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sperkins

The making of a classification scheme for libraries of Judaica - 66th IFLA Council and ... - 0 views

  • The authors of the scheme contend that there was and is a need for a classification system for libraries of Judaica to classify and arrange their collections according to Jewish concepts based upon Jewish thought and terminology. This paper describes the history of A Classification System for Libraries of Judaica it's development, the process involved in preparing the 2nd and 3rd revisions, and its use in various libraries.Keywords: Librarianship, Libraries, Classification, Judaica
sperkins

The End of LC Subject Headings? - 5/15/2006 - Library Journal - 0 views

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    Should the Library of Congress (LC) jettison Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH), the longstanding professional taxonomy? That's one of the provocative suggestions in a new report released last month by LC. "The Changing Nature of the Catalog and Its Integration with Other Discovery Tools," commissioned by LC and written by associate university librarian Karen Calhoun of Cornell University, was making waves weeks earlier, thanks to a critical review of a draft of her paper, written for AFSCME 2910, the LC Professional Guild, by Thomas Mann (author of The Oxford Guide to Library Research). It warned of "serious negative consequences for the capacity of research libraries to promote scholarly research."
sperkins

Towards a Theory of Information: Information: Mystical Fluid or a Subject for Scientifi... - 0 views

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    Access to the full-text PDF article from the British Computer Society.
sperkins

Everything is Miscellaneous - 0 views

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    "This blog discusses the topics covered in Everything Is Miscellaneous."
sperkins

Wiki - Main - WebHome - 0 views

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    A wiki companion to the blog Science Library Pad, about technology for science libraries and publishers.
sperkins

Bonnie Nardi - 0 views

  • While face to face interaction is especially rich in ways to establish connection (touching, eating together, making eye contact, sharing common space, informal chitchat), people also establish connection through mediated communication. Blogs, wikis, instant messaging, email, chat, newsgroups, listservs, websites, and games are especially interesting forms of human communication that establish and maintain fields of connection as well as allow for the exchange of substantive information. M
sperkins

plasticbag.org: Two cultures of fauxonomies collide... - 0 views

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    This post considers explanations for changes in tags, 
sperkins

Health 2.0 | Economist.com - 0 views

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    This Economist article explores web-based, user-generated content with a focus on health information. 
sperkins

LibrarianInBlack: Review of Open-Source Software for Libraries - 0 views

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    LibrarianInBlack.net's review of open-source software for libraries
sperkins

Pandora's Click - The New York Review of Books - 0 views

  • To say that Send: The Essential Guide to Email for Office and Home is more a users' manual than a book is not to belittle it. Email is like an appliance that we have been helplessly misusing because it arrived without instructions. Thanks to David Shipley and Will Schwalbe, our blind blunderings are over. With Shipley and Schwalbe's excellent instructions in hand we can email as confidently as we load the dishwasher and turn on the microwave.
sperkins

Not a Destination : David Lee King - 0 views

  • In this emerging model, the library is no longer a destination.Instead, the library provides access to a destination… outside of the library!
sperkins

Basic Competencies of a 2.0 Librarian: Why Learn this Stuff? : David Lee King - 0 views

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    Excerpt from the post reads:  "The library world is beginning a transformation from a single focus on content-storing-and-retrieval to a more varied focus where creating content is also important. This is happening for many reasons… one reason being the ease of digital content creation that web 2.0 tools allow. Librarians, especially librarians hired to do 2.0-ish stuff, are being asked to create content - write blog posts, create screencasts and podcasts, experiment with video, and teach other library staff how to do these things.cerpt from the post: "
sperkins

Tags Help Make Libraries Del.icio.us - 9/15/2007 - Library Journal - 0 views

  • Now social bookmarking and tagging tools help librarians bridge the gap between the library's need to offer authoritative, well-organized information and their patrons' web experience.
sperkins

Reading Books in the Digital Age subsequent to Amazon, Google and the long tail - 0 views

  • Presenting a wide range of literature, this article explores the state of art in book research, paying particular attention to John B. Thompson’s interpretation of digital transformations within the book industry, as depicted in Books in the Digital Age (2005). Claiming that Thompson’s analyses are one–sided, the article applies alternative perspectives and a model of a text cycle, contending that the diminishing role of paper in text production and text distribution makes the dominant position of printed books particularly vulnerable to advances in digital reading technologies.
sperkins

Book Shelf View - 0 views

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    Blog post describes two technology concepts for application in libraries including:
    "Imagine keyword searching through a book database, only the results come back as a picture of library stacks where the book is highlighted in context, where serendipity and browsing could happen."
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    "Another idea in the physical world would be to create rooms, about the size of a study room, with walls with functionality similar to iPhone screens where one could search either through voice recognition or via wireless keyboards, then walk over to the wall of books, seeing life-size images. Touch a book, and open it with an effect similar to the Internet Archive's OpenLibrary page-turner, but using touch screen technology"
sperkins

CompSpeak 2050 - 0 views

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    " The prospect of escalating conflicts and tensions around the world, together with the ongoing search for global peace, demand that we create technologies which allow everyone to communicate with everyone else. Voice-in/voice-out (VIVO) talking computers, using online voice-recognition technology, will allow all people to access the world's storehouse of information merely by speaking, listening, and viewing graphics."
sperkins

Scott Isensee and Randolph Bias - The Future of Usability - TalkBMC - 0 views

  • The Future of Usability: Podcast interview with Randolph Bias, associate professor, The University of Texas at Austin School of Information, and Scott Isensee, user interface architect at BMC Software, Inc.
sperkins

Twitter / askundergrad - 0 views

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    instant messaging example for libraries
sperkins

Twitter - Library Instruction Wiki - 0 views

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    instant messaging tutorial and wiki for libraries
sperkins

Rambling Librarian :: Incidental Thoughts of a Singapore Liblogarian: TagClouds: What i... - 0 views

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    Post titled, "TagClouds:  What if OPACs allowed a 'Browse by Tags' feature?"
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