Monday, February 18, 2008

Uni

Yes – I am going back! Next week I start studying for my MBA through the University of Ballarat (I am definitely a gluten for punishment). I do however feel that an MBA will really help me learn more about the management of organisations and thus will give me a better grounding for my future work in libraries and in a variety of other areas. I am attempting three subjects this year:

Accounting and finance (definitely the scariest – but this should help me at work and for NLS4)
Marketing (should be great for work)
Business economics (2nd semester)

Anyway – wish me luck – I think I will need it!!

NLS4 Meeting

On Saturday I headed down to Melbourne for our first NLS4 meeting of the year. Basically we went through everything we had to do (which is lots) and geared ourselves up for a big year. Great news though is that we have a Gold Sponsor – the State Library of Victoria. Hopefully this is just the first of many. Stay tuned for further updates!



Book: Playing for Pizza


I just read John Grisham’s latest book (but not his law one). This one was a quick read about a has been NFL player who ends up playing in Italy. Typically story of sport, romance and a victorious win by the underdogs. Not bad but I definitely prefer his legal thrillers!


Victorian Library Technician Group Meeting

On Tuesday I headed down to Melbourne with Kim (which is great as we chat all the way). Basically we planned out events for the year with will soon be uploaded on the ALIA website. The usual highly popular events will be run such as Hot of the Press, Techs on Tour, River of Opportunities, plus a few dinner here and there. Looks set to be another big year!

University of Ballarat: Library Technician Orientation

On the Saturday afternoon, UB had their orientation day for the library studies school. I gave a very brief (10 minute) spiel about ALIA, what they can do for students, what the Victorian LT Group does, Technotes (new edition should be up now), e-lists etc. They seemed like an enthusiastic bunch. I feel this is a really good way to connect with the future of the LIS profession – plus I got to wear my ALIA top which rarely sees the light of day

Bookgroup

So I went to the first bookgroup meeting at the Mechanics Institute Library to discuss A Fortunate Life. Everyone enjoyed the novel and all the girls (no boys) seemed really rice. The other great thing (apart from all agreeing that the book was awesome) was that we all discussed other books we had read so we all went away with a list full of “to reads”! Boy that “to read” pile never grows smaller!

VALA

I was extremely lucky to be able to attend a whole day at this year’s VALA Conference. I am a member of Health Libraries Inc and they bought a shared registration to distribute amongst its members. I scored big time by being able to attend for the whole second day – the Wednesday. Here are my notes:

Schubert Foo – National Library of Singapore

Think of the library as an information concierge.

Brick vs Click (Physical vs Online)

He discussed that Singapore library users are very similar to ours in that they want access now without having to do all the steps in between. Instant access is taken for granted – if its not on the net it doesn’t exist for them. Therefore they are trying to delve into the spaces of their users to connect them to resources that users need for whatever purpose, in any format – anywhere!

Bookjetty.com (similar to Amazon??) But instead of having the option to buy the book you can see holdings from libraries and link users back to the library webpage). This all revolves around inter-connectivity which the library can provide through many of the Web 2.0 technologies.

They also do things like make their physical exhibitions virtual so that they can be enjoyed for many more years to come, once the physical exhibit has changed.

SMS Reference Service (Singaporean’s are very tech savvy).

Reference point – so much info sent in regards to a query. Books, journals, pay peer view, tailor made (like look at Chapter 7), where to find the book in the library etc. Then you evaluate the service and the queries are stored and can be re-used and histories are kept.

Google – like in maps they have information that is connected from the National Library. (Like run you cursor over a statue in town and info box from library pops up). Just another way they are connecting with users and bringing them back to the library via the online world.

Vendor Presentations

I was there for the vendor presentations and attended the following. All were interesting, many irrelevant to my workplace but was also going to comment on how great the trade exhibition was. Awesome, lots of freebies, so many different vendors – just great!

