Tuesday, December 25, 2007

A flood of literature!


It was a dark and stormy… afternoon

Well, it wasn't this bad (Maitland & Cessnock, NSW in 1949) but any conection of the words 'flood' and 'library' send horrors through the strongest of hearts


4.38 pm, Friday 7th December 2007 will go down in the annals as a startlingly soggy moment !

A(nother) big storm came in from the west across Sydney, dumping over 20mm of rain in about 10 mins.
The new building, had just been opened by the big boss from Canberra, refreshments were being enjoyed by staff and invited guests…

Meanwhile, back in the Library, the Lone Librarian (aka LiteraryWolf!) was working at the reference desk, with a few staff perusing the internet and newspapers. The storm was ‘fully engaged’ outside, when loud rumbling and the odd thunk noises were heard… the Library floor was shuddering… then jets of vapour/dust burst from the floor ! ! [see also Ghostbusters movies].

After the odd expletive of astonishment, the Librarian (warden who earned her pocket money that day) encouraged (with gentle cries of “get out!, get out!, get away from the computers!”) the staff, who were likewise observing the floor in surprise but making no move to remove themselves from the volcanic scene.

Barely had the words left the Librarian’s lips, than - with a final KERTHUNK! -, the concrete of the floor slab cracked open, the carpet tiles lifted and a small but elegant, and very fast flowing, fountain of water emerged from a crack in the floor!

The staff, (yes, they were still there), were again encouraged to leave while the Librarian, shortly joined by heroes from facilities management, leapt into action dashing across the rapidly expanding Library Lake to rescue material from the floor and unplug electrical equipment.

The water kept flowing…

Personal items were rescued and the Librarian of the Lake, her arms clad in the purest shimmering samite held aloft her job files, mobile phone, wallet and catering shopping from the water…{oops, sorry that sounds like a film}, and walked upon the Lake to return to dry land - there was a bit left.

A mere few minutes had past, the facilities heroes continued to rescue things and a small crowd had gathered to observe the phenomenon. Now, with a moment to pause, the Librarian squelched across to the only phone left plugged in and sought help from on high - a call to senior Library staff (they’re on a higher floor) to come and see the-Library-in-flood. The fearless Assistant Director quickly arrived on scene.

Brilliant strategies from the assembled crowd, such as putting the wide based newspapers table on top of the carpet tiles to stop the flow, were attempted… but failed.

The ether was burning with the flurries of mobile phone calls from the building owners who had not yet left the celebrations but had been called out to attend to now-filling-most-of-the-Library Lake.

The big boss (who had visited the Library earlier that afternoon with some VIPs to “I always show off our Libraries to visitors”) was engaged elsewhere in the building, but events were observed by many disbelieving and surprised executives, staff and visitors.

By now, some 10 minutes in, the flow was easing (fortunately! but only because the storm had finished) and the Library Lake, (now also spreading out to the building lobby and into a lift well), could be viewed and admired for what it was -- a splendid water feature no backyard renovation program could have accomplished ! And, most effectively, it remained at only several millimetres high - keeping it well below book shelf line.

The fearless Assistant Director liaised with facilities people to get damage control underway and to alert our colleagues here and around the country to our dilemma, only finally got home well into the night. The somewhat damp Lone Librarian beat a retreat around 5.30pm, dragged away after assurances she could do no more. By that time, heavy equipment had started to arrive, the water flow had stopped and the Library Lake remained, glistening in a bit of wet sunshine filtering through the windows.
And the story continued…

Over the weekend the whole Library - books, journals, cabinets,... nearly all fixtures and fittings - were stripped out and stored. Come Monday, the whole area of carpet tiles had been pulled up, the concrete was patched, then all things made their way back to their proper places (praise to the folk of the removals company - a scary déjà vu time for them – as they had only moved us, the Library and the entire office into the building several weeks before). The Library staff, who had been camping on a higher floor, returned to unpack (yet again).

So by late Thursday afternoon, just 6 days later, all was back in place and the new - new Library (no longer the Liquarium) was back in action.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Still around... just not lately in the blogsphere!



Grrreetings dear readers,

Yes, the Wolf has been off galivanting (read - working!) out in the real world and has been neglecting the virtual !

