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Asciiflow - ASCII Flow Diagram Tool - 0 views

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    Just used this today to make a diagram of our Evergreen system. It was exactly what I was looking for and it worked flawlessly. 
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Generate and keep really secure passwords for free | ITworld - 0 views

  • Of course, they could look for a username that sounds like you in the list of 8 million LinkedIn and EHarmony logins and then just use the password published there, or the ones posted following the hack of 77 million user accounts at Sony or the 130 million credit-card accounts taken from the clearinghouse that processes your credit card payments, or tens of thousands lost by a New York electric utility or the California government services agency you thought was unquestionably trustworthy or the 24 million emails and user names swiped from Zappos or almost anywhere else.
  • you should use a different highly secure password at every site you use.
  • That way, no matter what web-site login database is breached next, your loss can be limited to only the information (or money) on that one site,
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • KeePass -- one of two apps with unquestioned leads; both come with Firefox and Internet Explorer extensions or web sites you can used independently; LastPass – the other of the two leaders. Both are stable, quick, reliable and free;
    • anonymous
       
      I've used LastPass. It's nice, but I prefer to have something local if possible. I'm not really concerned with their security, but it's nice to have your passwords offline.
  • KeePass;
    • anonymous
       
      This one doesn't have a browser integration but it can be kept on a usb key for portability
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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
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    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.
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Letterology: Please Don't Eat the Library Paste - 0 views

  • I'm not making this up. This gravestone marker is from the Goldfield Pioneer Cemetery in Goldfield, Nevada. It marks the grave of the "Unknown Library Paste Man"
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    Not actually a hoax.  (In case you were, you know, tempted to eat library paste.)
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[Series] Emerging Careers in Librarianship: Data Curation « Hack Library School - 0 views

  • Data curation is defined as “the active and ongoing management of data through its lifecycle of interest and usefulness to scholarship, science, and education.” (GSLIS) The volume of scientific data is growing exponentially across all scientific disciplines. This phenomenon has been termed the “data deluge.” The data deluge is now a fundamental characteristic of e-science and “big science,” especially in disciplines such as physics, astronomy, and earth and atmospheric sciences. Moreover, stakeholders are beginning to recognize the value in sharing data assets with each other and in curation of data for re-use over the long term. Competent information professionals are needed to curate this data for future research and education requirements.
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    After the opening keynote at our conference, this seemed relevant.  I think the need for data curation will become more and more relevant as we move to a paperless society.  Though, given the challenges of what to preserve and how, that day may be long in coming.
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Affection for PDA | Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

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    "Approximately 400 to 600 libraries worldwide have switched to a patron-driven system for purchasing new works, and that number is likely to double over the next year and a half, according to Joseph Esposito, a digital publishing consultant who has spent the last nine months studying the implications of PDA with a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation."
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Book Places in the Digital Age « The Digital Digest - 0 views

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    The article offers an interesting model of a "Book Place"-- a sort of combination library/bookstore of the future that offers things like printed books on demand if they're not in the store (thanks to the awesome Espresso machine and the 7 million titles it has on EspressoNet), and rental/subscription services for users-- including DRM free options for electronic media.
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The Antidote to e-Books - 0 views

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    I would say this is still more of a niche interest than an "antidote," but it does say something that people would still prefer to use the Espresso Book Machine and publish a physical copy of a book and it still sells rather than create it as an eBook on Amazon or Google Books. Probably the most useful aspect is for small independent booksellers to maintain a large accessible inventory but only keep and produce a small physical supply as needed, which could also apply to libraries--however not mention in the the articles is these units also have a hefty price tag of over $100,000.
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Your Ebook is reading you - 0 views

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    On the one hand this is nothing new, several entertainment industries are using deep analytics to see how customers use their products. However, many Ebook readers may not be aware that how long they take to read a book or what they read is being tracked. Customers may avoid books on controversial or personal subjects out of privacy concerns, and publishing may being taking a by-the-numbers approach where they depend more on analytics than market experience and become less willing to try new ideas and authors.
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Fairness questions raised about the retire/rehire of a Fort Worth Librarian - 0 views

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    This article looks at a legal but somewhat controversial practice in some municipalities where employees can retire and receive a full pension, but still come back to work full time on a salary. In the case in question a librarian who retired 8 years ago was hired over 66 other candidates at a salary $22,000 higher than an an entry level hire would be paid. Some concerns are also raised about how retire/rehire may prevent young educators from getting jobs.
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Brazil prisoners reading books to shorten their sentences - 0 views

