Monday, July 28, 2008

Brigham Young University to Make Thousands of Genealogical Documents Available Online


Ebrary announced that Brigham Young University (BYU) has licensed its technology to locally host portions of the university library's digital collections including genealogical records and art materials. BYU is sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which maintains the world's largest repository of genealogical resources. BYU's Harold B. Lee Library is a member of the Association of Research Libraries.
The library has an extensive selection of manuscripts, diaries, photographs, family histories, scholarly publications, books, and art images that have been digitized and are available to anyone in the world with Internet connection.

TutorVista.com Brings Live Homework Help and Electric Reference Materials to Public Libraries



www.tutorvista.com/libraries

TutorVista.com announced the launch of its live one-on-one homework help program for public libraries in the U.S. and Canada.

TutorVista's Library Advantage Program is unique in that it provides both voice-based live tutoring and text/chat-based tutoring. Students can use TutorVista's voice-over-IP (VoIP) capabilities to talk naturally with a tutor where permitted in the library or at the students' homes. Voice-based tutoring is five times faster and engages more senses than typing-based tutoring. Tutor and student share virtual whiteboard on their screen where each can see what the other writes or draws.

In addition to affordable, live tutoring, the Library Advantage Program makes the company's library of math and science simulations, animations, videos and study aids available to students around the clock.

With TutorVista's new program for libraries, students log in using a library card, specify the grade and subject in which they need help, and gain immediate access to a tutor.

Check It Out!


StoneHedge, England
cuil.com Former engineers from google ... new gen search engine. Pretty cool, (it's pronounced cool).
Cuil challenges Google with Privacy
Founded by husband-and-wife team Tom Costello and Anna Patterson, Cuil aims to rank the relevancy search results by content analysis rather than by popularity.
Read Thomas Claburn's article, InformationWeek
July 28, 2008

Saturday, July 26, 2008

An Enduring Legacy






Randy Pausch Inspired Millions

Randy Pausch, the professor at Carnegie Mellon University who inspired countless students in the classroom and others worldwide through his highly acclaimed Last Lecture, has died of complications from pancreatic cancer. He was 47.

Learn more about this amazing man and his many contributions and achievements by going to the following links
http://www.cmu.edu/homepage/beyond/2008/summer/an-enduring-legacy.shtml
http://download.srv.cs.cmu.edu/~pausch/

Also look for:
The Last Lecture on ABC
New Special on the life of Randy Pausch. Tuesday night, 7/29 at 10/9c
abc.com for more information.

Fire Destroys Books in University of Geneva Arts Library


Some 20,000 books damaged in a June 29 fire that spread through a wing of the Faculty of Arts at the University of Geneva, Switzerland, have been freeze-dried in an effort to save them. About 30,000 other books, which were not as thoroughly soaked, were dried out by ventilators (left). Investigators are still looking into the cause of the fire, which took place during a widely watched European Football Championship....La Tribune de Genève, July 1–4; Romandie News, July 3

Should Parents Let Children Read the GIVER?


Check it out!
Local/Regional
Published: Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Board lets parents decide if children should read 'The Giver'
Mother requested controversial novel be removed from elementary libraries