But things change so little... Google keeps growing, eLibraries are developing e-xponentially and all is lunacy in the world with the chaos of the run down to Christmas (and other festive) occasions.
Important news - make sure you use your favourite search engine to look up the release of baby seahorses {Hippocampus whitei, commonly called White’s Seahorse or the Sydney Seahorse) (press release from Sydney Aquarium, November 2007) to boost a colony at Manly, in Sydney, Australia.

Mega cute, great wildlife and enviro story... and many of the underwater pics/footage PLUS the saving of the colony's home on the beach netting is down to the skills and hard work of the Wolf's big brother, with help from many others !!

Sunday, August 5, 2007

The end ?? Nooooooooo!

The end of the world as we know it!
No, just a break to return to the everyday... while using (at least some of) the nifty things we've had to have a go at in the "Learning 23 Things" program.
My favs - del.icio.us, ZohoWriter, and LibraryThing; yes..., and Flickr plus YouTube - but only for the fun stuff that I have no time to look for anyway ;).
Already had things like BlogLines on the go from some time back plus being in the midst of the set-up of a new work wiki ... but always more to see and learn out there !
Did enjoy having a go at the various other things but I can see myself making more use of these beasties.
The impetus of a 'have to do' course always a boost to trying to squeeze in that bit more professional development work in the oodles of free time that we have -not - but it was fun (at times) [insert here mental image of classic old email graphic "duck smashing keyboard" ] - as the technology can still let us down too often.
And my parting graphics (at least for now) - if the layout gremlins have departed...





T

Eeeeeee books!

As a dedicated follower of paper, I have yet to play much with e-books. Not my preferred way to read but definitely one (just one, not the!) way of the future.

Look at NetLibrary, OCLC's contribution to the listened-word. A huge site, user friendly to search and certainly a way to go when you want your books to come in your ears rather than your eyes.
For a bit of added reading, I came across this site The Institute for the Future of the Book - some interesting articles and comments in the blog.

Podcasting...without a pod!

And now, yet more stuff to be looking for out there!
And... oh dear... I remain podless so this is just from an observer's view - if I'm going to blast my little eardrums whilst travelling - give me the (much better!) sound quality of a CD anytime!
As if there was not enough to look at at any given time, you can use vod/vid/pod-casts to see/hear what you missed! (is nowhere safe ?!?!?) or inflict your ideas of a good pod on others!
As you may have surmised from previous entries, I'm a bit of a fan of "my ABC" and you can find alot of podded goodies at their website here - from comedy and recipes to news and interviews.
And, naturally, you can use your other web 2.0 tools, to keep up, eg. use RSS to get updates when your favourite podcast is updated!
To go hunting to find out about/find/create podcasts, Mashable's Podcasting ToolBox is a large place to start! Just a couple from their list that look promising: PodcastDirectory.com or Grepr (which goes the social networking way to build you a profile of your pod-interests).

Choices from the 'Tube

Carl Sagan on the Library of Alexandria



A 'different' look at conference behaviour recognition ;)



and these lovely furry creatures!

Watch and learn (or be very afraid)

Video content, amongst everything else, is out there and growing at exponential rates. Too much of it is 'WHY did they bother??' and 'eeewwww!!!' - so little (comparatively) rates an 'oh, that's interesting and useful!' (and yes, there is a fair bit of 'LOL' stuff - but how much time does anyone have...????)
Well, the biggy is, of course, YouTube, - the one we get to hear about on the news almost every night when either someone has put something awful or illicit up or we have aging politicians (who have to ask their adult children how much a litre of milk costs for real people to buy) thinking that they are getting in touch with Gen neXt by putting party politicals on the web.
Cynical - me - never! but there is some good stuff to be found.
And for a couple of interesting ones... look up !!

Web 2.0n and on and on...

Easy way to have a browse around web 2.0 sites is to use Movers 2.0's Top Web 2.0 Sites list. Already looked at a few in previous blogs... but there's always room for a few more ! -
more file sharing through Box.net, offer your identity for theft by the nasties out there via FaceBook or MySpace, tag yet more interesting stuff using digg, compile your music playlist on imeem, find a webpage/article on anything sensible or bizarre on Squidoo, find yet more blogs or forums using topix and more wikis via wikia ... and so on, seemingly ad infinitum (and ad nauseum).
So much web, so very little time... and still so much dross to avoid whilst trying to find (or chance upon) the gems.

