
In addition to the UIE roadshow yesterday I have a bunch of fun speaking and learning opportunities coming up. I’m looking forward to it all!
2/25 : WebWise 2009
→ Social Media Iron Chef
2/17 : Drupal4Lib Camp
→ attending!
3/17 : Illinois State Library On The Front Lines: Agents of Change
→ Keynote, Creating the Usable Library
3/20 : IA Summit 2009
→ The Usable Library Website (poster session with Amanda Etches-Johnson)
3/22-27 : Gates Foundation Global Libraries Peer Learning Meeting
→ various sessions
3/28-4/2 : Computers in Libraries 2009
→ various sessions
More details and PDFs as it all unfolds.
Last Friday I had the honor of giving the first talk in the newly resurrected Margaret Chisholm Lecture series. Over 100 LIS students, alumni, and faculty spent a portion of their evening talking about the read/write web with me. LIS on a Friday night? My kinda folks for sure. I even got to meet my Flickr friend Jen Waller face to face. Nice!
They made some great posters for the event:
And had a big screen:
Here’s a pdf of my slides for the event: Libraries and the Read/Write Web. [11 MB]
Someone asked about what I read to keep up with all of the cool things happening on the web and in libraries. I managed to recommend using a feed reader and name a few blogs. I didn’t give a very exhaustive list mostly because my incoming self selected information stream is such a blur. I probably couldn’t name a quarter of the weblogs I subscribe to, I just pick out the interesting bits when they pop up.
To make up for my weak answer I promised to list some blogs that could make a little starter kit for keeping track of what’s happening with libraries and the read/write web. You’ll notice it is mostly non-library blogs. I’m not slighting library blogs, just highlighting the point that we need to get outside of the library and related writing.
Tech stuff
Gizmodo
NYT Technology
Design
Signal vs. Noise
information aesthetics
swissmiss
General
kottke.org
Lifehacker
TechCrunch
Misc
Pasta&Vinegar
Pink Tentacle
Wired Top Stories
Libraries
Librarian.net
LibraryCrunch
LibraryBytes
The Shifted Librarian
Swiss Army Librarian
Two more points. First, don’t click around to all of these sites every day. Use a feed reader to bring the information to you. To learn about that, see RSS in Plain English. Also, don’t limit yourself to these blogs and their feeds. Find some blogs relevant to you and your hobbies. This will get you in the habit of checking your reader frequently.
Thanks to everyone that made it a great event.
What: Gaming (& Gadgets!) Night
Where: CIL 2008, Jefferson Room
When: Sunday, April 6th, 5:30-8:00 pm
How much: FREE
Who: You and other people interested in gaming
Jenny Levine and I have given a few gaming workshops at past Computers in Libraries and Internet Librarian conferences. After the sessions we’ve opened up the room to anyone interested in playing some games and/or learning about gaming. It’s proven to be a popular and really fun time, so this year Information Today has turned the post-workshop gameplay into a featured event. With refreshments even!

We’ve assembled an impressive array of games!
Systems: Nintendo Wii, Playstation 2, and Xbox 360. We’ll also have two Nintendo DS handhelds.
Games: Wii Sports, DDR, Hotel Dusk, Guitar Hero III, Professor Layton and the Curious Village, Wario Smooth Moves, whatever you bring, and Rock Band.
Since we’ll have three systems going at once, we’re opening up the option of an honest to goodness tournament with prizes. You probably want to know which game, huh? Well, it’s up to you. Sign up in the comments here or at a page we’ve created on the CIL08 wiki titled CIL08 Gaming Night to play Rock Band, Guitar Hero, or DDR. We’ll play whichever game gets the most signups!
In addition, Chris Harris is bringing some modern board games. Bring your own games, bring your latest shiny, new gadgets, and we’ll see you Sunday night!
It is the middle of March which means that a bunch of library geeks will descend on Crystal City, Virgina next month for Computers in Libraries 2008. The conference is trying some new things this year and I’m excited to be a part of some of them.
