Archive for June, 2007

Uneventful Journey to ALA in Washington D.C.

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

When I arrived at the airport today at 6:15 this morning there was a long line at the United check-in area, but no one seemed to be using the self-check kiosks or check baggage line. I wasn’t sure if it was just not working or a perfect example of herd mentality. Since I was already checked in, I went right up to the “Self Check-in Check Baggage” area and was helped right away. About five other people jumped the line and were hustling in behind me. Group Think, Die!

Security seemed like the traditional event where you take off your shoes, belt and other metal objects, take out your laptop, and place them in plastic totes on the X- Ray conveyor belt. I usually take off my jacket too and send it through. Something was wrong and they had to readjust my totes but the TSA folks seemed pleasant.

I met up with the library director and we had a nice chat while we waited to board. Once on board, I wound up sitting in the center seat, next to a man who smelled like Brie, as in stinky cheese. Mr. Eau-de-Fromage proceeded to make a cell call and speak loudly about how he was now on the plane and about how he didn’t like the security officials attitude. Blah blah blah. Earplugs and noise canceling headphones did the trick for the rest of the flight. However the odor was persistent and troublesome. I’m sorry stinky cheese man, but you need to take a bath before a five hour flight.

Once we landed, I started to see a lot more librarians, and library administrators especially at baggage claim. Karen and her husband Michael from Mountain View and a number of others that I didn’t say hi to. My bag was waiting for me. Melinda and I split a cab and talked about the future of libraries and about the conference in general.

I met up with a bunch of other folks from my library system for dinner. Todd, Nichole and her mother, Melinda and I went to Famous Luigi’s on 19th St NW. The food was good but the service was famously slow.

Reinventing Reference 3 first thing in the morning.

Forensic Scientist program

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

So we had Linda from the Santa Clara County Crime lab speak at the of our “Summer of Mystery” events. She was a great speaker and the twenty five people who showed up to here her talk seemed to enjoy it.

Linda from the Santa Clara Crime Lab at the library

Changing themes and lamentations

Monday, June 18th, 2007

I have been playing with the various WordPress themes lately. The latest one is Blackmagic. I think WordPress themes are great way to teach CSS as well as modular web design. I’m surprised that many libraries don’t use CSS to it’s full advantage by giving users the ability to change the text size, present pages in high contrast, or format them for printing, especially for pages that include directions, hours, or fact sheets.

Oh, CSS please invade every corner of every library web site.

Gearing up for ALA

Monday, June 18th, 2007

So what to bring to ALA in DC, Gadget-wise? Cell, MacBook Pro, iPod mini, Airport Express, Canon 30D digital camera, media card reader, noise-cancelling headphones, every charger known to man, and a USB nose-hair trimmer [just a joke].

I want to bring the Wii but, I’m not that hardcore. I’ll probably bring the book I’m currently reading. The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable by Nassim Nicholas Taleb [interesting but so-far but a slow read].

Book Club Expo

Thursday, June 14th, 2007

On Saturday, I staffed the library’s booth at the Book Club Expo in San Jose. I was able to see one Salon: Twentieth Century Classics with Diana Loevy who wrote The Book Club Companion, and Kira Stevens who wrote Good Books Lately and a couple of other panelists.

The booth was pretty slow but the majority of visitors said they used libraries. From an outreach standpoint, we were preaching to the choir. The best part was getting to see some friends… [ Hey, Emily! ]

I think libraries should have booths at music festivals or car shows. Anyone want to help me run a library themed booth at Viva Las Vegas 2008? How about a library camp at Burning Man?

Free Multi Service IM Clients reviewed & rated

Friday, June 8th, 2007

ExtremeTech reviews six multi-service IM clients. Adium, eBuddy, meebo, Meetro, Pidgin, and Trillian get a going over and a run-through. meebo is the only one that is browser based, and the only Mac client they review is Adium. For anyone conducting chat classes or thinking about implementing multi-service clients in your library, the article has a handy table that compares their respective features.

[ Via Slashdot ]

From the Streets to The Road by Cormac McCarthy

Monday, June 4th, 2007

I don’t know why it took me so long to read The Road by Cormac McCarthy. McCarthy’s novel presents a bleak, ashen world and the tragic chaos of mankind on the brink of extinction. An anonymous cataclysmic event has shattered the ecosystem. A man and his son embark on a desperate flight south to the sea in order to escape the coming winter. As they slog along the road, what’s left of humanity seems destined to consume itself and them, if they are not careful.

Usually a premise like that fills me with joy and anticipation. When I finally got around to reading it, I wasn’t disappointed. McCarthy combines his excellent facility for gripping prose with the lyric epic poetry reminiscent of Homer’s Odyssey complete with flashbacks of domestic life unhinged by the emerging dystopia. The stanzas add a rhythm that propels the story yet it never seems heavy-handed. Occasional grammar mistakes and misspellings add a certain authenticity to the narrative and to the characters’ plight. The Road is a sincere portrayal of humanity at it’s worst and at it’s best and is worthy of all praise from Oprah to Pulitzer.

the Street is fit but knows it

Sunday, June 3rd, 2007

Google Street View of the Los Altos Library Google’s Street View that is. It’s pretty well done. there is something vaguely voyeuristic about it all, despite being very practical. I’m waiting for a Machinima to show up on YouTube. Add a little Philip Glass to a high speed tour of Mountain View and we can call it we can call it a Mapinima.

“The Streets” are great too, despite occasionlly needing the Urban Dictionary to help with those Cockney rhymes.

Gaming in the library

Sunday, June 3rd, 2007

Now as the proud owner of a Wii, I’m hooked. The ability of the remote controllers to detect motion in three dimensions makes the gaming experience totally suited for a wide range of ages, from kids to vintage adults. The Wii Sports and Wii Play are all you need for rotator cuff injuries, a good case of Tennis elbow and hours of fun. I can’t wait for the library to carry Wii games, especially now that they are outselling PS3 2 to 1.

We’ve been doing a number of gaming in the library types of activities, primarily Guitar Hero for the PS2. Last Saturday, the library held a teen filmaker series followed by a video game marathon consiting of GH2 as well as some retro gaming on my old Dreamcast. Apparently they couldn’t get enough of the Soul Caliber.

My co-worker who organizes most of the Video Game Nights (that take place Fridays or Saturdays 3pm – 5pm) actually will be co-presenting at CLA this year on this very topic. Rock on Sarah!!!