Monday, 22 April 2013

The five stages of disruption denial

Yoinked from a LinkedIn group, The five stages of disruption denial. Originally I clicked on this when all I could see was 'the five stages of disruption' and I thought it was some kind of awesome new SHUSHING TECHNIQUE. As in, when do you step in to shush? How do you shush? However, this Harvard Business Review blog article is actually about adapting to and adopting change. In this case: Twitter. Which reminds me:
"Game of Thrones reminds me of Twitter a lot because there are 140 characters and terrible things are constantly happening"

Sunday, 21 April 2013

Lord of the Rings PSAs

It made me laugh. My favourites are the first two and the second-last one. Talk, walk, and throw!

Thursday, 18 April 2013

Made with the British Library

The British Library has a Pinterest page showcasing the many things it 'helped' create, whether by supplying research material, programming, or other resources. What a great idea! ...Well that was a short post.

Wednesday, 17 April 2013

Crowdfunding and Libraries

Via LISNews, Library Journal's Crowdfunding the Library.

What's crowdfunding, you might ask. Well! I have fished up a useful definition from Freebase (or really, Mashable fished it up and I liked it enough to use it, too).

Crowd funding or crowdfunding describes the collective effort of individuals who network and pool their money, usually via the Internet, to support efforts initiated by other people or organizations. Crowdfunding is used in support of a wide variety of activities, including disaster relief, citizen journalism, support of artists by fans, political campaigns, startup company funding, motion picture promotion, free software development, inventions development, scientific research, and civic projects.

Kickstarter is a pretty well known crowd funding site. Recently, the cast and creator of a TV show I liked started a Kickstarter campaign to raise money for a movie. They got it, and they broke a few records along the way. (That was the first time I donated to a Kickstarter project. I just signed up without even watching the promo video. I really loved that show.)

But does it work for libraries? In short: depends! It works best for 'short-term and new' projects, which is good. Also, it takes work; apparently you don't just put up a post and watch money come rolling in. It helps if you have a video or other marketing strategy like the folks in Shutesbury, Maine, who used a site called Indiegogo. It really really helps if that video goes viral.

So what's a small enough project? I'm not sure. Maybe:

  • Funding for a library collection - 'donate to improve our kids section' would probably work better than 'donate to improve our non-fiction section'
  • Funding for a very small library - really really small
  • Funding for equipment - new projector? New furniture? (Maybe a funny video featuring people sitting on old crates would be good - someone on an old chair that's rigged to fall apart, that kind of thing)
  • Funding for very very specific things, like 'replace our crummy old sign'

What do you think you could use crowdfunding for?

Tuesday, 16 April 2013

Michael Geist on why the digital divide in Canada is going to get worse

Mr. Geist, a professor of law at Ottawa University, talks about the digital divide:
The state of Internet access in Canada has been the subject of considerable debate in recent years as consumers and businesses alike assess whether Canadians have universal access to fast, affordable broadband that compares favourably with other countries. A new House of Commons study currently being conducted by the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology offers the chance to gain a better understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of Canadian high-speed networks and what role the government might play in addressing any shortcomings.
Many of these communities are described as "uneconomic", since the costs associated with building broadband networks are viewed as too expensive given the expected return on investment. The government has funded some programs to foster improved access, however more may be needed to finish the job. This could include direct subsidies funded from revenues obtained through the forthcoming spectrum auction or tax relief for community-based broadband initiatives. Many of these communities are described as "uneconomic", since the costs associated with building broadband networks are viewed as too expensive given the expected return on investment. The government has funded some programs to foster improved access, however more may be needed to finish the job. This could include direct subsidies funded from revenues obtained through the forthcoming spectrum auction or tax relief for community-based broadband initiatives. The access issue is no surprise as there are still hundreds of thousands of Canadians without access to broadband services from local providers. While this is often painted as an urban vs. rural issue (with universal access in urban areas vs. sparse access or reliance on pricey satellite services in rural communities), the reality is that there are still pockets within major cities in Canada without access to either cable or DSL broadband service.
This is why libraries need computers. Lots of computers that give people access.

Monday, 15 April 2013

Reader's Advisory: Westerns bookmark

Over the course of my schoolin', I've pretty much taken three adult readership advisory courses; I've only completed two of them. One was a Gen Ed and the latest is online through my college. The last assignment was due today; I passed it in on Friday 'cause I was eager to finish.

Anyway, boring back story aside, this time through adult reader's advisory I decided to focus on genres I have very little experience with. One of the assignments (actually two, but a different genre each time) was to design a bookmark. Not of the 'this is the library' bookmark, but one with recommendations along the lines of 'if you like crime thrillers, try these authors'. The Iowa Library has some examples on their site; they are .doc files and require you to download them to view them.

I decided to work on Westerns, which I had zero experience with. Almost. My experience with Westerns is essentially limited to the short-lived sci-fi series Firefly and a passing interest in Wyatt Earp. Better than nothing.

At first I thought I might link it to Firefly by choosing a book appropriate to each character, but that didn't stick. Then I thought about the appeal of Firefly itself and how it was a cross-genre show. I ordinarily have no interest in Westerns, but Westerns with spaceships? Those I'm okay with. So then I thought, 'why not lure people to Westerns via genres they already like?' and instead chose five of the genres covered in the course - fantasy, mystery, horror, historical, and science fiction - to choose cross-genre books from. That turned out to be much easier, though the thing where I was determined to find books I'd read myself added an extra layer of difficulty. I did okay on that front, though. I don't think I'd read the romance, but if there was nothing else to read... Anyway. Here are the results:


Bull, Emma. Territory. New York: Tor, 2007. Print.
Hockensmith, Steve. Holmes on the Range. New York: St. Martin's Minotaur, 2006. Print.
Lovelace, Merline. A Savage Beauty. Don Mills, Ont: MIRA, 2003. Print.
Matheson, Richard. Shadow on the Sun. New York: M. Evans and Co, 1994. Print.
Parry, Richard. The Winter Wolf: Wyatt Earp in Alaska. New York: Forge, 1996. Print.
Resnick, Michael D. Santiago: A Myth of the Far Future. New York, N.Y: Tom Doherty Associates, 1986. Print.


Related junk:

TV Tropes' "Badass preacher"
RPGnet Forum: "Fantasy Western in fiction"
Matt Molgaar's Horror Review: "Richard Matheson 'Shadow On The Sun' review". 
Base image for bookmark: "Old western silhouette" by mollygrue @ DeviantArt
Library Journal review by Kristin Ramsdell: "A savage beauty". (EBSCO link)
Library Journal review by Ken St. Andre: "Holmes on the range" (EBSCO link)
Wikipedia (I know, I know): "Weird west". 

I didn't have time to find this book, but it looks liked it'd been helpful: 
Green, Paul. Encyclopedia of Weird Westerns: Supernatural and Science Fiction Elements in Novels, Pulps, Comics, Films, Television, and Games. Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Co., Publishers, 2009. Print.

If you end up using this, if you could credit scarletinthelibrary.blogspot.com and mollygrue at DeviantArt, that'd be nifty.



Sunday, 14 April 2013

Paging Becky...


It's LIKE content, only not quite.
Graduation is right around the corner. See you soon?