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adrienne_mobius

Losing My Revolution: How Many Resources Shared on Social Media Have Been Lost? - 1 views

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    Researchers found a nearly linear relationship between time of sharing of the resource and the percentage lost, with a slightly less linear relationship between time of sharing and archiving coverage of the resource. From this model we conclude that after the first year of publishing, nearly 11% of shared resources will be lost and after that we will continue to lose 0.02% per day.
Scott Peterson

Separated At Birth: Library and Publisher Metadat - 0 views

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    An article I found interesting both for how the Douglas County Libraries was trying to own rather then license much of their e-resources and store it on a server, but also how they were working with the metadata for those resources, converting it bu a crosswalk from the publication industry's XML-based ONIX (ONline Information eXchange) or simple Excel into Marc.
Scott Peterson

R-Squared Conference Blog - 0 views

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    An interesting blog for a conference that took place in Telluride, Colorado, last month which looked at risk and rewards and encouraged innovative thinking. Some of the presentation resources are available here: http://rsquaredconference.org/program/resources
Scott Peterson

Digital Object Identifier - 0 views

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    I found this interesting as it covers many of the links we're seeing in our electronic resource records (dx.doi.org) Pat of the larger Handle System the DOI is essentially a stable link for resources and citations.
Scott Peterson

The Handle System - 0 views

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    The Handle System "A digital object may incorporate not only informational elements, i.e., a digitized version of a paper, movie or sound recording, but also the unique identifier of the digital object and other metadata about the digital object." It is the larger group that DOI belongs to and helps with providing electronic resources not only with a persistent link but metadata associated with that resource.
Scott Peterson

An online hub for archical materials - 0 views

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    The Social Networks and Archival Context Project (SNAC) is a project that aims to bring together online resources and archival materials on historical person, to basically allow a researcher to know where all the records are to understand a person. What I found in the prototype is that it resembled a catalog of sophisticated authority records. This could be useful for someone needing quick information or seeing how a historical figure fits in context, but I question if in the end it doesn't repeat information found almost as readily in other resources such as Wikipedia.
Scott Peterson

No More Gatekeepers | From the Bell Tower - 0 views

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    This was a fairly interesting article about how, Amazon's Jeff Bezos wants to eliminate the "gatekeepers" by empowering as now anyone can become a publisher, producer, or editor of content. Ultimately I agree with the article's assertion that librarian's should be opening doors and resources, but feel that is essentially what the role has been the whole time. A "gatekeeper" is not so much a barrier to people but a barrier to wasted time and effort, and serves as a resource and authority to what people are searching for.
Sharla Lair

The Charleston Advisor - 1 views

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    Publishes critical reviews of online resources for libraries.
  • ...1 more comment...
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    I'm already getting Professional Development email ideas! Thanks, Sharla!
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    I'm going to use it also.
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    Great!
adrienne_mobius

Smartphones Have Bridged The Digital Divide - ReadWrite - 0 views

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    "Since at least the 1990s, when personal computers first became commonplace, public policy experts have worried the ill effects of a Digital Divide. That is, a learning, socialization and economic gap across socio-economic status, race and gender caused by unequal access to computing resources."
Scott Peterson

ALA President, Maureen Sullivan: ALA, E-Books and You - 0 views

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    A brief video from the ALA about eBooks, mainly useful for information resources the ALA provides about eBooks.
Scott Peterson

Stakeholders Strive to Define Standards for Web-Scale Discovery Systems - 0 views

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    An interesting article covering some of the many problems in in developing consistency and open standards among discovery services. Notably the article mentions the Open Discovery Initiative and also talks about indexing concerns and resource coverage.
anonymous

Why Your IT Spending Is About to Hit the Wall - Wall Street & Technology - 0 views

