A device for every occasion

There has been a lot of talk in the library world about ebooks and ebook readers and so it seemed timely to attend Crystal Rose’s Education Institute session on ebooks.

Ebook readers seem to be booming, with seemingly endless releases of new readers. (Once again, Canada loses out in the recent kindle ereader releases). It makes me consider my use of ereaders and really, it comes down to the occasion or the format I’m reading. I frequently read on my smartphone (at lunch, in bed when I can’t sleep), on my iPad (love reading journal articles on it), on my Sony touch (usually longer books), on the computer as required. Could one device do it all? At this point, I don’t think so and that’s because of the item. I read PDFs differently than a long book. Something I’m not spending much time on at a lunch doesn’t need to be as robust as something that I need to focus on.

As I drafted this, Penguin appears to have pulled out of the ebook game for libraries, removing their books from Overdrive while they reevaluate. This again raises questions on how libraries can be part of the ebook world. Ownership of content is a pressing issue and present licenses aren’t helping. Time and again I see the question “what is the future of ebooks in libraries” and with the constantly shifting arena, it seems to only be getting more problematic.

Update It seems Penguin has reversed the decision until the end of the year. More here.

A wee update

Well, I’ve been quiet again but I have a good reason. I’ve been rather busy as I finished up my previous job and embarked on a new journey. If you haven’t heard, I am now the new Web Services Librarian at Memorial University of Newfoundland (MUN). I’m rather excited by it all. I know I will miss my former colleagues and my work as a liaison, I do love working with faculty and students in the realm of teaching and learning, but I’m looking forward to working with them in a new capacity. I’m excited to be working with a new group of great librarians and I am absolutely thrilled to be back on the east coast.

I have lots to learn in this new role and plan on sharing things here as usual. I’ll be doing the usual webby things in this new position, including UX, usability, web migrations, etc. I’m still incredibly interested in educational/instructional technologies and of course, there will be the usual library issues stuff. So, not much will change on the blog itself. Hope you’ll stick around!

LibDay7

Last week was #libday7. This time, I mostly tweeted as it was a relatively quiet week, complete with a vacation day. Here are some highlights though, in case you missed it.

  • lots of FYE work. The beginning of August is always Welcome Day time, so there is lots of organizing to do for tours and info booth. Also need to make sure the FYE wiki is up-to-date. This year, they are doing a pseudo one book, one community activity, which I’ve been involved in and am working in supporting. I’m also working on figuring out this year’s swag.
  • chatted with a future lib tech student. I love talking with students, seeing their passion and excitement. I tend toward not sugar-coating answers and we have some good frank discussions about librarianship.
  • VuFind implementation. I’m part of a group working on getting VuFind up and ready for use. It’s been an interesting experience.
  • various miscellaneous duties, including assisting a researcher find information for an upcoming book.
  • conference calls for a variety of things, including association duties.
So, that’s the highlights from one of my quieter weeks. If it had been a month ago, it would be a very different list of duties. That’s one of the great things about my job – while there is an underlying goal in all I do (help people find info), the actual duties keep me both interested and busy

Another social network

Lately, I’ve been a little enthralled with the way information and social networks explode and expand. I was lucky enough to get an early invite to Google+ and I found it particularly interesting to see how quickly my circles grew and how connected my particular social circles are. Watching this grow, I thought back to the last time I watched a wave spread throughout my social network – I watched as twitter talked about the possible death of Osama Bin Laden  and the official announcement that was given. Social networks have truly changed the way I get information.

There are already lots of blogs and news pieces about Google+, so I’m not going to weigh in too much on the topic – it’s far to early to tell. So far, I like the clean look and I love being able to control circles and who sees my information. I’ve taken much of my information out of facebook because I don’t feel like I’m in control of it. I’m not sure Google+ will take over my use of twitter and friendfeed, but so far, I like it. If it starts getting too game-y, too much like facebook, I’ll be gone.

TEDxLibrariansTO roundup

Well, it finally happened. I’ve been looking forward to this conference for a while and it lived up to expectations. The theme for TEDxLibrariansTO was thought leaders. This was the first conference in a long time that I didn’t tweet as I wanted to fully immerse myself in the conversations in the room.