Zoho... Zo who?

More cool toys! Apps in the ether! Enjoyed these - Zoho's Zoho Writer and Zoho Sheet - create docs or other files 'out there', and easily grab them back or share them. Yes, I know, doesn't sound that exciting but when you have steam driven technology at home and an outside-world unfriendly main system, being able to carry (not literally) a few files around is definitely a plus. And then there's the ease of use - all the nice goodies on the toolbars - be it the ever popular emoticons, images, 2 click access to special characters and easy file formatting options. (Having found that I could actually get into ZohoWriter from my work desktop, I proceeded to be a good 'Learning 23 Things' cub and do this blog entry from there. Needless to save after getting it nicely underway, I got a 'dialog box of death', so it was back to a standalone PC - when I could get at one!)
There are, of course, various others out there such as ajaxWrite or if you want familiar options, and like using the web-company-that-ate-the-world, Google docs & spreadsheets is out there too.




Monday, July 30, 2007

Whether... whither... wiki?!

Ahh! the 'wiki', that now embedded-in-the-language-generic-reference to a collaborative website/tool/online community.

We all know Wikipedia, that huge open community encyclopedia with lots of stuff about so many things. Useful, at times fascinating but trustworthy? Everyone's heard of the problems, yet because of that same 'openness', the 'sense of community' perhaps, the problems are resolved, the glitches are fixed - and the answers get better - but the trust/credibility issue is still there. It isn't the Encyclopaedia Britannica - that isn't what it should be nor is it what it is meant to be!? (just look at Wikipedia's entry on the Ency Brit! - seems extensive and interesting - but just can't resist comparing usage figures with Wikipedia itself!)

Yet, the concept lends itself as an excellent resource to small or closed 'communities' for collaboration, knowledge sharing, etc. The ease and speed with which entries can be added/modified leading to the development of the 'knowledge base' certainly beats sending everyone an email 'here's an interesting article', trawling thru a discussion list or wading thru a selection of blogs (feeds, etc notwithstanding).

We here at my work abode have one underway ("in development"). We're using the MediaWiki software, so everyone can guess what it looks like ;) yet it starting to come together well. As one of the chosen few, I 'have the power!' and am working on a couple of articles presently - resources for our in-house trainers and on search engines (gee!, that one will be hard to find content for - not! ) - but as per my last blog entry - sorting the wheat from the chaff is what they need us librarians for!

Also played the required lesson in the 'sandpit' (sorry, we're Aussie here - we think outside the 'box' ;) of PLCMC's Learning 2.0 Wiki. Added a few items. Nice to have a play around with different software than we're using at work - no great surprises but gives the eyes a break to have a different screen scene!

Lots of articles to read out there about wikis - just 'ask' via your favourite search engine!

A couple to peruse - for library things, try Library Success (love the cute, anachronistic? touch - the logo is a catalogue drawer! Only people watching re-runs of the first Ghostbusters movie will know what they are soon! - just kidding library folks! - we'll know - or some of us will...???), The Blogging Libraries Wiki (a wiki to find blogs - how much mashing can we do?) or LISWiki. Just a couple of others - WikiHow, a wiki to look at when you're using sites like How Stuff Works; or History Wiki.

The point of 2.0 ?!

