Categories
book news

Doug Squared

Author Douglas Coupland talks with Wired about his new book, and how he became, much to his surprise, a character in the book and developed an internet persona with its own life and interesting hobbies. So what do you do if the internet version of you has more interesting hobbies than you do? Pick them up, of course!

There’s a rumor going around the Internet that Douglas Coupland collects meteorites. Nobody knows how it began, least of all Coupland. But the story started to circulate shortly after his first novel, Generation X, became an On the Road for the ’90s. Every effort he’s made to set the record straight has been ignored by his many fan sites. So he recently decided to purchase a few choice specimens.

“We should all be so lucky to have people throw such good ideas our way,” he says.

Categories
cinema humor news

“I am not afraid.”

During a recent interview, director Werner Herzog was shot in the leg. He continued the interview, quietly bleeding, and said:

“It was not a significant bullet. I am not afraid.”

I don’t think you can get more fucking badass than that. I hope I can be that tough when I’m 63.

(yahoo news uk)

Categories
libraries news

‘Feral professionals’

Library Journal article about the tendancy of academic libraries to fill their positions with non-librarians.

Academic libraries now hire an increasing number of individuals to fill professional librarian positions who do not have the master’s degree in library science. Instead of appointing librarians with the traditional qualifying credential, they hire staff to fill librarian positions who hold a variety of qualifications, such as advanced degrees in subject disciplines, specialized language skills, teaching experience, or technology expertise.

As a future librarian aspiring to work in an academic library, I’m obviously a little worried about precious professional positions being taken by non-librarians. However, I agree with Mr. Neal in his summary that integrating ‘feral professionals’ into the academic library is bound to incite a certain amount of revolution in the way academic libraries, and librarians, view themselves and the services they offer. Read any article out there today on the modern librarian, and it becomes fairly obvious that it is a role that is constantly changing and re-evaluating itself. Libraries have to offer new services in new ways to new patrons, especially academic libraries who are consistently thrown against new, young, and tech-savvy patrons.

In comparisn, I’ve read lots of stories about librarians who go out and use their degree to find non-library positions. I’m curious how the ratio compares between non-librarians taking professional library positions vs librarians finding professional non-librarian employment. I imagine that, somewhere, it all evens out.

Categories
libraries news

Libraries: Service with a ‘boom’.

The Institute of Museum and Library Services issued a press release today concerning reshaping libraries for baby boomers. The forty-four page report, co-sponsored by the IMLS and the Americans for Libraries Council, details an extensive plan for understand and adapting to the needs of baby boomers as they retire and seek out new and creative enterprises in their lives.

Public libraries are uniquely placed to help mediate the great social transformation signaled by the growing proportion of healthy, active older Americans. Recent research documents the desire of older Americans to remain engaged in the broader world and to continue their learning opportunities. These adults are resources for our communities and our libraries – if librarians can transform their practices and their institutions to provide opportunities and connections to support lifelong learning and civic participation.

On September 26-27, 2005, Americans for Libraries Council (ALC) and the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) convened a Library Leaders Forum, Designs for Change: Libraries and Productive Aging, to examine key issues relating to the aging opportunity. The meeting was held as part of ALC’s Lifelong Access Libraries initiative, which seeks to foster fundamental changes in how librarians provide services and opportunities to active older adults.

Categories
game news tech

Boot Camp vs New Coke

Follow up to my previous Boot Camp post.

Eric over at Websnark dual-booted windows on his MacBook Pro and loaded up City of Villains. Evidently the result was even more impressive than he had anticipated.

I ran at full native resolution with all the bells and whistles. It was beautiful. Effects I’d never been able to see before showed up perfectly. In the middle of a gigantic fight with a giant monster (the Ghost of Scrapyard, for those playing along at home) I and two other Masterminds, along with a pile of corruptors and brutes, were all in a pack alongside about sixty minions, the giant monster, special effects of everyones’ attacks, at least twenty Henchmen and a giant blue glowing thing… oh, and explosions everywhere… at absolutely no choppiness nor loss of framerate.

This poses a quandary for PC-manufacturers, who have until now at the least dominated the gaming market through sheer windows-compatability brute force. And the gaming market makes up a very significant chunk of change in the computer hardware world. If Macs can, all of a sudden, do everything and play everything, and do it as well as Eric’s post describes, the PC is gonna be in a heap of trouble.

But of course, the real winner here is Microsoft. But then, that’s nothing new. In fact, according to Chris over at Apple Matters, this could be a bad move by Apple in general (though I agree with Eric that once the cat was out of the bag, Apple was beholden to make a move).