  • Between 2006 and 2010, demand for processing cycles (MIPS, servers and the like) has slowly approached an 18 erpcent annual growth rate in the big banks. Storage, by the way, has hit 45 percent per year -- the advent of Big Data is here -- and although the unit cost of storage is still dropping, storage cost pools around the financial industry are expanding out of control. The growth phenomenon is now exacerbated by market conditions, and Moore's Law just isn't enough.
  • Taking a step back, you will likely ask, "How can this be true?" The answer involves yet another "law" -- actually, a paradox observed in the late 1800s -- "Jevons paradox," which states:Technological progress that increases the efficiency with which a resource is used tends to increase (rather than decrease) the rate of consumption of that resource. William Stanley Jevons developed this hypothesis in 1865, based on his observations of coal consumption vis-à-vis the technology advances designed to improve the efficiency of coal usage. It was his argument that these improvements alone could not be relied on to reduce consumption; rather, they would lead to increased consumption -- and he was right. Today we talk about elastic computing; in 1865 Jevons focused on "elastic coal" – well, at least the demand was elastic.
  • So the aforementioned growth in demand (passing the 20 percent mark per year) is actually fueled in part by the inherent efficiencies created by Moore's Law. Through 2010 we were in the Moore's Law zone of managing IT costs downward. Now we are a new world governed by the effects noted by Jevons.
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    Because of Moore's Law - the decreasing costs of computing power, we've become a world of Big Data and are now consuming ever more computing power at a rate that exceeds Moore's Law.
Scott Peterson

CrossRef - 0 views

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    CrossRef is the official DOI registration agency of the international DOI Foundation. It was launched in 2000 and includes over 900 voting members and publishers who represent over 3000 societies and publishers. The organization includes metadata services and on the front page a resolver so DOI strings that are not hyperlinked will connect directly to the resource to determine what it is.
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    Interestingly enough, III seems to use it for WebBridge (which I know little about): http://csdirect.iii.com/webbridge/index.php?n=LinkSyntax.DOI-CrossRef
adrienne_mobius

Very Pinteresting!: The hot social network is taking educators by storm - The Digital S... - 0 views

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    "Everyone's buzzing about Pinterest, a new social media tool that connects people through the things they like-but for a growing number of users in classrooms and media centers, it's fast becoming a powerful resource where teachers and students share images, store lesson plans, read about current events, watch video clips, and collect their favorite apps."
Scott Peterson

The Public Domain Review - 0 views

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    An interesting resource about Public Domain works leaning towards art/historical material. Works vary from Ebooks to images and articles are well written it not up to scholarly review standards.
Scott Peterson

History of Project Gutenberg - 0 views

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    With eBooks having taken off in the past few years I was curious about the current status of Project Gutenberg, the original resource of online books. Starting in 1971 with the Declaration of Independence Gutenberg initially relied on manually typing in royalty free books into a text format. The project is still continuing, but the founder died last year and as of July 8th the archive is only 40,000 books, an almost miniscule number compared to the digitization efforts of Google.
Jennifer Parsons

OverDrive alternative: How a savvy Colorado library system owns e-books for real, saves... - 0 views

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    A heartening story about how the libraries of Douglas County, CO are bucking the current trend of leasing music from services like OverDrive.  As a result, they negotiate directly with publishers, actually own their electronic books, and are able to display said electronic books directly in their catalog, not just in a ebook-only ghetto (a source of irritation to me).  The author suggests this could start a new trend that might culminate in a loosely-organized, nation-wide system that allows smaller libraries to benefit from the expertise and work from larger systems with more resources, like Douglas County.
Jennifer Parsons

Copyright Limitations and Exceptions for Libraries & Archives | IFLA - 0 views

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    Well, this is ambitious and I imagine will be very time-consuming.  It's a good resource guide to the IFLA (International Federation of Library Associations)'s attempt to liberalize copyright laws on an international scale.
Scott Peterson

Out of Print, Maybe, but Not Out of Mind - 0 views

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    A somewhat whimsical article looking at how similar e-resource offerings are to traditional books and how books are still part of our mindset.
Scott Peterson

Can volunteer effort help keep school libraries open? :: News :: Philadelphia City Paper - 0 views

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    What sounds like a cautionary tale about keeping libraries open in a time of slashed budgets and electronic resources becomes a concerning episode of institutional decline of libraries in the Philadelphia school system as some "libraries" have operated for years without staff and functioning as essentially a store room.
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