Helene Blowers suggested that a Pecha Kucha presentation be held. Six of us will have 20 slides and 20 seconds each slide to make a point. I’m moderating the track that this is in which means I get to cut people off mid-sentence during this session. Fun! [Tuesday, Track C, 4pm]
Jenny Levine and I have been doing gaming workshops at the past couple IL and CIL conferences with some informal open gaming afterwards. It has morphed into a Sunday night event: the Gaming & Gadgets Petting Zoo. I need to start practicing being a Guitar Hero.
I’m facilitating a postconference workshop with some top notch library thinkers.
Helene Blowers, John Blyberg, Sarah Houghton-Jan and David Lee King will be giving short presentations followed by conversation and brainstorming. It should result in some great potential projects!
Tuesday morning’s keynote will be given by Erik Boekesteijn and Jaap van de Geer from the Delft Public Library. Their presentation at Internet Librarian last year might be my favorite conference moment of 2007. This should be just as good! They’ll share stories from their 2007 tour of U.S. libraries.
Tuesday night is the Second Annual InfoTubey Awards for outstanding library marketing on YouTube.
Hurrah for learning!
Last Tuesday I gave a talk in Philly at the 50th anniversary NFAIS (National Federation of Abstracting and Information Services) conference. The audience consisted of some librarians and some people from the database industry. I took the opportunity to say a bit about the read/write web, what libraries have done with it, and how databases would be better if they took cues from it.
One thing I presented was a mockup of what a social or participatory database might look like. My slides might not be too helpful without commentary so I’ll just write a bit here. Here’s what I’d like databases to have:
→ a usable interface. Simple enough it seems, yet we direct patrons to interfaces that have 6 or more places to input data and all sorts of options to refine their searches. This is not acceptable. The example that I gave of a great interface, maybe my favorite in all the library world, is VuFind. It is an open source OPAC overlay being developed by Villanova University. I can even paste the entire link(!) to a book’s record right here because it isn’t long and ugly! http://www.vufind.org/demo/Record/397263. Here’s a bit more on VuFind from Roy Tennant in Library Journal.
→ usable urls. See above. To put a finer point on it,
http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=1&hid=113&sid=85d806a6-91d6-40a8-b53b
-dac0e9002bf8%40sessionmgr102
is plain unnecessary. Why not something like http://database.com/authorID/article#?
→ history of articles retrieved. Not just saved articles in folders. The ability to turn on a feature to log all articles accessed could be useful. If the system could then generate statistics about a user’s viewing history, that would be great. Think: most accessed journals, authors, etc…
→ sharable, persistent spaces. Here I’m envisioning something like David Lanke’s Scapes concept which I find compelling. People can assemble content from databases, discussion, notes, links, a todo list, and other relevant documents like audio, video or pictures. These spaces have granular privacy and collaboration controls so that they can be shared with the world, certain networks, specific groups, all research friends, or only certain friends. Just like Yelp features their power users, so too could outstanding examples of research be highlighted by the database company. This would engage people and show off the full potential of their product.
→ embraces the open web. Library research does not exist in a library only vacuum. Research tools should reflect this and not segment themselves from the rest of the web. I don’t expect results from closed databases to appear in the open web, but it would be great to include stuff from the normal web, the web that people are accustomed to using, into databases.
→ full RSS support. Some databases (ebsco and proquest only?) are starting to get this. Customizable feeds for queries, authors, periodical titles, keywords, subjects, most saved/emailed/printed would be good. Providing javascript for RSS –> HTML would be great.
→ easy to use citation tools. In any relevant format.
→ user profiles. If something is going to have participation, there must be participants. If participant’s are meant to have meaningful identities over time, there must be user profiles. So here is what someone’s profile on a participatory database could look like, with details below.
Click through to flickr for a better view.
Things to note:
Even though I didn’t intend for it to, this has some courseware functionality in it. I don’t know how much I’ll pursue this line of thought, but it does make sense in that a user-centered, practical research tool would be course based. A participatory database certainly wouldn’t replace anyone’s main social networking site, but it would look more like what people are accustomed to using. Because of the ability to make useful social connections people would be motivated to do research.
I hope you find my thought experiment worthwhile. A quick reminder that while light-years away from what databases currently look like, this stuff is library science, not rocket science. Isn’t like sending people to Neptune to establish a colony. Ideally I’d like to say that libraries could produce such a product but I don’t think database vendors provide the requisite APIs. So if we want something like this, we’ll have to collectively pressure them.