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TechKNOW and Books to Buy

June 29, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

Firstly, here’s the new issue of TechKNOW, out of Kent State U.  I stuck more stuff I stole from Alterman behind the cut.

BTW, speaking of Alterman: I think the guy’s a snob, but I’ve never met him and my opinion really doesn’t count, anyway. The fact is he’s a great writer, and he wrote a terrific article for this book which has been on the shelves for a while now. (Buy the book.) The publishers are the same people who published this book, which you should also buy. (Buy this book, too.) Finally, I met this author at her book release party a couple of weeks ago and this author, who just got back from the Daily Kos road show in Vegas, a month or so ago at his book release event, and you should buy these books too.

(The fact that these books are published by my brother-in-law does not in any way mean that they’re not worth shelling out money for.  Remember (I say as I flick the ‘on’ switch to my MIB neuralizer), the small press is good . . . the small press is good . . . buy these books . . .)

[Read more…] about TechKNOW and Books to Buy

Filed Under: Reader Advisory

Presidential Signing Statements 2001-2006

June 28, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

This appeared on Eric Alterman’s  blog at MSNBC today. I am reproducing it here it in its entirety:

Mr. Alterman:
I have been
reading media and legal materials (including your piece, “Think Again:
Signing the Constitution Away,” at the Center for American Progress), here,
about the unitary executive and the Bush administration’s use of
presidential signing statements.  I think this is an important topic.

Therefore,
I have collected all presidential signing statements from January 19,
2001, through June 12, 2006, and posted a temporary webpage that
provides full text of all the bill signing statements issued by
President George W. Bush.  By setting out the full text of the signing
statements, this Web page should remedy complaints that the statements
are difficult to find.  To help readers verify text, the Web site also
provides links to the full text of the same documents at the White
House and Government Printing Office (GPO) Web sites.

The Web site also provides links to the full text of the laws that are the subject of signing statements.

I
am contacting law schools, scholars, attorneys, and commentators,
hoping to find a permanent home for this Web page.  Please feel free to
pass the URLs to others who may be interested in either: (1) giving
this information a permanent home on the Web, or (2) using the
information (including stealing and distributing it).

The main URLS are:

  • Full Annotated Text of all PSSs
  • Full Unannotated Text of All PSSs
  • Index to PSSs

I
hope that the Web site will: (1) help scholars and commentators write
intelligently and authoritatively about presidential signing statements
and the unitary executive, and (2) save attorneys a great deal of time
rooting these statements (and the laws to which they apply) out of the
GPO and White House websites.

The site is not pretty, but it is useful.

In sum, I want to give this information to someone else.  My offer is free to any taker.

Thank
you for your time.  I enjoyed your article and have linked to it on my
site.  I appreciate your writing well on such an important topic.

—Joyce

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

House of Morgan & Online Libraries

June 23, 2006 by Jon Frater 1 Comment

The Morgan Library got some very spiffy coverage in the Music section of the NY Times this morning, and that’s extremely cool.  But what was even cooler to me was clicking on my daily dose of LRC and finding this article on online libraries by George Giles. Giles is a libertarian (as are many who post on LRC) so his politics may not be to your liking, but the sites he links to seem quite substantial and cover everything from math to science to the goings on at Oxford and MIT to Marxism (I personally didn’t know there was a Marxists.org but i can’t say I’m surprised.) And I’m heartened to see he listed WebMD and the NIH among his selections. It’s all worth looking at in some detail.

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

The Science of Superman

June 21, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

I taught my class on E-Journals this morning at the NYAM Library Open House (and got a great reception from the 10 people who showed up–yea, me!) so I thought I’d devote today’s space to something genuinely nifty if not exactly library-related.

Alan Boyle’s Cosmic Log on MSNBC.com is too cool to not be part of any science freak’s daily reading (weekly reading at the least) and since today’s post is all about the Science of Superman, there’s even less reason not to visit today. There are no doubt more hard-core websites on both these subjects (of science and Superman) but this one is eminently accessible and fun to read, which makes it okay in my book.

Meanwhile, I’m bumping up against my deadline for an article on the Academy’s Grey Literature Report, which is one reason I’m posting here so seldom just lately.  My absolute drop dead delivery date is July 10, so I’m hoping to get a real draft complete by June 30. Wish me luck!

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

Beyond Google: What’s Next for Publishing?

June 15, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

This piece by Kate Wittenberg from EPIC at Clumbia U. is definitely worth reading.  It’s titled "Beyond Google, What’s Next for Publishing" and does a fine job of discussing how online environments are affecting (and being affected by) the publishing industry.