Why is Boot Camp the Apple equivalent of the New Coke fiasco? Well, because Apple is trading a little short-term gain for a long-term negative. At this moment in time, OS X does have a big lead over Windows XP but Vista is around the corner and it promises to address a lot of the problems found in Windows. So, for the next few months, people might buy a Mac with the idea of using it as a dual boot machine and get slowly but steadily sucked in by OS X’s superiority, but once Vista comes out that will likely change.

In fact, Apple has tried this before. In an effort to stave off dwindling sales Apple once offered Macs with PC cards in them. These were the equivalent of dual boot machines. The theory went that people would buy the machine for their Windows needs, but use the Mac OS more and more as time went by. Finally, unable to resist the allure of Mac OS you’d have a full blown Apple zealot on your hands. The reality was that Mac users bought the machines (they were brisk sellers) and got converted to Windows users. This was when the cutting edge Windows was 3.0, it is hard to imagine that Boot Camp won’t make at least as many Windows converts out of Mac users than the other way around.

Having Macs and PCs out there, appealing to different users with different needs, was much like having two distinct political parties. You were either a Mac user, or a PC user, and the line rarely blurred between the two. With Boot Camp, that line is officially blurred. Is it only a matter of time before we have essentially the same computers trying to sell themselves under completely different names?

Additional reading:

More additional reading (added 4/7/06):

Categories
internet news

The new ‘Times’

NYTimes.com, the online portal to the New York Times, wrote a letter to its readers on Sunday describing the redesign of their site. Among the new features are improved navigation and an up-to-the minute “most popular” section. Also added is a tab that takes you to articles as they appeared in the newspaper. In a word, their page has become more interactive, customizable, up-to-date, and functional. With all that function, I hope they don’t forget they have to keep posting news.

We also wanted to give our readers a greater voice and sprinkle a little more serendipity around the site by providing prominent links to a list of most e-mailed and blogged articles, most searched for information and popular movies. A new tab at the top of the page takes you directly to all our most popular features.

Categories
news tech

Macs do Windows, too.

Apple has announced the Boot Camp Public Beta. Set to be included in the next OS X release: Leopard, Boot Camp allows Mac users to run Microsoft Windows on their Mac. Essentially, they’re offering Mac drivers for the Windows platform. Even so, they have to get in their anti-Windows quips:

EFI and BIOS

Macs use an ultra-modern industry standard technology called EFI to handle booting. Sadly, Windows XP, and even the upcoming Vista, are stuck in the 1980s with old-fashioned BIOS. But with Boot Camp, the Mac can operate smoothly in both centuries.

Categories
news tech

Trained on movie footage, don’t let it watch 2001.

Device warns you if you’re boring or irritating.

The “emotional social intelligence prosthetic” device, which El Kaliouby is constructing along with MIT colleagues Rosalind Picard and Alea Teeters, consists of a camera small enough to be pinned to the side of a pair of glasses, connected to a hand-held computer running image recognition software plus software that can read the emotions these images show. If the wearer seems to be failing to engage his or her listener, the software makes the hand-held computer vibrate.

I’m curious what you’re supposed to do AFTER the device has told you that you’re boring your listener to death. Start juggling? Make weird noises? Sadistically continue, ignoring the vibrating device, eager to find out just how tolerant some people can be? Obviously this is not a tool that should fall into my hands, but seriously, they should consider programming some social cues into the hardware to offer alternatives to a conversation about “How I organized my sock drawer this morning by color, and how tomorrow I will do it by style”.

Categories
internet news socialweb

The Net’s New Age

The Net’s New Age. Business Week has an interesting if fairly general article on some of the big “Web 2.0″ products in the works from the major companies.

The implications reach far beyond the Net. The new Web is changing the business model for media and communications companies. Traditional players in these markets have built their businesses on a foundation of brand and content, forming a customer base and marketplace. In the Web 2.0 era, they’ll aim to cultivate a community of users on the Web, according to Troy Young, executive vice-president and chief “experience architect” at Organic, an online advertising and consulting firm.

Personally, I’m going to get annoyed if every single website I go to wants me to be part of its “community”, interact with it on a personal basis, and create a profile so it can pander to my tastes. Having the content and tools is great, certainly, so long as function maintains dominance over form, and pages don’t get interactive when they don’t need to be.

Categories
humor news

Mecca Cola: Drink with commitment

Mecca Cola is a fairly old story, but I only first heard of it the other day. I love their slogan. Quite the statement. My opinion is that if you want to fight against consumerism, don’t drink unhealthy and overpriced beverages. But that’s just me.

Demand for bottles of Mecca Cola – which bear the slogan “No more drinking stupid, drink with commitment” – is already soaring.

