Wednesday, November 02, 2005
Internet Library Conference Statistics
OO/Gwen
Internet Librarian, as you know, is designed for all types of librarians. The approximate percentages of types of library attendees are as follows:
30% University
20% corporate
20% Public
10% government
10% medical
5% K-12
Obviously public library attendees, at around 20% are very well represented. As you know, at Internet Librarian 2005, we also had a full days track devoted to public libraries, called Top Tech Trends in Public Libraries.
While we do not keep a demographic of the speakers, it looks like about 20-25% were from public libraries.
To answer the subject of library vendors being involved in the presentations, we take pride in the fact that our events are among the most well-planned learning opportunities in the library field. Unlike some library association events, our very existence relies on the fact that our attendees find value in the presentations and continue to want to attend year after year. Our presenters are picked based on the value those presentations can bring to the attendee. While some vendors do speak, it is because of some ground-breaking new product or initiative of special interest to the library community. Vendors speakers might make up 5% of the total number of presenters.
We feel that Internet Librarian has become a place where librarians of all types can gather to discuss the future trends and practical applications of the Internet and technology in libraries. It is not geared towards one specific library segment, because libraries of all types face similar issues with respect to technology. Public libraries are obviously well represented in both the programming and attendance figures, and we continue to hope that more and more of your public library colleagues realize the value of this conference and decide to join us in future years.
Thursday, October 27, 2005
Oceano Library
Congratulations everyone!
OO/Gwen
Internet Librarian Conference
This year there was a lot of emphasis once again on using more than one Internet search engine. Google is great, but AskJeeves (soon to be called Ask.com) and Exelead, and SearchYahoo (great, streamlined version that looks similar to Google), A9 (an Amazon engine) and MSN Search... are some of the few additional search engines that the speakers urge librarians maintain familiarity.
Other tools stressed in most presentations included the efficacy of RSS (Rich Site Summary... or "Really Simple Syndication" :-) tools) . Also there was a lot of discussion about "social networking services." This is where the data you collect is available online for others, and theirs to you, if you choose to participate. Librarians are finding that the networking that was usually done by phone and mail and meetings, are done more and more online. Documents are exchanged, or sites and search tips are shared and compared. Some of these social networks can be joined anonymously to avoid mass mailings to your personal e-mail.
Podcasts in audio and now video are other services that many speakers stresssed. There is a way to search word by word television newscasts ... I hope I am describing it correctly. For a detailed description on one of the advanced services to to blinkz.tv and read:
More later.
OO/Ref
Tuesday, September 06, 2005
Internet Browsers, Evaluations
About a year ago we tried Firefox as our Internet browser and have been using it ever since.
This Spring 2005, the University of Pennsylvania Computing Department did a comparative study and report on browsers. This is part of their report (which can be found in full at www.upenn.edu/computing/eval/2005/webbrowser/rec-sup.html)
Summary:
On the Windows platform, the team recommends Firefox and supports Internet Explorer.
On the Macintosh platform, the team recommends both Firefox and Safari; a majority of testers preferred Firefox.
Opera receives an honorable mention on both platforms.
Informational Caveats:
1. Some BEN Financials users will need to use Internet Explorer on a PC (or via Virtual PC) to perform some specific actions.
For sites requiring IE on Windows, Firefox has a Windows-only extension that allows you to "View this page in Internet Explorer" or "Always view this page in Internet Explorer." Using this extension will launch the active window (or specified link) in Internet Explorer. If you choose to "Always view this page in Internet Explorer," any time you go to open that page (or click on a link for the specified page), it'll launch it in Internet Explorer.
2. Midway through the testing process, Mozilla froze its suite development to focus on Firefox. The team decided the Mozilla Suite browser should no longer be supported or recommended in favor of Firefox.
3. For Linux users, Firefox and Opera both run on Linux.            
4. The team decided that Netscape version 8.0 released too late in the evaluation to merit much testing or discussion. Given that Mozilla is developing Firefox on it's own and it has begun to gain wide acceptance, the team decided to not to evaluate Netscape 8 further.
5. Both Safari and Opera announced significant upgrades at the end of the testing process; we should keep a collective eye on the development of these two products.Gwen/OO-Ref
Thursday, July 28, 2005
More Training and Workshops
In late September, I plan to go to Cerritos Library to be trained in online ready reference resources: Free, Fast, and Factual: Online Ready Reference Sources for 2005 and Beyond.
In late October several of my colleagues and I plan to go on our days off to attend the Internet Librarian Conference... always the place to attempt to catch up the one-year falling behind we've experienced in reference and technology leaps. It's always exciting! It's always lots of work! And if you don't go... you lose! :-0
keep on paddling...
Gwen at OO-Ref
post script August 20th. I won't be going to Cerritos Library afterall. There is a possibility that this workshop may be brought to our region?
Friday, July 15, 2005
FYI Articles
And that article by Diane Ludin describing the new CD-rom about the Morro Bay estuary prompted Judi Horner to suggest that the reference staff venture over to OY on a field trip to see what it is all about. Gwen/OO
technology races onward
and I was led eventually to OPAL http://www.opal-online.org/
" OPAL allows library patrons and library staff members to participate in online library programs from anywhere. Everyone is welcome to participate in OPAL programs, and libraries of all types are encouraged to become OPAL members."
This is totally new to me; when do people have time to keep up with WHAT is happening, let alone PARTICIPATE in it? Gwen/OO
Tuesday, July 12, 2005
Other blogging librarians
(July 3, 2010, I am editing the list to indicate which sites are no longer active:)
http://www.libraryplanet.com/
http://lcld.library-blogs.net/ defunct
http://blogs.csmonitor.com/liblog/ defunct
http://www.hawaii.gov/lrb/libblog/
http://blog.xrefer.com/ defunct
http://www.blogwithoutalibrary.net/
http://eprintblog.crimsonblog.com/ defunct
http://www.explodedlibrary.info/
http://www.chickeninthewoods.com/brary/index.php defunct
http://blisspix.net/index.php defunct
http://librariansonedge.blogspot.com/
http://librarianoutreach.blogspot.com/
http://wirelesslibraries.blogspot.com/
Moved to http://babyboomerlibrarian.blogspot.com
http://vip2.blogspot.com/ defunct
http://libraryinfo.blogspot.com/
http://librarystories.blogspot.com/
http://www.rcpl.info/services/liblog.html
Oh, well, there are tons more.... but you get the idea.
Gwen/OO-Ref
edited July 3, 2010 to indicate defunct sites.
Reference Vision Meeting
Personally, I also have some concerns about the future of reference librarians! Will our role transition more toward instructional librarians, as in academic libraries? Some library literature suggests this may be the trend.
My co-worker and I will have an opportunity to also venture into these questions perhaps at the Reference Focus Group (sponsored by the State Library) which we will attend here July 21st.
OO/Gwen