By MICHAEL BRINDLEY, Staff Writer http://mbrindley@nashuatelegraph.com
NASHUA –
Elementary school teachers in Nashua must now notify parents if they are going to use an award-winning science-fiction book called "The Giver" in their classrooms.The school board made the decision Monday night, by a 7-1 vote, after a two-hour hearing. A review of the book's use in city schools was initiated after a parent, Jodi Gould, said her fourth-grade daughter was "very bothered and upset" by some of the book's themes of suicide and euthanasia. Gould said the book was read aloud in her daughter's class at Main Dunstable Elementary School.The only dissenter was board member Sandra Ziehm, who argued that the book should be completely removed from the city's elementary school libraries.Kathy Drolet, a curriculum supervisor with the district, said this was the first time she could recall a book being singled out with a specific requirement for notification of parents.Teachers will sometimes send letters home if a book being used may have sensitive material, she said. But that decision has always been left up to the teachers and building principals, she said."The notion that there would be some kind of written guidelines or protocol (for a specific book) is new," she said.The district does not have a list of banned books, Drolet said.Gould filed a request with the district, asking that the book be removed from the elementary school libraries."I don't have an issue with the book itself," Gould said Monday night, during a hearing to decide the issue. "I just think from an age-appropriate view point, if I had been given the choice . . . I definitely would have opted out of her reading it."The book, published in 1993, is a science fiction thriller about a futuristic society that, in striving to create a utopia, rids the world of conflict, poverty, pain and fear. Children are assigned careers when they turn 12.The book has won several awards, including the Newbery Medal, but it has also been banned by some school districts.Gould said the part of the book that disturbed her daughter the most was when some children are "released," which is actually a form of death or euthanasia. Gould said there were also several references to suicide. Gould told board members she contacted the author, Lois Lowry. Gould said Lowry recommended the book for children in the sixth grade and higher. Gould also pointed out that the book is in the teen section at Barnes & Noble. Gould, who said she read the book after the complaints from her daughter, didn't see a problem with the book being available in the middle schools and high schools. After Gould's request, a committee of administrators, teachers and school board members was convened to reconsider the use of the book in schools. The committee ultimately decided that though some of the content may be inappropriate for certain age groups, the book should remain available in elementary school libraries."Classroom teachers and librarians should be aware of the sensitive nature of certain elements in this book when considering its instructional use," the committee wrote in its decision."As in other cases involving sensitive material, parents may request that their child not participate."Althea Sheaff, executive director of curriculum and instruction, said the committee found that removing the book from the schools "was too restrictive." Sheaff, chairman of the review committee, noted that one of the central themes of the book in question is the ability to make choices."The committee felt they did not want to deny access," she said. "Because ultimately it is about choice."The school board considered several options Monday night, including removing the book completely from the elementary school libraries, before settling on requiring notification to parents if used in elementary classrooms.Board members Ziehm, William Mosher and Jack Kelley were in the minority, voting in favor of removing the book from the libraries of elementary schools. They argued that allowing it to remain for any elementary-aged child to take out takes the choice away from parents.Removing it from the libraries wouldn't mean that teachers couldn't use it in their classrooms. Ziehm said the book isn't appropriate for the majority of students in the elementary schools, aside from some of the more accelerated readers. Elementary schools have students in kindergarten through fifth grade."I would err on the side of the majority of the students," she said. Kelley said that after reading the book he felt it was not something that should remain available to students at the elementary schools."The mere fact that it's in the library is putting it in a place where the age of the children is not appropriate for this book," he said.Mosher said there were "disturbing themes" in the book."They do not need this kind of controversy in their reading material," he said.Board President Tom Vaughan said that while there are certainly issues that could be harmful or disturbing to some young readers, "I don't think that argues for us removing it from the libraries or disallowing it from the curriculum."Vaughan said elementary schools in some surrounding towns also carried the title. He also questioned what sources should be used to determine what age is appropriate for the book."It's rated differently by different people," he said. Board member Robert Hallowell pointed out that even though the school board wasn't siding with the parent, the fact that the book has now been brought into question would have an impact."The mere fact that you brought it forward has lessened the chance that it will be used in the future," he said.Hallowell eventually made the motion that earned the support of the majority of the board.Principal Chris Gosselin said that in hindsight, the book was not appropriate for the fourth-grade level, but said that it is also important to trust teachers to make the right decisions for their classrooms."This was clearly a mistake," said Gosselin, adding that the school will take greater care looking at what's going out in the classrooms. "We don't want to take away that trust" from teachers, he said.The school board also considered whether permission slips should be sent home when elementary school children want to check the book out of the library but voted against it.All of the board members said they had read the book before coming to the hearing.Board member Rick Dowd said that while he didn't want to censor books or tell teachers what to do, parents have a right to know what their children are reading."Parents deserve the right to have the opportunity to not have their child exposed to books which may have a controversial nature," he said.Board member Dennis Hogan called the book "brilliant," describing it as a "junior '1984.' " Hogan said it is more of a political novel than science fiction, showing how bad things can get when you try to make sure nobody gets upset or experiences emotion."I wish I had something this substantial to read when I was in fifth grade," he said.
Michael Brindley can be reached at 594-6426 or http://mbrindley@nashuatelegraph.com.
I found this article in American Libraries Direct, an online journal I get through e-mail. As future librarians we'll be faced with situations like this. Personally, I've read the book several times and so have all my children. They read it in elementary school. It's a great book that led to many interesting discussions.
What do you think?