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    Interesting idea. I wonder who okays the books they can read.
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    Yeah, I think that might backfire a la "Shawshank Redemption": Dufresne: (in response to another inmate's discovery of "The Count of Monte Cristo") You know what it's about? You'll like it. It's about a prison break. Red: We oughta file that under "Educational" too, oughten we?
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    The benefits of this are pretty clear, and allow some realistic limits, letting prisoners read up to 12 books to take 48 days off of their sentence each year.
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MemSQL - 80,000 queries per second - 0 views

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    Even though it's not going to be free and open source, it's cool to see that new blazingly fast databases are being developed. 
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Libraries Cut E-Book Deal With Penguin - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    Penguin Group and electronic-book distributor 3M have made a deal with two New York City public library systems that will return Penguin e-books to library shelves for a one-year pilot. Penguin is one of four major publishers that don't make e-books available to libraries. The pilot, crafted to protect e-book sales, will delay the release of e-books to the libraries for six months after the titles go on sale in stores and online. Each library e-book will expire after a year.
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National Federation of the Blind Assists in Litigation Against Free Library of Philadel... - 0 views

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    The Free Library of Philadelphia has a program in which free NOOK Simple Touch e-readers are loaned to patrons over the age of fifty. However, the NOOK is completely inaccessible to patrons who are blind. Library personnel had discouraged two blind patrons from even attempting to check out one of the devices. The library had also been issued letters from the Department of Education regarding the obligation of federally funded institutions to purchase accessible e-book readers and other technologies. It's not clear from the release what steps the library may have taken to remedy the situation or how it escalated to the point of a lawsuit.
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Load balancing at Github: Why ldirectord? | Anchor Web Hosting Blog - 0 views

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    This is a really nice article about a few different approaches toward load balancing authored by an engineer that work[s|ed] for GitHub. The top comment is from the guy who made HAproxy refuting some of the OP's assertions.
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Who will preserve the past for future generations? - 0 views

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    This is a highly critical but reasoned examination of the state of the Library and Archives Canada. The author feels that the national library is losing focus by breaking up parts of it's collection, putting undigitized materials into remote storage where they are harder to access, cutting hours, and reducing staff by up to 20 percent--all of which contribute to the dissolution of the country's past and heritage. What he doesn't offer is an examination of what brought the national library to this state (unavoidable funding cuts or bad decisions to streamline or both) and what can be done to fix it.
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Espresso Book Machines: Should Libraries Offer On Demand Publishing? - 0 views

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    A fairly brief article that cites the benefits of on-site book publishing (supporting independent and creative authors), formatting and self-publishing academic material, and supporting in a limited manner a patron driven acquisitions model, offset by the machine's high price of $125-$150,000. I think it would be interesting to see numbers on printing volume and overall operating costs, as well as whether any leasing options are available for the book machine.
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    I'm glad to see the Espresso is starting to get press. It's been around for awhile, and has the potential to be very useful.
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A note to our readers We have updated our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. Review t... - 0 views

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    Pricewaterhouse Coopers' Global Entertainment and Media Outlook predicts that E-books will make up 50 percent of the U.S. trade book market by 2016. Total book spending is predicted to be relatively flat, with the total spending on print books declining while e-books will grow fast enough by 2013 to offset the decline. E-book spending is predicted to skyrocket in North America, but will grow slower in Europe and Asia, with Japan and South Korea as notable exceptions.
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Scholarly Publishing 2012: Meet PeerJ - 0 views

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    PeerJ on the surface sounds like an interesting concept where members pay to have their materials published and therefore have a lower overall cost to use and still allows academics to publish. However, this sounds similar to another article I read a few months ago of an explosion of "scholarly" journals that were little more than vanity presses. In particular I'm concerned about how a "qualified academic editor" will find peer reviewers, with little details on how the process will work or the qualifications of everyone involved.
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A Digital Dilemma: Ebooks and Users' Rights | American Libraries Magazine - 0 views

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    "The current model of digital content delivery for libraries places library users' privacy at risk. Authorizing the loan of an ebook or the use of a database can communicate unique identifiers or personally identifiable information that reveals a user's identity."
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