The internet and the web - from origins as read only - is now a place where any or all can create, add and transform information.
Web 2.0, and given our interwoven relationship - Library 2.0, are very much here and now - and still growing and changing.
And this just happens to match up with the here-and-now information attitudes of the gen y / gen neXt / net gen, and all the other older but information au fait folks out there. Try convincing a 19 year old that the world does not depend upon their immediate response to a just received text message - and you just try to get their attention for anything else while they are doing so !!
Immediacy is the key - the demand, the assumption and the expectation. "I want it now, it should be right at my fingertips - like everything else is". Whether it is true or accurate or the best information/answer (or even trustworthy!) often seems to be secondary at best.
[Yes, I can hear my esteemed colleagues out there muttering and quietly crying into their coffee.]
The answers/information is expected to be out there, on tap (of keyboard or keypad) and it is to often taken to be the answer. And, yes, alot of stuff is out there and quite alot of it can be found using "the Google".
Yet is any answer the answer?!
Us library folk have always imparted the hows, whys and wherefores of information seeking.
In the physical library we had them - the users/clients/people - right at hand, ready to be grasped and encouraged (or dragged) into knowledge. The answers were in physical, obvious and logical (well mostly) places.
With great speed, things changed and keep changing - physical world and real people to deal with - if you're lucky! Real world 'visible' resources - likewise.
The truth is out there (and so many versions of it to choose from ! ;) but in many ways the ye olde information super highway is still the bumpy dirt road it once was - now it is just 18 lanes wide.
Quality and quantity - it still always comes back to these two basics.
Us library peoples, (the original and cleverest search engines), just have to keep shifting with the times - and the technology - as we have always done. And more so - we have to both keep up and be ahead in order to both meet information needs and plan for the future.
Through whatever techy means that we can best reach those who want the answers, we still have to keep teaching/showing them how to find, and - increasingly more important - to evaluate the 'answers' they find - and don't find. (Eg. there are those out there who will believe that the Great Wall of China was built to keep rabbits out - if only because "it was on the internet".)
Yes, it is an old argument but is still valid now and the pressures are greater. The sheer volume of information facing any seeker is mind-boggling. This, together with short attentions spans, and perceived immediacy of need, leaves the info worker much put upon... but we can do it!! we always have, in one form or another, the tools are just different.

There will always be information to be organised, answers to be sought and people who need to learn how to seek the right ones ...
"It's libraries, Jim, but not as we know it!"

Friday, July 20, 2007

To tag or not to tag...

This puppy’s inner indexer/cataloguer is torn between running screaming into the distance and enjoying - plus occasionally appreciating - the weird and wonderful? side of web 2.0 that includes tagging / social bookmarking / folksonomies.

One nice ‘potted version’ article that I came across - that you can share with all those you know who look blank (or worried) when you say tagging - is was ‘7 things you should know about social bookmarking’ on the Educause website - a useful summary, including discussion of the good, the bad and the folksy.

Technorati can be interesting - have to agree with their “…zillions of… some of them have to be good” headnote ! I just haven’t found many yet - and no, I’m not counting the fun ones that I peeked at!
It did point me in the direction of some other interesting sites like… Thoof - a cute combo of tagging site and wiki, but still in its infancy, eg. a recent search for ‘library’ had only 4 hits; and BoingBoing - self proclaimed ‘directory of wonderful things’ - lots of stuff to chase through (interesting history of BoingBoing’s real-world to e-world life in Wikipedia entry).

Well, del.icio.us is a bit of fun - useful place to store and share your own choice websites, blogs, etc, as well as to pick up on ‘what-other-people-are-looking-at’ (or, to put it in tv cooking show speak: ‘here’s one somebody else prepared earlier’ !

The value of what one might call social search refinement seems to work best, perhaps naturally, when the numbers of users/contributors hit a (fairly large) critical mass. Enough bodies putting in their 2 cents worth, or by default not doing so, can push the more useful sources to the fore.

The dear 75 year old Australian Broadcasting Corporation took a curious leap in the tagging direction, when, on July 1 2007/this year, its news website was redesigned and ‘my tags’ and ‘my stories’ (for bookmarks) sections appeared ready for (inter)action. Worth noting that the tag library is well populated and exudes an air of authority, control and sense ! So either ‘Aunty’ was very well prepared (no surprise there) and provided an authority list… or (and?) we, the ABC viewers and listeners, are a truly erudite bunch!

Monday, June 25, 2007

A thing about LibraryThing... and Rollyo

So now we have some tech toys that can 'save time' once you've spent the time setting them up!

