, check your bra for squeaks.
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD:Mystery
Thursday, November 23, 2006
Party in Second Life for Australian Libraries
By the way, congratulations to fellow-linter, Michelle McClean who has been award a Ramsay and Reid scholarship to spend 3 weeks travelling the US looking at Library 2.0 technologies in public libraries. Imagine getting to visit with John Blyberg and then checking out the Imaginon in Charlotte.
.....................................................................................................
Virtual end of year party for Australian Libraries in Second Life.
The Australian libraries blog, librariesinteract.info, is hosting an end-of year party in Second Life on 13th December, 6pm to 8pm Western Australian time. [This is 1am San Francisco time; San Francisco time also being Second Life time.]
Second Life is a virtual world, with a population of over 1 million, in which large companies, schools and universities (IBM, Dell, Harvard) have set up shop. Reuters newsagency has its own correspondent there. According to a September 2006 Popular Science article, Second Life, through currency trading, shopping and land sales, has a GDP of $64 Million. Recently, Australian Libraries were given a free building for a year on Cybrary City, courtesy of Talis and the Alliance Library System in return for 2 hours per week work on library services for SL residents.
The party will include a tour of Info Island and Info Island II by Lori Bell from Alliance Library Systems. We will follow the yellow brick road from the Oz library to the Kansas State Library Virtual Branch next door. Then, back to our building to hang out... dance on the dance floor, snare some cyber snacks, and go easy on the virtual alcoholic beverages.
You can join in virtually from your own PC, or come and look over our shoulders in real life. If you join in virtually, it would be a good idea to check out Second Life before the event:
1. Go to the Second Life website.
2. Check the systems requirements.
3. Go to the join up page and choose one of the family names offered..and make up your first name.
4. You will be asked for your credit card details, but do not have to give them.
5. Download the Second Life client to your PC.
6. Choose how you'd like your avatar (representation in SL) to look.
7. Enter...explore.
8. Teleport to just outside our building at: 207, 68, 23. (Often passersby can help you out to do this) Alternatively, we can teleport you to our building, if you send a message.
For further details, please contact Con Wiebrands (flexnib at gmail dot com) or Kathryn Greenhill (sirexkat at gmail dot com). If you are already exploring Second Life and would like to meet up, our SL names are Paradoxa Kurrajong (Con) and Emerald Dumont (Kathryn) - feel free to IM us!
Hope to see you on Info Island!
Kathryn and Con
---------------------------------------------
Saturday, November 18, 2006
I'm going to Aurora.
From the background on the Aurora Leadership Institute home page:
The Institute's mission is to assist future leaders in the library and associated cultural and information industry to maximise their leadership skills and potential. We want to position leaders to be proactive and effective voices in a dynamic and sophisticated information environment.
This is done through a combination of experiential learning, group and individual exercises, and by working with a strong team of senior and experienced Australian and New Zealand mentors. The Institute programme includes exploration of leadership concepts including vision, risk taking, creativity, communication, and styles of leadership. It is a demanding, challenging and exciting experience.
MPOW and the two librarians who recommended me have been really supportive in the whole process. If you're reading this - thanks.
I had a single motivation to apply. Peta's post on LINT which was, a rather straightforward call for applicants. When someone asked a question about what it involved, 10 people immediately jumped in and basically said "go for it...the best preparation is not to expect anything...it's gruelling but you'll use what you learn for the rest of your career".
To apply, I needed to frame what I do, and what I want to do, as leadership. I'd seen leaders as charismatic and determined sorts who make other people's decisions for them and then somehow convince them that this is what they really wanted to do. Always surrounded by flunkies and constantly watching their backs because they'll be challenged by someone else who wants to be the leader. That's just not for me.
But..if leadership can be keeping a central focus on what the library user wants and sharing and enthusing and encouraging and networking and learning and facilitating, then I'll take that on.
The only down side is that it's two weeks after both kids start at a new school. One is going to kindy for the first time, the other starting mainstream school after being in a special educational program. When I talked the application over with my mother-in-law she told me that my boys would see a mum who was following her dreams and fulfilled by what she was doing. Wow! I'd only been stressing out and hadn't seen it quite so positively.
What I'll actually be doing is so mysterious that the naughty little girl in me is imagining Masonic kinds of rituals involving binding books in buckram while reciting Dewey. And finding out that LCSH actually has a sacred narrative meaning authored by Da Vinci. And maybe that Canberra really was designed using spiritual mathematics , and the National Library is a key point in it all.
This blog will be a great place for me to reflect and track my path in all of this.
Friday, November 17, 2006
Need debugging
I went away to camp for the weekend and came back to find that Mr4 had been throwing up. Mr8 and the Co-Pilot had become very messy by Monday/Tuesday.
Wednesday night during my reference desk shift, I began feeling a bit woozy, but wasn't sure it was the bug. I tried to talk myself out of it, but gave up at 8pm and went home an hour early. Good thing too. What I did next was not fitting for a library.
