Contents contributed and discussions participated by Rhondda Powling
New world order ahead: The developing world is the setting for science fiction's best n... - 0 views
How to Start Reading Science Fiction, Part 2: 10 Accessible Science Fiction Books | Kir... - 1 views
SF Signal: How to Start Reading Science Fiction, Part 1: What You Need To Know | Kirkus... - 1 views
Time Riders | TimeRiders Trailer - 0 views
Reading List « Libraries and Transliteracy - 2 views
1 in 4 College Textbooks Will Be Digital By 2015 - 0 views
MoversandShakers 2011 - 1 views
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For ten years now, LJ's Movers & Shakers has been spotlighting librarians and others in the library field who are doing extraordinary work to serve their users and to move libraries of all types and library services forward. They hail from all corners of the library world and several nations. Nominated by their colleagues, friends, bosses, and just plain admirers, they are just the tip of the iceberg. We know there are many more Movers out there, making libraries better and taking them into the future.
The Future of Libraries is Transliteral - A Guest Post by Ned Potter « Librar... - 1 views
Awful Library Books - 3 views
Online book reviews are fantastic - trust me | Christina Martin | Comment is free | gua... - 0 views
Internet Archive Partners With 150 Libraries to Launch an E-Book Lending Program - 2 views
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The Internet Archive, in conjunction with 150 libraries, has rolled out a new 80,000 e-book lending collection today on OpenLibrary.org. This means that library patrons with an OpenLibrary account can check out any of these e-books. The hope is that this effort will help libraries make the move to digital book lending. "As readers go digital, so are our libraries," says Brewster Kahle, founder and Digital Librarian of the Internet Archive
This Library E-Book Will Self-Destruct After 26 Check Outs - 1 views
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@RWW "imagine, if you will, a publishing company - oh, let's say HarperCollins - telling libraries that after checking out a book a certain number of times - oh, let's say 26 - that they've reached the cap on loans. The book can no longer be shared, and libraries need to return the copy or buy the book again. Sound crazy? Well, that actually is the new policy for HarperCollins, reports Library Journal, detailing the new terms for its e-book loans via OverDrive, the main e-book distributor for libraries.
BTFA Home - 1 views
Beth Revis - 0 views
Derek Landy Blogs Under Duress - 1 views
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