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Ethiopia


Born in a small village to an illiterate cattle merchant who insisted upon his son's education, Yohannes Gebregeorgis had seen few books in school. At age 19, he borrowed a soft-covered romance novel titled Love Kitten that changed his life forever. Today, after getting an MLS and working as a children's librarian in the U.S., he is establishing libraries and literary programs to connect Ethiopian children with books. He established Ethiopia Reads in 1988 to open reading centers and donkey-pulled mobile libraries. "With literate children there is no limit as to how much we can do," says Gebregeorgis - CNN, May 1

Kudos to Yohannes Gebregeorgis

Filling the Support Gap


FixYa (fixya.com) is an online community devoted to providing technical support for consumer products when the manufactures fail to do so. Users can post questions about their specific problems with equipment ranging from computers and digital cameras to air conditioners, search for similar problems that have already been solved, or research products they are considering buying to see what kind of problems they are likely to experience. The site also offers live chats with "Premium Experts" the site's most active and highly rated problem solvers, as well as a search function for repair services when equipment can't be repaired by the end user.
Pass it on!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Greener Computing


Adam Pash has published tips for environmentally friendlier computing at Lafehacker (lifehacker.com).
His suggestions: Optimizing the computer's built-in-power-saving settings and automating hibernation or shutdown with applications like WinOFF, adjusting print-viewpage layouts with Aardvark (karmatics.com/aardvark) or GreenPrint (printgreener.com) to save paper when printing, automating peripheral shutdowns with specialized power strips, and monitoring computer power usage using LocalCooling (www.localcooling.com).

Blogs Still Growing


Research from media communications company Universal McCann indicates that blogging is still in growth mode. The firm's Wave 3 research report, published April 3rd, found that 73% of respondents read blogs, up from 66% in June 2007, and 38% write blogs, up from 31%.

Consumption is stronger in Asia; 92% of South Korean respondents read blogs and 71% write their own blogs, compared to 60% in the U.S. who read and 26% who write them. Personal and family matters are the most popular topics, followed by music, news and current affairs, opinions on products and brands, and film and television. The report (www.universalmccann.com) is based on surveys of 17,000 internet users in 29 countries.

Have you blogged today?

Sunday, July 20, 2008

HTML/Web Design Assignment

A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers





"Such near aspects had we
Of our life's scenery"
Thoreau

http://www.pitt.edu/~kag106/thoreau_fragment_1.html
http://kathygremo.googlepages.com


I used Google Creator to format my fragment of Thoreau's A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. I find the more I use Google the more I like it and enjoy using it. FileZilla was a little more complicated, but hurray I finished the assignment on time.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Comprehensive Courier Man individual modules or may choose to do a full impleagement System Developed for the Library Market

The partners of Quipu Group announced the general release of Library2Library , a highly scalable courier management and materials transportation system designed specifically for libraries. Library2Library is a knowledge base, allowing staff to keep, update, and access all courier information in one place.
There are a number of benefits for courier managers in Library2Library. An operator can access all the functions of the application through a single interface, and mangers can quickly get the information they need from the full report suite. Inquiries on routes, delivery schedules, and billing can be viewed online or downloaded to Excel, and reports are highly customizable to each courier systems' needs.
Library2Library includes a trouble-ticket system, routing-slip creation, lost and damaged item management. Courier systems may purchase individual modules or may choose to do a full implementation of Library2Library.

www.quipugroup.com

Graphic Novels Core Collection: A Selection Guide

H. W. Wilson's new Graphic Novels Core Collection: A Selection Guide is designed to help librarians choose age-appropriate works in this increasingly popular literary form. This Wilson Web selection guide highlights approximately two thousand recommended titles with descriptive and evaluative annotations (plus cover art), searchable by author, title, subject, genre, and grade level.
The latest release in Wilson's Core Collections series of selection guides, Graphic Novels Core Collection, provides assistance with collection development, readers' advisory, and curriculum support. Strict standards are applied for rating materials by age appropriateness. Descriptive and evaluative annotations offer insight into both quality and content, and automatic links to cover-art give librarians a first-person "feel" for the work.
Like the other Wilson Core Collections, Graphic Novels Core Collections allows users to narrow any search to Short List (most recommended) titles. Limiters for fiction, nonfiction, or biography reflect the growing diversity of subjects treated in graphic novel format.

www.hwwilson.com

U2 and Green Day The Saints are Coming

I want to thank everyone from Holy Family University who on their own time went to New Orleans, after Katrina with Habitat for Humanity, especially Dusty, Sara and most especially Will who is still there helping out.
God Bless!