Ovid SP – Brief overview of the new system.
ProQuest – Newspapers overview (free two month trials available).
Softlink – Online e-reference system. LMS looked great with ILL forms, Lit search
forms and Chat embedded. Lots of customisation options.
E-book Library – Great demand driven option (but how $). Swinburne uses this model.
Oxford – Language dictionaries online. Oxford Reference Online available through the Electronic Resources Australia Consortium.
DA – Portable reader/writer ILIAD.

Many vendors mentioned that they can collaborate with COUNTER – the statistical package.

Concurrent Sessions

Garry Hall

Clinician’s knowledge network (QLD’s CHC). CKN also run by HCN.

Other states:
CIAP (NSW) EPOCH (Tas) CROC (NT)
HIAP (ACT) SALUS (SA) CIAO (WA)

CKN has Up-to-date. Total cost is $3.5million per year which work out to be 90cents per head of population. Single licenses for institutions for other databases can also be run through the CKN page.

Important to remember the QLD Health is very different to what we have here in Victoria. Public Hospitals are more centrally run. The libraries across the state use a shared drive to store training materials.

They are also involved with QULOC and other collaborations to maximise CKN. Additional products that they are looking at introducing include PEMSOFT and Map of Medicine. They also trial other products.

Like CHC it is an established an integral resource.

Barbara Kirkham

WRMS: Work Request Management System

Allows the SLQ to track a request through all the stages of its life span. The system connects with reports, statistics, email, word document templates and archives requests. A single integrated system for all departments across the library which also calculates the total time it has taken to complete a request.

It enhances the organisations ability to log and track requests. There is also a 12 hour time limit per month per client.

Heather Jenks

E-resources grew but full text downloads decreased? Why?

They used EnCompass (a federated search engine) then the tool was withdrawn as it ceased vendor support.

So, they used Google Scholar as the federated search engine. Full text downloads rapidly decreased as Google Scholar does not have all publisher and aggregators information available (ie. no commercial publishers). The library catalogue also wasn’t available to search so stats went down.

Then they instigated a new federated search engine (or multi-search as they call it) called 360 search. Stats have once again sky rocketed.

Just interesting to compare stats whilst using a freely available tool compared to properly integrating one and tailoring it to your system and libraries resources.

Michael Geist – Canada


Internet 2008…

We still grapple with the same issues after 10 years (filtering, policies, offensive content etc.)

Technorati – a blog search engine (over 100,000,000 blogs)

The power of people. Like Facebook where a group formed opposing Canadian Copyright Law. The policy was reviewed due to the 40,000 members complaining, sending letters etc.

Podcasting lectures – which not only allows students who missed a lecture to catch up but is attracting new students to Universities because they can hear what they are in for before they arrive and are choosing particular universities over others because they like the lectures presented.

Postsecret (blog) – A blog where you can tell your secret to the world through art. 250,000 posts in 2 years. Since then, books and art shows have arisen all from this one blog!

Videos (like Star Wreck) freely available to download, but then as it was so good, people bought DVD, merchandise and the license was sold.

You tube – like the professional season of “Lonelygirl” and the power it provided. Bigger ratings than TV.

Find it! Rip it! Mix it! Share it! Come and get it!

Flickr – with creative commons (also look up general creative commons website)

Books freely available under “cc” – like his book! In the interest: future of Canadian Copyright Law. But people read it, then want it so buy it. Then they buy other books by same publishers etc…

Encyclopaedia of life: cataloguing all life forms (10 years project – 9 years left.)

Librivix – Audio version of Project Guttenberg. Volunteers read these books and upload the audio.

MITOpenCourseWare – course notes, syllabus, podcasts, videocasts, powerpoints etc.

Digitisation projects (like Project Guttenberg, Google Book Search, Alouette?)

Open Source Software (like Firefox, Apache etc.)

All these enable creativity…..

Internet 2018…

Four pillars….

1. Access/connectivity: Broadband for all, muni wifi. Spyware, net neutrality, spam. We must ensure that we all have access and the ability to participate, all in an equal fashion.

2. Enhance participation: transparency, trust, privacy, domain names, intermediary liability issues (like he is getting sued for something someone wrote on his blog about someone else!)

3. Copyright: Anti-circumvention, fait use, term extension, orphan works, wipo.

4.Content: Open access, digitisation, crown copyright, public broadcasting.