Here’s an excerpt to get you started:

"While we have been busy attending conferences, workshops, and seminars
on every possible aspect of scholarly communication, information
technology, digital libraries, and e-publishing, students have been
quietly revolutionizing the discovery and use of information. Their
behavior, undertaken without consultation or attendance at formal
academic events, urgently forces those of us in scholarly publishing to
confront some fundamental questions about our organizations, jobs, and
assumptions about our work.

Most students today arrive at college assuming that a Google search is
the first choice for doing research, that MySpace is the model for
creating online content and building peer communities, and — perhaps
most important — that multitasking with various electronic devices,
often from remote locations, is the traditional way to do class work.
The implications of those changes must transform our publishing
strategies.

If "digital natives" are the next audience for our scholarly resources,
shouldn’t we be thinking about new ways to organize, store, and deliver
our content? In fact, is content even what we should be focusing on for
this next generation of users, or are the tools, functionality, and
access built on top of the content what are of real value?

As publishers, we are going to have to adapt quickly and creatively if
we wish to remain true to our missions as information professionals and
yet be relevant to users. Are we ready?"

Well, are we? Get thee now to the Chronicle of Higher Education and read! Read!

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

Stolen Sidekick: A Public Service Announcement

June 7, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

I don’t generally post things like this, but this (assuming it’s real, and from what I can tell it seems to be) deserves a mention:

"You lose a Sidekick, leaving it in a cab accidentally. Some idiots grab
it. Instead of doing the right thing and returning it, even after a
reward is offered? They keep it and start snapping pictures.

THIS
web page is the result. These idiots just keep digging themselves
deeper and deeper. Just thought I’d pass this web nugget along and help
spread the word."

Folks, the lesson here is simple, and would be simple even if this turned out to be a total hoax: Return lost property, especially a $300 cell phone.  But I’m sure you know that already.

Filed Under: Web/Tech

Museum Mile and NYAM

June 6, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

An announcement from Chris Warren, Historical Collections, NYAM:

"This year, prompted by the Freud exhibit and interest in building
relationships with the Museum of the City of New York, NYAM is participating in
Museum Mile on June 13 (if you’re not familiar with this great event, visit
their website:  http://www.museummilefestival.org/ .

 
Library staff will be hosting a table on Fifth Ave., handing out balloons,
giving away door prizes, and luring visitors into the building to view our
exhibition of Freud’s drawings. We will also be glad to
distribute literature about your activities to the thousands of Museum Mile
visitors.
 
We hope you will visit Museum Mile, and come by the NYAM booth."
 

Hope to see you there!

Filed Under: Events

Librarians Break Silence in Records Case

June 1, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

From today’s New York Times (links & excerpt):

Four Librarians Finally Break Silence in Records Case

By ALISON LEIGH COWAN
Published: May 31, 2006

 

Four Connecticut librarians who had been barred from
revealing that they had received a request for patrons’ records from
the federal government spoke out yesterday, expressing frustration
about the sweeping powers given to law enforcement authorities by the
USA Patriot Act.

 
   

The librarians took turns at the
microphone at their lawyers’ office and publicly identified themselves
as the collective John Doe who had sued the United States attorney
general after their organization received a confidential demand for
patron records in a secret counterterrorism case. They had been
ordered, under the threat of prosecution, not to talk about the request
with anyone. The librarians, who all have leadership roles at a small
consortium called Library Connection in Windsor, Conn., said they
opposed allowing the government unchecked power to demand library
records and were particularly incensed at having been subject to the
open-ended nondisclosure order.

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

The Library: Next Best Thing to an MBA

May 31, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

From this week’s BusinessWeek (link & excerpt):

The Library: Next Best Thing to an MBA
Across the country, public libraries are giving would-be entrepreneurs a helping hand with resources and expert guidance…

Five years ago, Farid Ali was a Web designer for a
Manhattan law firm when a friend, George Constantinou, suggested they
open a restaurant together in Brooklyn. For Ali, however, there
appeared to be a couple of small hurdles. First, his entire restaurant
experience amounted to a brief stint as a busboy some 20 years before.
Second, he had never owned his own business.

"I had always worked for other people," he says. "To
become an entrepreneur was very challenging, I wasn’t in that mindset."
So he enrolled in an online workshop for budding entrepreneurs and came
across a librarian who told him about the resources available at the
public library.

For the next two years, Ali spent three hours a
day, four days a week, poring over reference material, databases, and
digital tools at the Brooklyn Public Library’s Business Library.
Constantinou joined him frequently. Together, they learned how to write
a business plan, create a Web site for their business, and, as Ali
says, "open a restaurant." Moreover, he says, "I realized by scanning
the shelves that owning a business takes a lot more than just raising
money and finding a location."