Amy Buckland started the day with a call to revolution. Thought leaders should take radical action, help move the profession forward and not be afraid of failure. Failure can be a good thing and it should be done quickly – don’t let a project linger if it isn’t working, kill it quickly. According to Amy, the revolution is coming. Librarians wanted. I want to be part of this revolution. Updated: here are the slides for Amy’s talk – read it and be inspired.

Amy’s call for revolutionaries tied nicely with Eric Boyd‘s talk on Maker Culture and hackerspaces. Eric gave a great introduction into something I’ve only heard about (and now I want to know more about both maker culture and hacker spaces). While the work that Eric’s been doing is neat (ex. North Paw), what struck me was that librarians can and probably should be makers. This rose from Eric’s comment that maker culture is about trying all sorts of crazy ideas – librarians need to do this. I saw direct links between Amy’s revolutionaries and makers. I’m still mulling on this idea and I know I’m not the only one thinking about this.

Sarah Grimes gave a passionate talk on the value of games in libraries, asking why we don’t rally around censorship, challenges and ratings of games, the way we do so readily with books.

Siobhan Stevenson talked about labour issues in public libraries – primarily the devaluing and disappearance of librarian work and the rise of users as producers of information. Part of this can be traced to the rise of services that no longer need librarians and a move towards consumer trends (libraries as bookstores and cafes). Sadly, this is not limited to public libraries – academic libraries are going through similar pains. Unfortunately, no solutions were offered.

Mita Williams was both passionate and inspiring with her talk on community engagement. By hosting collaborative events, we can host conversations and initiate change. Mita gave powerful examples of unconferences bringing people together and influencing people. Once we invite such conversations and establish events, it is essential that we continue to support the conversation. An easy way to do this is to mentor others as you plan events so they can lead in the future.

Melanie McBride gave a moving talk on creating heros in the library by supporting gaming in the library. She spoke on the importance of voluntary participation, emphasizing that voluntary is key as it is about choices, freedom and autonomy.

John Miedema spoke of his research into slow reading. He questioned rather technology really allows for slow reading. Needless to say, I’ve added his book Slow Reading to my list of things to read.

Discussions throughout the day were intriguing. Some of us talked about our profession’s tendency towards being insular. We need to stop talking to ourselves, preaching to the converted, and move to influence those around us. Another conversation raised the point that librarians are more than their institutions. We don’t stop being a librarian when we go home – the passion that drove us to this profession continues when we are not at work. The question was raised as to why we don’t do more, collaborate more, outside of work. And of course, there was discussion around what a thought leader actually is. One person suggested that it is the thought that leads, people work to bring the thought to reality. Another suggested that thought leaders may simply give voice to the idea and work as a team to accomplish it – it isn’t always about one person.

Needless to say, I left with my brain full of ideas. I was lucky enough to volunteer for the event, but I want to give a huge congratulations to Fiacre O’Duinn and Shelley Archibald, the event organizers, on pulling together a great group of speakers and participants and for making the day a huge success.

Digital Odyssey 2011

As OLITA president for a second time, I was again heavily in involved in this year’s Digital Odyssey: Ebook (r)Evolution. The theme seemed perfectly timed and interest in the event was overwhelming – so much so that we increased our registration to capacity and still sold out! Even the days before the conference seemed to be working with our theme, with multiple news reports on ebook use and even the launching of the new Kobo on the conference day. Eric Hellman set the tone of the day with his talk “Why Libraries Exist: Transitioning from print to ebooks”.  Talks from the day will soon be available on the Digital Odyssey website.

The great thing about this year’s event was the mix of public, academic and school librarians who attended. Ebooks are having an incredible, and still not completely understood, impact on libraries. Public libraries are dealing with Overdrive, lending limits, and an increasing number of ebook devices. Universities still seem to be concerned primarily with books in browsers, though that may change in the future. Despite the differences in delivery, the event allowed librarians from all sectors to come together and consider how the move to ebooks will affect our patrons, our libraries and out profession.