LibraryThing is pretty cool. One can quite quickly DIY one's books into an illustrated catalogue. Timing was good - recently went to my fave bookshop's annual sale (Galaxy Bookshop) to stock up on latest goodies from f & sf genres. So I promptly-ish added the latest purchases (and some of the ever-so-large stockpile of my monographs) to my little corner of LibraryThing. Though it has a few idiosyncrasies that are unavoidable in a beta version, it is a very handy way to keep tabs on one's collection. The ability to add your own/read others' reviews or use the suggest/unsuggest options = nifty!
The inclusion of covers is very useful - so many titles now come out in multiple covers... can be hard to keep track if one bought the book some time ago but haven't read it yet - and it appears reincarnated on the bookshop shelves!

Rollyo is another fun tool out there: use it to create your own specialised search engine to trawl the websites of your choice. Can be very useful. Nice, too, to be able to test/use/modify for your own the searchrolls others have already added.

Sunday, June 24, 2007

And here is the news...

Next on the playlist are the delights of RSS and blogs as sources(?) of news and information (or is that more like opinion, with news and information running not-so-close second and third?!)

Bloglines is one example of a reader to use to gather such joys of e-news to your browser... as if one doesn't have enough to do sorting email!
There are several others - have a play and find one you prefer.

For news around the planet, the Wolf gets some of her updates by RSS feeds from the BBC , the ABC (the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, that is!), and Crikey.

Library and information feeds/blogs/blogs with feeds, etc, are varied, to say the least.
Just a couple of the many (and sometimes worrying!) blogs out there that I try to find time to peruse include: Jenny Levine's The Shifted Librarian (interesting discussion lately on Second Life), Stephen M Cohen's LibraryStuff and the new-ish blog by power searcher Mary Ellen Bates - Librarian of Fortune.
One blog host, Blogspot, includes an index to librarians’ blogs. Unrelated to Librarians’ Internet Index, it gives an alpha list by blog name with short description. 'Wide-ranging' is an understated description! Currency seems to be bit of a problem - but we all know that difficulty in our online lives!

A sample of sites with useful - for work stuff - RSS feeds: 'The Australian' newspaper (particularly the business and IT sections), Scientific American, Parliament of Australia website and SearchEngineWatch .

A useful place for library minded readers to start learning about RSS and such tech toys is at Curtin University's RSS page.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

And now for... more pictures - with a difference!

The Wolf has been out playing on the internet... again... this time learning to find her name in the most surprising places!



Yes, the Wolf is a star! But you all knew that, really... didn't you!?


When the Wolf travels, she chooses to fly...



And as the Wolf is a Gemini...

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Aaargh! attack of the html layout gremlins !

See my last post! ...for their e-vil effects!

A flick thru Flickr

And now some more illustrations for your viewing pleasure, selected from all the many and varied pics posted on Flickr from folks around the globe !



Hopefully links will remain stable - another test of the user-friendliness of technology!




Wolf (tries to) take the time to stop and smell the roses ... but works too hard !(from 'csstudios')
















A neighbour of the wolf (from 'Doug Lloyd')




















Somewhere near wolf's place... (from 'bobj03054)
































Ahhhh! the technology - from the days of perusing a photo library's stock by peering thru a magnifying lens or leafing thru prints... to typing a subject/topic/item of interest into a search engine or photo website... or just browsing.
PS - hey, you out there! - don't go getting any ideas that this is some grey-muzzled old wolf blogging away - this wulfie just happens to read alot about 'the ways things was' :)

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Seeing things!?


And to see if the blogging pictures work !
Credits for this lovely photo: "A gray wolf looks out from his snow covered forest.Image Source: Brooks, Tracy - Mission Wolf/USFWS, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service " via The Wolf Den website at http://fohn.net/wolf-pictures-facts/

Thursday, May 31, 2007

The lovely portrait...

All thanks and credit to "The mesmerizing stare of a gray wolf. Image Source: Kramer, Gary, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service." via "The Wolf Den" website at http://fohn.net/wolf-pictures-facts/

I'm here!

Yes, finally one lagging behind is making a move! Having a steam driven computer at home is something of a drawback in this techy age - so now I've beaten a client away from a library PC with a (metaphorical) stick - {he really didn't need to know the district hockey scores anyway}. So onto Learning 23 Things / Libraries 2.0 / Web 2.0 and all the other most groovy terms we have for the online world we reside in - fortunately, only some of the time. So there's a quiet start - on a Friday afternoon (Oz time, of course), first day of winter {Bliss!!}