Categories
news

French Rabbit: The Official Lagomorph of Good Taste

Perhaps they should rename the company: Earnest and Julio Gauloise. Sure, we all laugh when we think of wine in a box. We’ve all (ALL) tried it though. Some of the more unfortunate of us may have even sampled some Rossi from a giant bottle made specifically to get you inebriated at bottom dollar. French Rabbit is different. With a tagline such as, “Savour the wine. Save the planet.” how can you possibly resist trying it? Ignore the annoying Flash page and go save the planet, one blackout at a time. We all have to do our part, right?

Categories
libraries news

The ‘Experience Library’

LJ Talks to Waynn Pearson and Don Buckley of the Cerritos Library. A model of the integration of flash and substance, molded to fit their users’ needs.

Lots of people come to visit. If they can’t match your budget, what can they take away?

DB: Creating a positive experience for the guest not just intellectually but also emotionally. Broadening the definition of what a library can be. “WOW” customer service: staff scanning the horizon, walking around, and finding a way to say “Yes.” What we like to hear is, “You have a beautiful building, but it’s the people who work here who make it really special.”

Categories
internet news

Come see the softer side of Google

Google Charm makes its debut. Google’s chief executives offer their candid commentary on their growth, prospects, and the controversial China decision. Of course, they maintain some secrets.

That said, however, no-one is exactly sure what Google really wants to do in the future. Speculation among experts is rife about what the company wants with all that dark fibre – but in the end, your guess is as good as mine.

But that’s fine with Google.

“The mystique works to our advantage,” says Eric Schmidt, shaking our hands as we leave the room half an hour late.

Categories
news socialweb

MySpace, Threadless, and Ultra-Fast Release Cycles

“If you’re not on myspace, you don’t exist.” By now, everyone’s heard of MySpace. So what are some of the secrets behind its success, and what can we take from it? How about ultra-fast release cycles?

Skyler’s comment about how myspace keeps changing and growing organically, almost every day, is a passionate user’s view of what the developer’s call quick release cycles. Where software developers are typically on release cycles of 6 months to a year, the Threadless guys said that even two weeks was a little long. In fact, virtually all of the web 2.0-ish folks at the conference mentioned these quick release cycles as crucial.

Categories
cinema libraries news

Google hosts National Archives

National Archive Films on Google Video.

Over 70 years ago, the National Archives was founded to preserve
American historical documents, as well as the moments and events that
could be saved in still photos, films, and audio recordings. Today the
Archives is home to everything from rare historical footage (newsreels
and government documentaries from the 1930s) to the 1969 moon landing.

Categories
libraries news

Homeless, and now libraryless.

The NYPL cracks down on internet use, and against the homeless.

“Homeless people depend on free access to internet in libraries to find out about job listings, keep themselves informed and email résumés to potential employers,” said Rogers, who regularly searches craigslist.com for weekend jobs or part-time work.

Categories
news

Baa, Baa, Rainbow Sheep

Baa, Baa, Rainbow Sheep? Some teachers at nursery schools in England may be taking political correctness a bit too far.

“The fact that black is a color appears to be lost on the PC police,” wrote Ian McPhedran in a column in the Advertiser, a newspaper in Adelaide, Australia.

Categories
humor news webcomics

Attack monkeys? Attack monkeys!

The coolest news story, ever.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 Today the Paris Guardian reported on the hottest new trend in Parisian gang weaponry: attack monkeys. “They’re ultra-fashionable,” said Didier Lecourbe, a police officer from the depressed Paris suburb of Aubervilliers. “Now that the authorities have cracked down on pit bulls, Dobermans, and rottweilers, apes are becoming the new weapon of choice.” Imported illegally through Spain from Gibraltar, Morocco, and Algeria, the Barbary apes are known for their powerful limbs, sharp teeth, and short tempers; removed from their natural habitat, they can become highly aggressive, and their favored method of attack is to hurl themselves at people’s heads. Police believe as many as 500 Barbary apes have been smuggled into France in the past two years.

Thanks to Jason for the link.

I’d like to think they got the idea from us.

Categories
libraries news

The Future of the Academic Library

I’m on a librarian listserv, and these are a couple articles that were mentioned today, concerning the future of the academic library and the growing digitalization of information, entertainment, and education.

This article from EDUCAUSE Review eloquently discusses the problems, and ideas for solutions, for the modern academic librarian.

Over the next decade, colleges and universities will have to make critically important practical and policy decisions about the function of libraries, about the space devoted to libraries, and about the roles of librarians. If these decisions are made wisely, the academy may be able to maintain much of the ineffable, inspirational value associated with academic libraries while retaining their practical value through altogether transformed activities and functions built upon a new mission designed for a more digital world.

