Hi. The hardest thing about having a whole life and a whole blog is when you have to make choices between one and the other. I’m away this weekend at a wedding, I’ll be back for a few days and then I’m off to Australia with indeterminate access for two weeks. Of course, these notices were more important in pre-RSS days to keep you from clicking through to my page, getting annoyed that I never updated, and then never coming back. In any case, there is always more to say and I think heading into what we affectionately call the “big blue room” for a few days can’t hurt, can it?
Author: jessamyn
google scholar, some more perspectives
Jeremy at Digital Librarian has a few more words about Google Scholar [or as some are calling it, schoogle] that sums up a lot of how I feel about it. [see also: metafilter and slashdot]
We need to stop be re-active, and start being proactive. Our vendors are not going to move us forward in the ways we need; they are reactive to our needs, not to our future. It is very easy to be passive as a community, and to let outside forces map our route. It is much harder to take control of the wheel and do the mapping ourselves. But until we do, the “Where do we want to go today?” will continue to be the rhetorical question that is only answered by the company (or vendor community) that asks it.
ranganathan’s laws, updated
My pal Fred from ibiblio said he met Lennart Björneborn this week. I checked out his site and he’s adapted Ranganathan’s five principles of library science to the web world. Even though they are copyrighted [?], I’ll include them here:
- Links are for use – the very essence of hypertext
- Every surfer his or her link – the rich diversity of links across topics and genres
- Every link its surfer – ditto
- Save the time of the surfer – visualizing web clusters and small-world shortcuts
- The Web is a growing organism
librarian activist, now with RSS!
Librarianactivist.org now has an RSS feed.
Clinton Library opens, umbrellas confiscated
Some photos of the new Clinton Library.