|
My Internet connection went out for a little while tonight, so I picked up Richard Saul Wurman's Information Anxiety 2, which has been sitting on my desk for a few months now. I was flipping through it more than reading it, as I like to go back and read the stuff in the margins. Today I noticed that on page 143 is a section titled "The Right to Copy." Here's the part I want to highlight:
I recognize this isn't the most revolutionary idea anymore, nor may it be the first time you've heard it. I do think that it's the copyright debate in a nutshell, though - the acknowledgment that "laws of copyright are changed to the right to copy." And if the copyright owners can just take away your right to copy, then they can make sure their laws are enforced. Of course, that's the crux of the problem for libraries. If you can't copy something, it's probably because you can't get your hands on it (even electronically, so to speak) unless you actually purchase the item yourself, which you then can't copy or loan to someone else. That pretty much leaves libraries out in the cold, which ultimately leaves all of our users out in the cold. Think about your life, because I'm sure there's a time when you used a library, whether you needed something for a paper, you checked out something good to read, you wanted to look up a magazine article, needed to use their computers, whatever. At some point in your life, I'm willing to bet you've used a library and its resources. Now think about how that may change for future generations.
I had a report that the "open links in new window" script on my site doesn't work on IE
A Technology Timeline (Adobe Acrobat PDF) [via Slashdot]
Fascinating reading that demands you print this out, highlight your favorites, and discuss amongst yourselves. Personally, I hope the "brain add-ons" get here before 2033.
Now this might put Conversant back in the running in my investigations....
Speaking of Brent, tonight at dinner he told us that he's going to be a genius when he grows up and invent a velcro suit that sticks to a velcro wall, just like the one in Big Fat Liar. We can only hope!
A few years ago, I bought my first Palm, the first III version. It changed my life forever, and I began preaching the gospel to anyone who would listen (and even those that wouldn't). A couple of years later, I got a Palm IIIxe because I was running out of room on my old PDA and because the screen on the newer ones was so much easier to read. Then last year, I got a Sony Clie 710, at which point I had two old Palm IIIs sitting around. I gave Sheree the IIIxe, but we never really got it installed. Now, she's in the middle of running a referendum for our home library, and with everything going on, she needs some help with the information overload. Enter again the Palm. I turned it on today for the first time in a few months, so naturally the batteries were dead. As we were bringing it back to life, 6-year old Brent saw the original Palm III and asked if he could have it. Now that's progress. He'll probably be playing with his before Sheree is. I'm waiting for the fallout when 7-year old Kailee finds out about this.... I figure I can fill it with educational software, stuff like Diddlebug, and games. Is there educational software available for that a 6-year old can use? I'll be finding out, but if you know of any, please send them along!
Another great link from Steven that includes, among other things, Here to Stay 3.0 - "The 2002 version of the original Top Ten Reasons the Internet Will Not Replace the Public Library as revised by the author from the 1995 SLJ article." Very timely. A Novel Idea Takes Wing in the Windy City
I'll see your Oprah and raise you one Chicago Public Library. First we had Chapter-A-Day, now we have Book-a-Minute SF/F. Nowhere near complete, but fun. It reminds me of the cassette John Moschitta made back in the 80s called "10 Classics in 10 Minutes." It was hilarious (especially "Gone with the Wind" and "Romeo and Juliet"), and now I will have to go dig through my ancient cassettes to see if I can find it. (FYI, John is the fast-talking guy in the old FedEx commercials.) Interestingly, searching Google for information about him brought me to the Web site for James Gleick's book Faster, which is on the Shifted Reading List. Supposedly it has some newer material than the book, too, as Gleick finds "recent news, oddites, or phenomena" that strike him as "pertinent or amusing." So now, in addition to all of the books on TSRL that I haven't read, I have to find time to go read through this site, too.
My Dad and I have always been fascinated by this picture, and now it's a clickable image map! Yee-haw! Moving my blog to my own server seems to have cleared up my publishing problems. Now I can publish carefree like the rest of the Radio world! I'm stoked!
Drool, drool, drool. I bought a new car last November, and when I was doing research, I found that Hyundia and Ford were the only dealers that had an in-dash MP3 system that came pre-installed. Of course, the Hyundia dealer I actually talked to had no clue what I was talking about, so I knew we were still a-ways off on this. Who knew Mazda was already busy naming a car! Unfortunately, this article is mostly about MP3 technology, rather than informative about the car itself. BTW, there are companies that make MP3 CDs of audiobooks, much like you buy regular CD audiobooks at the store. Those MP3 audiobooks would work in this car, as well as any other MP3-compatible stereo (home or car).
Score! Userland is adding comments to Radio! Knowing them, I'm sure I'll be able to subscribe to my comments feed in order to monitor them, just like I can with YACCS. I'm really impressed with the way Userland is continually enhancing Radio. Good job, guys! BlahBlahBlog points us towards a Scientific American article on memes from October, 2000, that I missed the first time around. I'm thinking of taking a poll to see if we can identify top library memes. Whaddaya think? I think we'll find that we need a few good ones to jumpstart some discussion. Okay, it's officially a poll. Send in your thoughts and I'll summarize and post them.
|
Blogroll (Sites I Read in My Aggregator) Mobile Blogroll (Sites I Read on My Treo 600) Spreading the meme: Why You Should Fall to Your Knees and Worship a Librarian Unabridged: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||