The future of the internet….is in our hands!

WOW! Awesome speaker, so much more to find out about!

Beyond the Hype - Saturday day

As it was the weekend Sharon drove us in (which was awesome as we had our luggage) so we parked over the river, had a coffee for breakfast and ambled over to day two of the symposium.

Sherman Young

The book is dead: long live the book (by Sherman Young)

Web 1.0 – Connectivity
Web 2.0 – Creativity
Web 3.0 – Collecting (Semantic web – will do the work for us)

Hardly any notes but he was an awesome speaker!

Concurrent Session 1

I chaired the following three sessions so basically took no notes! All talks were interesting though!

Mylee

The other speaker (not present) went to the USA on the VALA scholarship and visited libraries over there to see how they implement their Web/Learning 2.0 programs before they developed one for the State Library of NSW.

Jennifer

LinkIn – like Facebook for businesses.

Bernie

Gartner Hype Curve

Concurrent Session 2

Kathryn

You Tube: blip.tv, viddler, teachertube, godtube

Flickr: zoomer, picasa, photobucket

Delicious: magnolia, connotea, citeulike

Facebook: myspace, bebo, xanga, friendstar, ning

Digg (news): reddit, perthnorg, su?

Others to consider: Slideshare and Library Thing

Kate

Focus on the need first and the tool second.
Daily book review via RSS.
Overdrive (online e-book thing)

That’s it! It was a good conference. I originally thought it was going to be a bit different (with more workshops) but all in all I enjoyed it. I didn’t take a great deal back to my workplace to implement but I learnt some news things – now I just have to find the time to have a look at them.

So Tan, Jill and I caught a taxi to the airport, had some dinner, then jumped on a flight back to Melbourne. We had another mini hen’s night on the plane and the crew gave us champagne! Thanks everyone for a great time!


Beyond the Hype - Friday night

After the first day we went to the ALIA Fellowship presentation to Gillian Hallam – and boy - what a deserving applicant. Then we headed over the river to Southbank for dinner (about 20 of us). It was great to meet some other delegates (how funny is Fiona!) and to catch up with the ever so lovely Rach (who is such a star). Anyway, at Southbank they have a night market so we had wandered through that on the way to dinner and I saw the “fake tattoo” stand but it was busy… As we left dinner back through the market to get Cold Rock (yummy) the tattoo stand was empty. So I quickly ran up and got a butterfly on my lower back, then made Tan get one to. And then the rest of the crowd followed with either butterflies or barcodes – which were the most librarish tattoo available. What a laugh! Such an awesome bunch of people! Check out the photos!!




Beyond the Hype - Friday day

Anyway, on the Thursday morning we were up early (and I mean early – they don’t have day light savings – it was like bright daylight at 6:00am). We dropped Anaki off and caught the train into the city – that’s when the humidity hit me! Anyway, we finally got to QUT, registered etc. and breathed a sigh of air conditioned relief! Here are my notes from the first days session:

Christine MacKenzie

She discussed Library Web 2.0 Activities like:

Finding information/Enabling learning/Creating content/Celebrating culture

And that the library can become the “third place” – a place where you are not at home, and not at work. The library can become the community loungeroom. The library needs to be user centered with multimedia exposure and experience, socially rich and a place that communicates innovation. All part of the natural extension of the patron experience.

So we must:
Learn to learn
Adapt to change
Scan the horizon

Keith Webster

He mentioned a website called “Rate my Professors” – look it up to see what has been said about my previous (and future ones)!

They use “Encore” a search engine with the library catalogue, databases, news items, tags, student tags, reviews, ratings (student interaction) etc. This allows students to get to the licensed products which Google doesn’t allow (similar to VALA talk).

Katy Watson

Are services being driven by demand? Or it is just hype? Are we just following trends?

So monitor trends vs implementing trends? Add when deemed a required service. What % warrants action??

Just because technology is available doesn’t mean you are welcome in their “social” spaces (like Facebook).