Seal Shield Launches Antibacterial, Dishwasher Safe Keyboard and Mouse


Seal Shield Corporation announced the Silver Seal family of antibacterial products for infection control. Notably, Seal Shield introduced the Silver Seal Antibacterial washable keyboard and mouse. According to the company, the Silver Seal keyboard and mouse are the first ever antibacterial keyboard and mouse to be fully submersible and dishwasher safe.

Recent studies have shown the computer keyboard and mouse to be a major source of cross contamination infections. A study reported at the American Society for Microbiology found that the "superbug" Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) can survive on computer keyboards for up to six weeks.

Unlike traditional antibacterial products, the Silver Seal antibacterial plastic utilizes all natural, pure silver ions that are embedded in the plastic to create a safe and effective anti-bacterial solution. Silver is a natural antibiotic product and its properties have been incorporated into the Silver Seal product line using the latest nanotechnologies. Silver ions are infused in the plastic used to create the Silver Seal product line. When these ions are exposed to moisture in the air, they create an antimicrobial shield on the product that resists bacteria.



Sunday, July 13, 2008

Readex Partners with Center for Research Libraries to Create Web-based World Newspaper Archive


Digitization effort will feature thousands of historical newspaper titles published outside the United States
JUNE 26, 2008 (NAPLES, FL) — Readex, a division of NewsBank, and the Center for Research Libraries (CRL) announced today that they will create the world's largest, fully searchable digital archive of international newspapers. The World Newspaper Archive will provide students, teachers and scholars unprecedented access to historical newspapers published outside the United States, advancing research and offering new insights across wide-ranging academic disciplines.
"NewsBank offers the greatest combination of expertise and capabilities to provide our members sustainable access to historical news content," says Bernard F. Reilly, president of the Center for Research Libraries. "By partnering with its Readex division in this cooperative effort, we plan to systematically digitize and deliver over the Web the foreign newspapers held by CRL and other major newspaper repositories."
This uniquely comprehensive electronic resource will first offer Latin American newspapers published between 1805 and 1922 in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, Venezuela and other countries. Further series will focus on historical newspapers published in Africa, South Asia and other areas. Users will be able to seamlessly cross-search the World Newspaper Archive with America's Historical Newspapers, including Early American Newspapers and Hispanic American Newspapers.
"Readex and the Center for Research Libraries share a commitment to provide sustainable online access to primary source research collections," says David Braden, Readex president. "We are delighted to be working in cooperation with CRL—one of the world's largest and most important newspaper repositories—to launch this landmark digital project and expand opportunities to discover these primary resources."
The initial Latin American series will offer approximately 35 titles, encompassing nearly one million pages. Among the newspapers expected to be included are La Prensa (Buenos Aires), O Estado de São Paulo (São Paulo), Mercurio (Santiago), La Prensa (Havana), Diario de Centro America (Guatemala City), Daily Chronicle (Georgetown, Guyana), Mexican Herald (Mexico City), El Peruano (Lima), Port of Spain Gazette (Port of Spain), and the Venezuelan Herald (Caracas).
"International newspapers have long been highly valued by students and researchers in the humanities and social sciences," says Glenda Pearson, Human Rights Librarian and Head of Newspaper Collections at the University of Washington. "This exciting joint project between CRL and Readex will advance scholarly inquiry, while ensuring worldwide access to these invaluable publications for generations to come."
Participating members of CRL will enjoy permanent access to the World Newspaper Archive, while all others around the world will be offered access by Readex. Charter CRL participants now include Harvard University; McMaster University; New York Public Library; Princeton University; University of California, Berkeley; University of California, Los Angeles; University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign; University of Texas; University of Washington; and Yale University.
About the Center for Research Libraries The Center for Research Libraries is an international partnership of over 240 universities, colleges and independent research libraries. CRL supports advanced research and learning in the humanities, sciences and social sciences by ensuring the survival and accessibility of source materials vital to those disciplines.
About Readex, a division of NewsBank For more than 50 years, the Readex name has been synonymous with research in historical materials and government documents. Recognized by librarians, students and scholars for its efforts to transform academic scholarship, Readex offers a wealth of Web-based collections in the humanities and social sciences, including the Archive of Americana and the Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

New Digital Resources Sharing Service lets Librarians Add Free Download Media


A new Web 2.0 program that allows public libraries to publish and share digital video, audio books, eBooks, and music with other libraries was recently unveiled. The First of its kind, OverDrive Community Reserve is a shared collection of locally produced digital content available to thousands of libraries worldwide that are part of the OverDrive network.

