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Vonnegut’s Blues for America

February 6, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

Another quote from Kurt Vonnegut’s latest:

‘The blues was a gift so great that it is now almost the only reason
many foreigners still like the USA. Foreigners love us for our jazz.
They don’t hate us for our
purported liberty and justice for all. They hate us for our arrogance.’’

I stuck another excerpt behind the link. Enjoy!

[Read more…] about Vonnegut’s Blues for America

Filed Under: Reader Advisory

The Worst Word

January 27, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

Jeremy Clarkson opines thus in The Sunday Times:

". . . the worst word. The worst noise. The screech
of Flo-Jo’s fingernails down the biggest blackboard in the world, the
squeak of polystyrene on polystyrene, the cry of a baby when you’re
hungover, is ‘beverage’."

It’s a fun article, but I am forced to disagree: having spent far too long in the technology industry (in one capacity or another, I must say that if anyone ever comes up to me at a party and tells me about a new technology "solution", I’m going to beat them to death with my shoe. I hear that word and I see red. An urge to kill rises, and one day I’m not going to be able to control myself. Software (and many kinds of hardware) is not a solution . . . more often than not, it’s the problem that requires the solution. So while I respect Mr. Clarkson’s opinion, I think the worst words are invariably buzzwords. They’re great ad copy but they rob real words of any meaning they contained.

Well.  I’m glad I got that out in the open.  It’s Friday.  Time to drink.  (59 minutes and counting …)

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

Real Estate and Satellite Images

January 24, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

Found this on SearchEngineWatch.com: Hot:Real Estate Industry Uses of Satellite/Aerial Imagery. It’s a longish post with about a million hyperlinks, but it’s worth it if you have the time. The databases that are being developed in this area are huge:

"The combo of online maps, satellite/aerial imagery, and real estate are a hot combo these days. This new Reuters article, Every inch of Netherlands viewable online, offers a profile of Funda.nl
a database that lists 75 percent of the Dutch property for sale and
gets 2.6 million visitors every month. It will soon provide 15 million
photographs growing it to 21 million images by year-end."

I’ll point out for those who haven’t figured this out yet (all six of you and you know who you are) that these are tools that until very recently were available only to the military. Even then, an object the size of an airplane hangar or a ICBM silo was just big enough to capture in any detail. Not anymore.  Imagine seeing how a plot of land you’re considering buying in another city (or another state or another country) is affected by local roads, access to other towns, or changing coastlines in five minutes with a mouse click or two. Imagine planning a town (or even a city)  from the ground up in advance based on the topography available through this medium. Imagine what will happen in the not-too-distant-future (somewhere in time and space) when the imaging and metadata tools get even more powerful.

I’m nowhere near smart enough to imagine all the ways this infrastructure can be used (an awful thing for a guy who writes scifi in his spare time to admit), but I have faith that plenty of others are that smart and will come up with amazing stuff.

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

We Are Right and They Are Wrong

January 23, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

Kurt Vonnegut had this to say in the  Guardian this past Saturday:

"The title of Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 is a parody of the
title of Ray Bradbury’s great science-fiction novel Fahrenheit 451.
Four hundred and fifty-one degrees Fahrenheit is the combustion point,
incidentally, of paper, of which books are composed. The hero of
Bradbury’s novel is a municipal worker whose job is burning books.

While
on the subject of burning books, I want to congratulate librarians, not
famous for their physical strength, who, all over this country, have
staunchly resisted anti-democratic bullies who have tried to remove
certain books from their shelves, and destroyed records rather than
have to reveal to thought police the names of persons who have checked
out those titles.

So the America I loved still exists, if not in
the White House, the Supreme Court, the Senate, the House of
Representatives, or the media. The America I loved still exists at the
front desks of our public libraries."

We are legion and we are mighty as long as we stick together. More importantly, we are right and they are wrong. Tell everyone who will listen. Then tell everyone who won’t listen.

I’m buying this book and I posted the entire excerpt behind the link.