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

New NYAM Website

May 30, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

The Academy has redesigned its web site (***APPLAUSE***) for the first time in two years: take a look.  Here’s the official announcement from Kathryn Cervino, NYAM’s Associate Director of Communications:

"I invite you to visit and explore the Academy’s newly redesigned website at
www.nyam.org.
The sitewide facelift has made our website more visually and functionally
appealing. Among the most significant changes:
 
-The homepage has been completely restructured to give much-deserved
emphasis to the endeavors of the Academy’s five most active divisions focused on
health research and promotion. You’ll notice that text and photos describing
each division continually rotate through the "Divisions" section on the
homepage.
-The Library has been given a significant presence on the homepage. We now
offer five easy entry points to different functions of the Library, tailored to
consumers’  most common  requests. Webstat tracking software shows that the
Library is the most-visited section of our website.
-The search engine has been upgraded to provide results that are much more
helpful than before. With that, the search bar has been moved to a more
prominent location at the top of each page. The new search engine is now
provided through Google and provides more accurate content summaries.
-More Academy events are highlighted on the homepage (three, rather than
one).
-A new color scheme has been implemented throughout the site, making the
pages crisper, cleaner, and easier to read.
-The banner on the top of each page is now smaller , clearing more room for
content.
 
This is the Academy’s first sitewide upgrade since the then-new website was
launched in January 2004. I hope that you like it, and welcome your feedback. As
always, I am eager to work with each division to make specific upgrades and
changes within your section of the website.  These can include (but are not
limited to) adding new photos, creating new pages, and restructuring parts of
your section.
 
Thanks to those of you who helped with the changes, and to our webmaster,
Mike Wu, and his staff for making these upgrades possible."

Filed Under: NYAM Bulletins

Blogging the Bible

May 23, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

I found this project by David Plotz on Slate.com this morning (I’m already behind the curve as he started this weeks ago), but it’s interesting to me since I started reading The Bible Unearthed by Neil Asher Silberman and Israel Finklestein over the weekend.  The Old Testament (as you non-Jews call it) is not history . . . but it is, sort of. On the other hand, it’s not mythology . . . but it is, sort of. And it’s not rules and regulations on how to be a decent person (but it is, sort of.) And the archaeological record deals with all of it, but not in the way the raw text of the bible leads one to expect if one takes it as a completely reliable history book.

I’ve started to read the Torah portions at home on Shabbat, like a good Jew is supposed to. Technically, I’m supposed to study with a group, but I haven’t gotten to that point yet. But all things in time.  And it’s interesting to me to do this because it’s the first time I’ve actually sat down to do this, so I see where Plotz is coming from in his own research. It’s especially interesting having grown up the only believer in a family of Jewish atheists. However one feels about religion in general, I think the bible is still a powerful cornerstone to Western Civilization (notice the capitalization there) and it’s worth a read. That is, the bible (as we Jews call it) and Silberman and Finklestein’s book on the archeology of ancient Israel and Judah are worth a read.  I find it’s handy to keep the bible nearby as one goes through the other book too; that’s a trick I learned dealing with Joyce in college: when reading Ulysses, have a copy of the Odyssey handy.

Updates as they happen.

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

Celebrating the Beats

May 23, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

If the names Ginsberg, Kerouac, Burroughs and Cassady don’t ring an immediate bell with you, go and read this article by Donald W. Miller. Actually, even if they do ring a bell, read the article anyway; it’s a nicely organized, compact overview of some of the Beats’ better (and lesser) known history. You’ll notice at the bottom of the page, Miller notes that the article is adapted from a longer paper presented at the Fellowship of American Bibliographic Society’s Annual Symposium this past week, which makes me want to write to him to see if that paper’s to be made available anywhere any time soon.

Personally, the heaviest work I’ve ever done on the Beats was in college when Prof. John Tytell presided over the 1992 English Honors seminar, which I took. (Took it? I was at the meeting that chose his proposed seminar out of eight or nine others.) The seminar’s thrust wasn’t to the Beats particularly, although he did spend a big chunk of his life researching them (Ginsburg in particular). 

Now that I think of it, that was a pretty decent seminar: it was titled "Some American Antinomians" and spanned three hundred years of American literature.  ‘Antinomians’ in this  sense being those who go against generally accepted moral law. We covered Melville (Billy Budd, Bartleby), Emerson and Thoreau, Pound (of course–with Tytell everything comes back to Pound sooner or later), The Beats, both as a group and individually, and I’m likely forgetting bits and pieces of other worthwhile writing. But those were the biggies. The antinomian aspects of any of all these folks are debatable, but it wasn’t a bad seminar.

This entry has been waiting to be posted for over a week so I’ll hit the publish button now, but I promise I’ll write more about the seminar itself at some point in the future.

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

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