The Shifted Librarian - Shifting Libraries at the speed of byte
 Sunday, October 13, 2002

Jessamyn: How I Tried to Resign from Google Answers but Found I Was Already Fired

"Is what they said true? Do you think 'many' librarians use Google Answers as a resource themselves? Where do you suppose they get the money to do this? How would Google even know this 'fact' considering that most of their users are at least somewhat anonymous. If you are a librarian who has used Google Answers, I'd love to hear from you. And I still think information wants to be free, no matter what Google Answers says."

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Presentations And Writings Online

I don't know what SLS IT would do without Donna (and Jody), but I've been remiss in noting that Donna has put my last two presentations online.

Also, if you subscribe to Library Journal, the October issue is available and it includes the netConnect supplement, which has my latest Product Pipeline column. Link to appear behind that column name when it's available online.

10:35:45 PM  |   Permanent link here  |    |   Trackback [] | Google It!

Advice For Newspapers That Want To Shift

J-Log found a great new journalism blog called HypergeneMediaBlog. It explores the impact of new technologies on and their possible adaptions by media companies in much the same way I try to explore new technologies and libraries. Here are a couple of samples.

  • Putting Ads into RSS Feeds
    "Why not turn your classified advertising into a helpful service, like an RSS feed? Let your customers customize the ads they want to see or simply offer more specific choices - (e.g. rss_used_foreign_cars_saab.xml, rss_apts_for_rent_zip_90210.xml). This would more than pay for the deployment and maintenance of free RSS news feeds, and perhaps leave some money left over for, ahem, profits. If news media don't do this soon, sites like Ebay and Monster are going to beat you to it."
     
  • Is Broadband the Killer App for News?
    "In June of this year, the folks at the Pew Internet & American Life Project released a study that went somewhat overlooked by purveyors of blogs, collaborative publishing, etc - The Broadband Difference: How online Americans' behavior changes with high-speed Internet connections at home....

    This stats in this study lead us to recommend that media outlets interested in targeting audience participation in the journalistic process might expect broadband users as their early adopters, and should plan accordingly. These users are sophisticated Net vets - they will see immediately through shoddy attempts at online community.

    The report also suggests that the most voracious consumers of online news and information are broadband users. Ridiculous deep linking policies (cul-de-sac thinking) and shovelware content are not going to keep these readers loyal and coming back for more. They're more likely to find what they're looking for in the Slashdot communities and smart aggregators such as Google News."

Naturally, HypergeneMediaBlog has its own RSS feed.

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News Flash: Ebooks Are Somewhat Popular Somewhere!

Utilizing E-books to Enhance Digital Library Offerings

"A comparison of circulation of identical titles available at the University of Pittsburgh in e-book and print book format indicates that e-book circulation is higher than print book circulation. During a four-month period each e-book title was accessed an average of 3.7 times compared to an average of 1.4 accesses per print book title. Thirty percent of the titles in the e-book collection were accessed during this period while only ten percent of the print collection was accessed [11].

Some e-book content is in more demand. These include current subject matter within certain disciplines and content that is generally not read in its entirety, i.e., scholarly, professional, and reference content.

Current netLibrary e-book usage patterns suggest highest subject usage within the economics and business; computer science; literature; medicine, health and wellness; technology; history; education; sociology; and religion collections. These e-book content areas are similar to those identified by librarians.

In June 2001, netLibrary emailed questionnaires about e-book content to 1900 academic, public, and special librarians. The sample was equally distributed among the three types of librarians. One hundred eighty-one responses were returned. Eighty-four percent of the responses were from academic librarians, fourteen percent were from public librarians, and two percent were from special librarians. Business, medicine, computer and information science, technology, and career content were the highest ranked subject areas for e-book collections. Digital reference content was also ranked highly [10]....

If libraries are to thrive in an electronic world, an e-book company focused on the needs of libraries is requisite. Libraries are a different audience from that of consumer electronics, and have different priorities. They have a higher dependency on standards than retail customers because they serve a wide variety of patrons, publishers, distributors, and locations, under ADA guidelines, and must do so at an extremely cost-effective level. They also have a stronger need for standards-based technologies to ensure that the goals of open scholarly exchange and learning can be met between user communities and between institutions. Academic researchers need to rely on authenticity and integrity of content; e-book content should match any print content and include all its elements (text, graphs, and illustrations). Content needs to be separable from access and manipulation features, and needs to be transferable, in a non-proprietary format, into a variety of reading appliances. Interoperability of files between systems is important, as is digital rights management software to enforce control over intellectual property [12]. All of these specialised needs foretell an e-book service by libraries and for libraries." [Ariadne, via The Virtual Acquisition Shelf and News Desk]

So looking at these statistics, why aren't ebooks more popular? (Regular readers will recognize this is a rhetorical question.)  Again, I have to wonder why publishers aren't partnering with libraries to make us launchpads for ebooks and digital content. (Yes, another rhetorical statement.)

9:38:00 PM  |   Permanent link here  |    |   Trackback [] | Google It!

Only one computer mishap this weekend, and technically it was my fault, so maybe the computer gods feel I have passed the test. Mid-day on Friday, Radio stopped working because I had re-installed it 30 days ago and had forgotten to enter the serial number. The trial version expired, but it was an easy fix once I found the SN. I can't believe nothing more serious went wrong!

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