In turn, the ACRLblog talks about the validity of the arguments presented in the EDUCAUSE article, and it’s relation to a few other articles that have been published in the recent past.

And to follow up, another EDUCAUSE article that talks about Place as Library.

On a personal note, I find it exciting to be a part of a world that is growing and changing so rapidly. I also find it a little scary to jump into a profession that rests so soundly on changing principles and ideas. When I get too worried, I think about all those little libraries, in all those little towns, and in all those big, big states, who don’t care so much about these issues as they do about when the next Sue Grafton book is released.

In other words, if the Academic Library seems flummocticatedly mutable, the Public Library remains stalwart and honest, which is not to say unprogressive.

Categories
internet news socialweb

ePrivacy, iPrivacy, and yPiracy

Consider this a link-dump, if you like. I won’t ramble much myself.

I don’t think it’s that people think of the internet as private, neccesarily, but that they just don’t expect it to be used against them. Or perhaps, that it’s so big that they can be just a face in the crowd. But internet privacy issues are becoming bigger and bigger, from getting google searched at the border, to having your Facebook profile checked by university admissions staff to help determine if they should accept your application.

This Times article highlights the issue of search engine anonymity. Though it clearly states that no “private” information was being proferred, doesn’t it feel like that would just be a matter of time?

“These search engines are a very tempting target for government and law enforcement,” Givens said. “Look at the millions of people who use search engines without thinking of the potential to be drawn into a government drag net.”

I’m not a big fan of facebook (I do have an account), but evidently a lot of people are. This story claims facebook has over 6 million active users, and that over 2/3 of them log on daily. And with stats like that, can you blame a college for “keeping an eye” on their students. Yes, and I think you should. It’s easy for college and university administration to forget that students are what keep them in business. So they had a few drinks, in private. So they “threaten” to commmit a crime. On the internet!? Hell, I’ve threatened to do a lot of things on the internet, but you can bet your ass that if someone “disciplined” me for it, I’d bring a lawsuit down on them with an unholy fury. Should students watch what they post? Perhaps. But maybe the administration should try and respect their privacy a bit too, before they scare all the students away. Because then what will they do?

Hit cancel on the login form and you’ll get two paragraphs of this story, which details students rushing a football field and starting something of a “postgame riot”. Campus police were overwhelmed and only managed a couple arrests, but once again facebook came to the rescue, and through posted photos they managed to finger a whole ton of other students. These students were actually breaking the law, so it makes a bit more sense than the previous example. Yet just another story of Student Beware!

This eweek article highlights the story of an Iranian man and resident of Toronto being stopped from entering the US when border guards found out he was a blogger and so googled his name, finding too much evidence that he had been living, without proper documentation, in New York. His blog post about the experience is interesting. It’s from November 24, 2005, so a little old but very relevant to the issue. Sure, it seems obvious in retrospect, but how would you feel if the border guard not only found your blog, but started to interrogate you about each and every post? I know I’d be outraged.

He was ecstatic. My blog made his day, or in this case, his night. He kept reading my posts and asking questions about a lot of them: Why did I go to Iran, what are my feelings about Bush administration, why I separated from my wife, what did I think about Iranian politics, etc.

From this article:

Now that students have grown accustomed to posting every detail of their lives, from the mundane to the torrid, on their profiles, they need to show a little more restraint. On many profiles, discretion takes a back seat to showing off Thursday night’s killer keg stand or commenting on Friday night’s hook up.

Though I totally love this turnaround by some clever students:

At George Washington University, students took it upon themselves to prove that university police were using the Facebook to find and break up parties. They created a “Beer Party” on the Facebook and waited, digital cameras in hand, for police to arrive. When squad cars rolled up, police found students sipping punch and downing cupcakes frosted with the word “beer.”

And facebook isn’t the only “dangerous” public domain. Myspace is, of course, immensely popular, and got these kids in trouble.

Do a Google news search for facebook right now, and you’ll get 332 articles, at a glance most of them about students getting busted by schools for things they’ve posted on their facebook profiles. While you’re there, try searching myspace as well, or livejournal, blog, typepad, friendster, etc etc etc. The social tools available on the internet today are amazing, and they certainly have their uses. But unless federal law steps in with internet privacy laws, expect the people you would least like to see your blog/profile/photos to see them, and act accordingly. Also, don’t forget that myspace and livejournal both have privacy locks you can put on posts so that not just anyone can read them. Until every service offers similar protection, bear in the mind that at its core, the nature of the internet is that it’s public.