Staying home from work this morning, but hope to make it in this afternoon to lead a play session with the new internal blog. The launch has been delayed until library renovations are finished at the end of January.
The Co-Pilot is off on his own camp this weekend, so I need to get perky to look after the kids. I definitely need to be better by Thursday when I help with the Year 3 end-of-year-sleepover-at-school camp.
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Talk to someone
Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Monday, November 13, 2006
Librarian 2.0 Manifesto and videocasting
Kingrss has creatively turned Laura Cohen's excellent "A Librarian's 2.0 Manifesto" into a videocast at YouTube.
It's great to see the free and meditative form used, and the shots from Burning Man. Along with David King's "Are you blogging this?" clip, and the St Joseph County Public Library's "Ray of Light" clip, it' s giving me an idea of what's "allowed" in library videocasts (that would be.... personalised, creative, artistic, captivating, free form and alternative visions).
I've written the main points of my screencast for 5 weeks to a Social Library onto Post It notes and shuffled them around in my exercise book. Tomorrow night at work, I start turning them into slides using Captivate, to create a draft storyboard and something I can build into a fully fledged screencast.
The wonderful L. from our Teaching and Learning Centre is very experienced with shooting video and interviewing, so she has offered to slot in some "vox pop" micro-interviews with staff who participated. I just need to tell her what I want asked. We'll experiment in changing the video to the right format, compressing it, then dropping it seamlessly into Captivate.
Not sure where I should draw the line for my screencast between a "professional" feel and a "fun" feel. If I'm alert, I guess I could aim for both...but I don't want to confuse everyone with anarchy.
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Service
Thursday, November 09, 2006
Everything's up to date in Cybrary City!
It will have resources for librarians, plus provide space for real life libraries to have a SL prescence. No mention of the word "free", but here's hoping.
Rochelle and CW have recently written about their first experiences in Second Life. Mine was similar when there wasn't an event on, but I had a great time at the Grand Opening of Info Island - watching Lorelei Junot behead herself with a guillotine at the spooky costume party and sitting in the cinema watching Rocky Horror Picture Show with other Library Friends. Oh yes, I also enjoyed the learning in the auditorium.
The Linden gods of Second Life have played dice with my avatar, poor Emerald Dumont (green hill - geddit?) by making her home inside a small model of a volcano in Mahulu. Everytime I teleport home, I end up in the volcano, thrashing about in fire and have to ask passerbys to teleport me out. At least I'm not like John Blyberg, who in SL had a grand piano stuck on his head for a while.
I'm beginning to think of SL not as a game or a virtual world, but as a user interface, similar to a web browser. A successful game would be interesting all the time. A successful virtual world would feel "real" all of the time.
A user interface can be friendly or unfriendly, but if it works well, then your focus should be on what you used it for, rather than the interface itself. If you browse the web with Firefox and what you find is boring, offensive, or unsatisfying, you don't walk away disenchanted with Firefox.
In academic libraries, we will soon have huge numbers of undergraduates who are used to this type of interface from gaming. They love it and understand it. To deliver the services where they are, we should understand it - and maybe learn to love it - pink hippos and all.
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Move away
( I never, ever cheat with these cards, just draw 'em as they come, but they keep being pertinent to my posts!)
Wednesday, November 08, 2006
Brewing another blog beast.
- We have too many email lists for internal communications
- All of us are saving emails in our own subdirectories on the same server
- To create a searchable archive
- To introduce staff to RSS feeds
- Experimenting so that we know how to create a ridgy-didge one to talk with our users
CW and I huddled around a PC one weekend at her house to set up LINT, so I've done a WordPress install before, but I'm finding out about .php, .css, ftp, plugins and the Gimp as I use them. I know I'm just learning - but I still keep beating myself up about not providing the perfect introduction to blogging bliss for the library staff.
Because I'm not Grand Zen Master Coder, I know it won't look exactly how I want it or do exactly what I want. I still want it to be something that people will "get", and hopefully enjoy. When you're asking people to change work methods, fun and enjoyment is not usually the result, so maybe I'm being a bit naive there.
We're replacing several email lists with the one blog, so I've set up categories with RSS feeds to match each list. The idea is that staff will subscribe to the categories that match the lists they already get, plus have access to all the other information whizzing about - all in a searchable archive.
I'm using these plugins:
- Category LiveBookmarks Plus Allows browsers to autodiscover category feeds, plus inserts an RSS icon next to the category name in the sidebar.
- Ultimate Tag Warrior so that we can tag posts and create tag clouds.
- Dagon Design Import Users . If you give it a file with usernames and their emails, it automatically adds them as users, creates a password and emails it to them.
- WordPress Suicide. So I can blow away the data on the test version and upload templates etc. from the copy I've been working on here.
- I've also added a patch, Ticket #1790: category-title-in-category-feeds.patch that inserts the category name after the blog name in the RSS title. (Pretty useless if all the feeds have the same title!)
In another post, I'll describe some of the decisions we needed to make in setting up the blog, just in case you're thinking of doing the same.
TODAY'S HIPPIE CARD: Action