I am working in a university library. I therefore wanted to start this blog to talk about libraries and especially library 2.0. I also wanted to discuss web 2.0 with the blogosphere.
Friday, April 23, 2010
Is it really only Five years old?
I read today that youtube is 5 years old. Youtube seems so ubiquitous now I can't remember it not being there.
The annoyance of bloglines
I have been using Bloglines since I started this blog. Unfortunately, for the past 24 hours its been down. Techcrunch has an interesting article. I think I may need to transfer to Google reader.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
New blog for jobs
A site I use well regular for jobs is Jobs for info pros and really has a great twitter site for jobs. Well they've started a new blog to. Check it.
Friday, April 16, 2010
What future for the social web?
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Dissertation of Sarah Hammond
Sarah Hammond has released the results of her masters degree here. The title of the theses being How are public libraries engaging with Library 2.0?. Really interesting read if you have time. Hope you get a good result Sarah for all your hard work.
Labels:
Academic library 2.0,
dissertation,
public libraries,
uk,
usa,
web 2.0
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Librarything discussing ebooks
I expect this is too late, but Tim Spalding on his Librarything blog has an interesting article entitled Reading alone: How ebooks will kill the smallest libraries. An interesting argument which concludes with these lines:-
But if something is gained, something will definitely be lost. The list of ebook "externalities" is long: the death of physical bookstores, the wounding or death of traditional public libraries, the concentration of retail power in a few hands, surrendering your reading history to corporations, privacy and censorship issues in undemocratic states, leaving your books to your kids, lending books to friends, showing off, subway voyeurism, etc.
Depressing reading.
But if something is gained, something will definitely be lost. The list of ebook "externalities" is long: the death of physical bookstores, the wounding or death of traditional public libraries, the concentration of retail power in a few hands, surrendering your reading history to corporations, privacy and censorship issues in undemocratic states, leaving your books to your kids, lending books to friends, showing off, subway voyeurism, etc.
Depressing reading.
Thursday, April 08, 2010
Mobile Libraries in the UK
There is an interesting story in The Guardian entitled Is the mobile library dead?. Worth a look if you have time.
A break away........
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