I’d like to extend huge thanks to everyone who helped make the day such a success: the OLITA council, the OLA office, the student volunteers, and especially the Digital Odyssey Committee – Sally Wilson and Michelle Arbuckle.

 

Code4Lib North convert

I attended my first Code4Lib North conference last week. The first day was Hackfest – I love the notion of getting a bunch of people together, people who have not worked together before, to solve agreed upon problems. I would love to see more of this happen within the library world and wonder if it could work within an institution. One day a week or month, get everyone together, decide on a problem or two, and spend the day actually trying to solve it. I want to try this (I’m pretty sure this occurs in other industries – has anyone done it in their library?).

The second day was full of short presentations on all of the neat projects programmers and web folk were working on – be sure to check out the wiki and here for content from the day (video link coming soon). The group was small – great for meeting and talking with a bunch of interesting folk. This was one of the first conferences in a while where I went away with really exciting new tech ideas – I felt I learned a ton but also left excited to learn a heck of a lot more!

Mobile Learning Sprint

Last week, Educause offered Mobile Sprint, 5 lunch time webinars over 5 days  on mobile learning. I must admit, I liked the continuing discussion that the 5 days allowed – it was more than just a webinar and it wasn’t as draining as a conference, but it was engaging.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – I love back channels during conferences/webinars. It adds an extra layer of discussion and engagement that sitting quietly in a presentation can never offer. The webinars offered a well used chat for participants. Despite the chat, I took my discussion to twitter as I enjoy taking the discussion to a wider audience – can’t make it to the actual webinar, you can still get the highlights on twitter. Edusprint, the hashtag for the webinars, provided for interesting discussion and I believe I had conversations with interest people who were not participating in the audio portion of the talk.

I’m still not sure how mobile learning is going to evolve – many of the issues raised, such as security, are issues for online learning generally. As it stands now, mobile learning seems to be centred on value-added options. I had an interesting conversation about qr codes in the classroom with one twitterer. Purdue is doing some really neat things with apps like Hotseat – a twitter like application for commenting during class. I’d love to try something like that in an info lit session, allow students to make comments and ask questions, appointing one student to monitor and raise appropriate issues for the whole class. On a whole, I think the webinars raised more questions than answers for me but we are in early stages of mobile learning. I’m looking forward to further discussions on mobile learning and I hope Educause continues the ideas of sprints for other topics. You can check out the recorded mobile sprint sessions here.

Conference roundup

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, I love conferencing. They are tiring and yet I almost always come back refreshed and excited to try new things. This time I managed to fit in two conferences nearly back to back.

I went to Computers in Libraries first, ever a favorite conference of mine. I presented a cybertour on qr codes, something I hope to do more with in my library in the next little while. The session helped me prepare for a small qr code hunt we created to celebrate my library’s 60th birthday. I find interesting content at CiL but this is a conference in which I really look forward to the informal networking. Having the conference in a central hotel means that it’s easy to run into people and find out what new projects they’re working on. Add in the extra bonus of fire pits, and you can’t go wrong.

ACRL quickly followed CiL. This was my first ACRL conference and I look forward to attending again. I presented with two colleagues, Andrew and Karen, and it seemed to go really well (though found it odd that we had to introduce ourselves). It was great to have an audience from academic libraries. Unlike CiL, I didn’t know too many of the attendees and found the lobby con aspect lacking, though that doesn’t mean there weren’t great networking opportunities. I found the poster sessions particularly good and talked to a number of great people. Others have summed up the conference better than I could, so i’ll leave it to them. I did come away with a number if things though. I’ve learned from past experience that attending sessions that are close to what I do are often less fulfilling, so for the first time I made a concerted effort to attend sessions I wanted to know more about, particularly data issues. This approach certainly made the conference more interesting. I am particularly pleased to see such a great virtual aspect to the conference. Registration provides virtual access to conference material for a year. I now have a dozen papers to read for sessions I couldn’t get to and am looking forward to going over the panel sessions I missed.

The hardest part of conferencing: getting back into the day-to-day again!