This talk was great as in my workplace there is very little hype about Web 2.0. I mean I hear and read about it all the time but most of it is irrelevant and pointless in my workplace. Great to have this talk as it was more cautious to new technologies.

Brad Jones

By using certain websites advertisers bombard use. It’s not “My Space” it’s “Rupert Murdoch’s Space”!! There is so much to learn (many more than 23 things) so it can be very daunting.

We have no control over certain things that are IT related:
Many can only use Microsoft and Adobe
Filters and blocking
Censorship of certain sites
IT blocking technologies

So think of your users – many cannot get to all these services that you are providing.

Luisa Rossitto

Made You Tube video for library orientation. Used simply tools that are easily available such as:
Digital camera
Move maker
Microsoft Paint
Audacity

Really coil little video clip. Inventive. She also mentioned Infotubey?? Which are You Tube awards for library clips.

EBLIP

They discussed evidence based librarianship and the five principles behind it:
Ask a question
Acquire the evidence
Appraise the evidence
Apply the evidence
Assess impact and performance (and report findings)

Continually gather evidence along the way (but don’t necessarily implement this evidence).

Workshop

I attended the Flickr, Slideshare, You Tube and Podcasting workshop.

They started with Flickr and Slideshare (which I already use and know lots about), then we basically run out of time for You Tube and Podcasting which is why I choose this workshop! Anyway they gave out a big workbook so (one day) I will work through that!

Beyond the Hype - Thursday night

On January 31st, Tan, Jill and I headed to a very sunny (and far too hot) Brisbane for the two day ALIA Beyond the Hype Symposium. We headed up on the Thursday night and had a little “hen’s party” on the plane for Tan who is getting married in a couple of weeks time. When we arrived Jill headed off to stay with a friend and Tan and I were picked up by the ever so lovely Sharon! We crashed on her lounge room floor for a couple of nights (right in front of the air con) and we had a lovely time catching up with her and her family (Thanks for having us Sharon!).


Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Book: Escape


So after a trashy book I moved on to a more in-depth one. I saw this one on Oprah (yes – tragic). But what a read. This is a story about Carolyn who was born into a polygamist community. A religious cult known as the Fundamentalist Church of the Latter Day Saints, a 10,000-strong community living in Arizona, USA. At 18 she was married to a 52 year old man and she became his fourth wife. What a riveting and very sad read. After 16 years of abuse she fled the community with her eight children. I mean, I can’t really explain it except that I highly recommend it. Again it makes you look at your life and shows you how good we actually have it! I have nothing to complain about!

Book: Book Lover


So after a pretty intense read of A Fortunate Life, I need some trash! Book Lover was just this! It was about a girl who whenever she gets depressed goes on “book reading binges”. Typical romance where girl meets boy (at local bookshop) etc. etc. I loved the following paragraph:

I collect new books the way my girlfriends buy designer handbags. Sometimes, I just like to know I have them and actually reading them is besides the point. Not that I don’t eventually end up reading them one by one. I do. But the mere act of buying them makes me happy – the world is more promising, fulfilling. It’s hard to explain, but I feel, somehow, more optimistic. The whole act just cheers me up.

Now that is quite similar to me (except I buy second hand, garage sale, market and Bookmooch books!) What is it about books that are just so mesmerising?? Anyway, the book was pretty average but just what I needed!

Book: A Fortunate Life


WOW! What a book. I only read this book for one reason – book group. I have joined a book group at the local mechanics institute and the first meeting is on Saturday. I got to select books that sounded interesting to me, and for the whole year only one of the ones I choose was selected!! Anyhow, this wasn’t one of them. I would never have selected it as it discusses a guy who goes to WW1. War stuff just doesn’t engage me. But boy am I glad I joined book group or I would never has been taken out of my comfort zone!

This book tells the story of Albert Facey who was born in the 1890’s. It is a biography of his life and how he grew up as a farmer, drover, soldier, union man, chook farmer, tram driver and much more. Just such an inspirational read with a real insight into life in Australia. I mean we just take so much for granted. I never had grandparents who told ‘tales’ so I felt like he was my granddad. Just a remarkable read – highly recommended!