Libraries with permissions to digital book, audio, or video content can upload titles for download lending to their local patrons, and also now can share the materials with library users worldwide. For example, the Rochester (Minn.) Public Library received a grant to produce a video to orient and educate Somali immigrants to the features and services of a public library. Now the video has been added to Community Reserve and is available for download as part of their local OverDrive catalog, and also is available for free for lending by more than five thousand libraries around the world.

Friday, July 11, 2008

It's a Good Thing


Helping Deaf Patrons Connect. Hearing impair patrons of Jacksonville (Fla.) Public Library can now use any of the library's locations to make telephone calls free of charge.

The library has installed video relay service (VRS) equipment from Sorenson Communication, which allows any user to conduct video relay calls with family, friends, or business associates through a certified American Sign Language interpreter. The service operates over a high-speed internet connection. The hearing impaired user sees an interpreter on a computer screen and signs to that person, who contacts the hearing user via a standard phone line. Hearing patrons can also place video calls to a deaf or hard-of-hearing person by calling a toll-free number.

The Talking Books Library has many services for blind library customers, such as recorded books and descriptive videos.

Sorenson provided the equipment and the service free of charge to the library. Jerry Reynolds, JPJ's Talking Books Library Manager made initial contact with the company at the ALA Annual Conference last year, and contacted Sorenson directly to pitch the idea of installing the system at all library locations. Many libraries offer the relay systems in their libraries, but Jacksonville is the first to offer the service system wide.

The library finished installing the video relay systems in January. It estimates that more than 400 patrons use the service per week.


Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Koha Assignment


Here are my 27 entries for books on Information Retrieval
from the Koha/LibLime system

Contents of Kathy Gremo

Title
Author
Item Type
©

Vocabulary control for information retrieval
Lancaster, F. Wilfrid
BK
Reserves

Accessing information in a technological age /
Whitson, Donna L.
BK
Reserves

An information retrieval system for a personal collection of literature references /
Cartwright, B.
BK
Reserves

How to build skills for research /
North, Max M.
BK
Reserves

On-line information retrieval systems :
Houghton, B.
BK
Reserves

The new St. Martin's pocket guide to research and documentation /
Lunsford, Andrea A.,
BK
Reserves

Text information retrieval systems.
Meadow, Charles T.
BK
Reserves

English and reading in a changing world,
Evertts, Eldonna L.,
BK
Reserves

Computer based information retrieval systems;
BK
Reserves

Intelligent interfaces and retrieval methods for subject searching in bibliographic retrieval systems /
Hildreth, Charles R.,
BK
Reserves

Filling empty space :
Suominen, Vesa.
BK
Reserves

Online retrieval :
Walker, Geraldene.
BK
Reserves

OCLC guide to preservation data.
BK
Reserves

Bibliographic control and information sources /
Behrens, S. J.
BK
Reserves

The AltaVista Search revolution /
Seltzer, Richard.
BK
Reserves

Changing patterns in information retrieval :
BK
Reserves

File management and information retrieval systems :
Gill, Suzanne L.
BK
Reserves

Enhancing access to information :
BK
Reserves

Information management /
Mackall, Joe.
BK
Reserves

Concepts and subject headings: their relation in information retrieval and library science,
Christ, John M.
BK
Reserves

Authority control :
Clack, Doris H.
BK
Reserves

Find it fast :
Berkman, Robert I.
BK
Reserves

Online retrieval :
Vigil, Peter J.
BK
Reserves

Optical character recognition :
Groenewegen, H. W.
BK
Reserves

Monday, July 7, 2008

Del.ic.ious a Firefox Extension


You ain't got a thing if you ain't got that jing!

I've been trying forever to get this assignment in. I've been having all sorts of trouble. My laptop has the sound for the video, but the files between Jing and Screencast won't transfer. Everything I've captured and recorded would go to Jing History. One time it came up as a document. Which I had posted earlier, but unless you could access my jing history, you wouldn't be able to view it. So here goes - this link is from my PC, which unfortunately doesn't relate the sound.

I hope this works, because I've gotta move on.
Happy Fourth of July!