Skip to main content

Home/ MOBIUS Libraries/ Group items tagged reference

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Scott Peterson

Parker on the Web - 0 views

  •  
    A related concept to T-Pen, but focused more on collecting together references, summary, bibliography, and related information from manuscripts in the Parker Library at Corpus Christi Cambridge. It allows material that ordinarily would have to be handled with care or viewed from a microfilm or facsimile copy to be used with no fear of damage and considerably enhanced by the additional reference material.
Jennifer Parsons

Professional Competencies for Reference and User Services Librarians | Reference & User... - 0 views

  •  
    Every time I look over RUSA's standards, I'm struck by how relevant they are to what we do as customer service professionals.
Megan Durham

How to Live Without Irony - 1 views

  •  
    This article was an interesting I didn't agree with a lot of it, but some of it was pretty accurate. Here's a hipster test : "Look around your living space. Do you surround yourself with things you really like or things you like only because they are absurd? Listen to your own speech. Ask yourself: Do I communicate primarily through inside jokes and pop culture references? What percentage of my speech is meaningful? How much hyperbolic language do I use? Do I feign indifference? Look at your clothes. What parts of your wardrobe could be described as costume-like, derivative or reminiscent of some specific style archetype (the secretary, the hobo, the flapper, yourself as a child)? In other words, do your clothes refer to something else or only to themselves? Do you attempt to look intentionally nerdy, awkward or ugly? In other words, is your style an anti-style? The most important question: How would it feel to change yourself quietly, offline, without public display, from within?"
Scott Peterson

For University Presses, a Time of Fixing Bridges, and Building New Ones - 0 views

  •  
    An article that references the closure of the University of Missouri last year, and mainly emphasizes that university presses need to focus on fund raising, advocacy, building alliances, and maintaining relevance in a changing publishing landscape.
Jennifer Parsons

TED Blog | The wide open future of the art museum: Q&A with William Noel - 0 views

  • The Walters is a museum that’s free to the public, and to be public these days is to be on the Internet. Therefore to be a public museum your digital data should be free. And the great thing about digital data, particularly of historic collections, is that they’re the greatest advert that these collections have. So: Why on Earth would you limit how people can use them? The digital data is not a threat to the real data, it’s just an advertisement that only increases the aura of the original, so there just doesn’t seem to be any point in putting restrictions on the data.
  • Institutions with special collections, particularly museums — libraries perhaps less so — want to improve their brand and raise visitorship. One way in which they can do that is through advertising. And what better way to advertise than by making instantly available, or as available as possible, images of their collections? Because that’s how they get known.
  •  
    An interview with William Noel, curator of the Walters Art Museum, which recently featured the Archimedes palimpsest in its collection-- both physical and digital.  What's wonderful about that is that its digital collection is under Creative Commons license. I'm a bit confused as to why Noel thinks that libraries don't want to advertise their collections, unless he's referring to the fact that libraries typically contain copyrighted material in their collections.
  •  
    Oh, and you can get to the digital exhibition of the Archimedes palimpsest at http://archimedespalimpsest.net/. It's not terribly user-friendly (to quickly look at the images, select "Google Book of the Archimedes Palimpsest"), but being able to access the raw TIFF images is pretty darn cool.
Jennifer Parsons

Wikidata - 0 views

  • Wikidata is a free knowledge base that can be read and edited by humans and machines alike. It is for data what Wikimedia Commons is for media files: it centralizes access and management of structured data, such as interwiki references and statistical information. Wikidata contains data in all languages for which there are Wikimedia projects
  •  
    This is a cool idea-- basically, it's a way to link the data in Wikipedia across languages to cut down on redundancy and help the information flow across language barriers.
adrienne_mobius

Credo's Literati integrates ReadSpeaker text-to-speech accessibility - 0 views

  •  
    "Text to speech removes barriers for auditory learners, learners who are visually impaired and those who are learning English as a second language."
anonymous

Closure Tools - Google Developers - 0 views

  • The Closure Compiler is a tool for making JavaScript download and run faster. It is a true compiler for JavaScript. Instead of compiling from a source language to machine code, it compiles from JavaScript to better JavaScript. It parses your JavaScript, analyzes it, removes dead code and rewrites and minimizes what's left. It also checks syntax, variable references, and types, and warns about common JavaScript pitfalls.
  •  
    This works amazingly well. The javascript we use to send text messages in the webpacs went from 8.5k to 4.3k. Also this works to combine multiple scripts and optimize them all together.
Sharla Lair

Librarians, Expertise, and the Social Transcript « Sense & Reference - 0 views

  •  
    A really interesting way to define librarianship. He says that librarians provide expertise in making accessible, navigating and making sense of the social transcript. Do you agree?
Jennifer Parsons

The Harvard Library Innovation Lab » Quality Rules - 0 views

  • My project work at the Lab has time and again shown the crucial importance not simply of cataloged records, but of cataloged records created to a high standard.
  • On the bibliographic side, every new Library of Congress subject heading a cataloger adds to a record creates a rich set of connective possibilities downstream for people like me.
  • But also: the expertise which catalogers bring to the task of comprehensive bibliographic description has proven crucial to me as a reference resource in my work of designing software to harvest and process bibliographic information
  •  
    On the heels of our keynote speaker, whose presentation has been weighing on my mind, this makes me worry that what will cause things to be lost is not things simply not being updated, but also things not being findable-- if some information doesn't have any sort of access point, it may as well not exist.
Megan Durham

What Popular Culture is Telling Us About Libraries and Why We Should Listen | Backtalk - 1 views

  •  
    Since I'm just now watching Buffy (don't judge me) I thought this was a good read about what pop culture tells about libraries and not just librarians. Everything is great until they mention National Treasure, but it finished strong so I'm willing to overlook it. Also no Music Man references :(
1 - 11 of 11
Showing 20 items per page