[Read more…] about We Are Right and They Are Wrong

Filed Under: Reader Advisory

Copyrights, Copywrongs

January 19, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

Will Femia, author of the "Clicked" blog on MSNBC.com, declares today that:

"Lessig is wrong — Lawrence Lessig
is a champion of the Creative Commons movement and an advocate for
loosening copyright restrictions.  His current battle is over the
digitization of books.  Google wants to scan books into a database to
make the text searchable.  You wouldn’t get the whole book in a search,
just an excerpt.  Ignoring whether this is a good idea or a handy
utility, this blogger makes a good argument against Google’s plan.  For
what it’s worth, there is a larger issue at play as well, which is
whether search engines and other services that surface material from
the Web (like RSS aggregators) are taking advantage of the original
content holders."

There’s more to it than this excerpt, so check out the whole thing if you have the time. Actually, you should probably make the time regardless.  This issue will not go away any time soon.

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

English as She is Spoke

January 12, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

I’m honestly not sure if this is a proper reader’s advisory or not, but, it’s an awesome article: "Moving Forward–and Backward–With the English Language." This comes courtesy of the Christian Science Monitor, a newspaper I’ve been reading (online) for years without ever seeing a single article on christian science.  I must be looking at the wrong section.

Just be aware that Stephen Colbert owns "truthiness".

Filed Under: Reader Advisory

Cataloging Manga & Anime

January 12, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

The December 2005 issue of TechKNOW (care of Kent State U.’s TSLibrarians listserv)  is out. (It’s actually been out for a while, but the hyperlink I had only started working a short while ago–it’s fixed.)  This quarter Jeanne Poole covers cataloging cleverly selected bits and pieces of the wacky (and not entirely consistent) world of Japanese anime and manga. We get a brief history of the art form and a bunch of well-formed MARC records to boot.  Good stuff, folks.

(Why can’t I write articles like this?  I own manga and anime; I’m friends with the Editor in Chief of Media Blasters, for corn’s sake.  Grrr…)

Filed Under: Cataloging

Rare Books Bound in Human Skin

January 10, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

I think "Ick!" says whatever the title doesn’t:

Human Skin-Bound Books in Many Libraries

Apparently this was a big thing in the 19th century.  Enjoy! (or, well . . . whatever.)

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

Annoying E-Mails Are Now Illegal

January 10, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

Also new in 2006: it’s now a federal crime to send someone an annoying e-mail anonymously. I’d pay to hear a few FBI agents talking about how’d they go about enforcing this one. I doubt it would stand any realu judicial scritiny (or, I hope it wouldn’t) but it could just be seen as the logical conclusion of a country run by people who all think they’re special (or at least all think they deserve special consideration for something by someone), who have lost any sense of dignity and are on the verge of losing their sense of humor.  On the other hand, the law apparently says that it’s okay to flame someone as long as you use your real name, so perhaps this is a mid-term election stunt of some kind.

At any rate, the new law is described here, so take a look for yourself.

Personally, yes, I think cyberstalking is a major problem.  Anonymous e-mail that someone may take offense at is another story.  Criminalizing it is one of those very tricky propositions that looks great on paper but is probably a lot less effecacious both in terms of prevention and enforcement in real life. The article notes that the version of the bill that passed was its second incarnation: an earlier version of the bill had a higher standard of proof of damage (one had to use an "interactive computer service" to cause "substantial emotional harm.") Criminalizing merely obnoxious e-mail is impossible to enforce unless the FBI plans to filter literally every email that passes between two American citizens. They can’t really do that, can they?

Well, can they?

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

New for 2006

January 10, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

Congratulate me: this is the 100th post of the Rogue Scholar. (Yea!) I started this silly thing last year as a way to help me develop how I thought about library-type work and the issues that relate to it: it gets lonely in the back office sometimes, and it pays to put pen to paper to figure out what one really thinks of all this stuff that librarians have to deal with. A lot of it is busy work but some of it bears thinking about.  (Google, for one.)

I wanted to note that in 2005 this blog had 3,682 readers, which I find nothing short of  amazing.  People read, people commented, people forwarded a few articles to other people. It was insane. I expected this to have maybe a few hundred people showing up through the year, but . . . wow, was I wrong. (Wow, am I glad to be so wrong.)

We’re upgrading our ILS from Voyager 4 to 5 this week, so we’re losing all but our OPAC search capability. That’s throwing a bit of a monkey wrench into our usual workflow, since we’ll be receiving journals and other materials without the ability to note the fact in our catalog. Ultimately, we’re storing everything on back shelves until the acquisitions module comes back on line next week.  In the meantime, we’re also integrating the 280+ Lippincott title back files we’ve just acquired into our online access area, and I’m dealing with all the work that goes into that.  Finally, I’ve got the 200+ Ebsbo e-journal titles we just acquired tucked safely into our online catalog, but there’s still a bit of testing to finish up there.  Finally, LinkFinderPlus is giving us problems again. It’s a constant battle between requesting additions and upgrades to the LFP Knowledge Base and tracking the aggregators and other database providers who give us direct access so that they’re recognized by the KB. While this is going on, I’m needing to clear all the old and forgotten crap off my desk before the end of this week. So yeah, if my posts are a little more scattered than usual this week, now you know why.

Work, work, work. ("Ach . . . this is the life we chose!")

Filed Under: Library Hijinks

A. Very. Big. Deal.

January 6, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

None of these (late again!) tidbits have anything strictly to do with library science, library management, library work, reference work, or other facets of Libraryland’s inner workings (when will I learn to be on topic with this stuff?) but they all have to do with library-related stuff that I think about from time to time.

Another bit about Google; yes, I am obsessed with Google. I am obsessed with what Google’s continued growth and ambition means for libraries and librarianship. I am obsessed with the precedents that Google’s operations and plans are setting for those of us who deal with data management on a daily basis and with its implications for the methods and goals of research for everyone. This particular article comes from author Douglas Rushkoff, whose work I’ve read (and enjoyed) and who I have real respect for. I don’t agree with his final point, that Goggle somehow has sullied its otherwise sterling reputation as a genuinely new internet company by buying five percent of AOL. From what I can find, it wasn’t this purchase that made them a competitor to Microsoft–they were always competitors of Microsoft. Every tech company that is not Microsoft competes with Microsoft in some way, shape or form–that’s a message the Bill Gates has sent to the world loud and clear over the past twenty years. If it isn’t, then why has Microsoft bought so many new and interesting companies and technologies and done its best to integrate the newest tech into their own products? (Please don’t try to tell me it’s all about making Windows the best OS ever–it hasn’t been the case for over a decade.) That’s what Bill repeatedly calls "innovation." (I call it "eating the opposition.") But the point is the same–the relationship between huge mega-companies in the tech field is complicated and ever-shifting, with each year bringing events that nobody very  accurately anticipates. If Google feels that owning a bit of AOL gives them an edge in the marketplace, and they’re using their own funds to do it, that’s good enough for me.

That’s not to say this is necessarily a great strategy for Goggle, mind you. I still can’t figure out how they intend to make this new purchase work for them–I don’t know what AOL has they can genuinely make use of (except enormous cash flow, which is not a bad thing.) Must be why I’m not a MBA.

Another speech from Bill Moyers: read everything Moyers ever wrote, said, or otherwise spoke of. You won’t go wrong.  Even if you hate him and everything he stands for (social justice, equality, integrity) you will learn from his work. I promise.

Finally, we have this bit from Andrew Tobias’ website. Please don’t tell me this is off topic. Integrity in data formulation is always on-topic for a library blog. This is a big deal, folks. A. Very. Big. Deal.

Update: Here’s a follow-up to Friday’s article on Andy’s site, and here is a link to a GAO report on the veracity of our election process. A. Very. Big. Deal.

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

Do Libraries Matter–Again.

January 4, 2006 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

I know, I’m a day late (again). I came back from vacation yesterday to dive right into integrating our new electronic journal list from our new serials vendor into our catalog, which process includes verifying the back files of each title and making sure that the overlapping databases (our general link resolver, whatever we get through other electronic resource vendors, etc.) It’s a lot of work and not one of these major companies has any way of doing batch updates (other than the typical batch activations that we use to upload changes and updates to the link resolver). Blah. And we just purchased a huge bundle of new material which also has electronic formats that needs to be integrated the same way, so . . . Double Blah.

Anyway, my boss forwarded this to us yesterday: "Do Libraries Matter: On Library & Librarian 2.0" by Michael Stephens on the ALA TechSource blog. I’m not sure that there’s much material here that hasn’t been written on or imagined by at least someone in Libraryland, but it’s good reading just the same and the links are active.

Enjoy!

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

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