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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

NYTimes: Without Cafeteria Trays, Colleges Cut Water Use, and Calories

But what about winter sledding?

From The New York Times:

Without Cafeteria Trays, Colleges Cut Water Use, and Calories
By LISA W. FODERARO

Schools are shelving the once-ubiquitous trays in the hopes of
conserving water, cutting food waste, softening the ambience and
saving money....

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/29/nyregion/29tray.html

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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Adding search power to public data



 
 

Sent to you by john taube via Google Reader:

 
 

via The Official Google Blog by A Googler on 4/28/09

Earthquakes are not the only thing that can shake Silicon Valley. After the dot-com bubble burst back in 2000 the unemployment rate of Santa Clara county went up to 9.1%. During the last couple of months, it has gone up again:


We just launched a new search feature that makes it easy to find and compare public data. So for example, when comparing Santa Clara county data to the national unemployment rate, it becomes clear not only that Santa Clara's peak during 2002-2003 was really dramatic, but also that the recent increase is a bit more drastic than the national rate:


If you go to Google.com and type in [unemployment rate] or [population] followed by a U.S. state or county, you will see the most recent estimates:


Once you click the link, you'll go to an interactive chart that lets you add and remove data for different geographical areas.

Here's a video showing how it works:


The data we're including in this first launch represents just a small fraction of all the interesting public data available on the web. There are statistics for prices of cookies, CO2 emissions, asthma frequency, high school graduation rates, bakers' salaries, number of wildfires, and the list goes on. Reliable information about these kinds of things exists thanks to the hard work of data collectors gathering countless survey forms, and of careful statisticians estimating meaningful indicators that make hidden patterns of the world visible to the eye. All the data we've used in this first launch are produced and published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and the U.S. Census Bureau's Population Division. They did the hard work! We just made the data a bit easier to find and use.

Since Google's acquisition of Trendalyzer two years ago, we have been working on creating a new service that make lots of data instantly available for intuitive, visual exploration. Today's launch is a first step in that direction. We hope people will find this search feature helpful, whether it's used in the classroom, the boardroom or around the kitchen table. We also hope that this will pave the way for public data to take a more central role in informed public conversations.

This is just the beginning. Stay tuned for more.

Posted by Ola Rosling, Product Manager

 
 

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Thursday, April 23, 2009

New widget of quirky or relevant stuff

I have added a widget of interesting things to the blog. It appears as my shared items from Google Reader. As I find things that are interesting or potentially of use to others, I will "share" them in Google Reader, they then appear in the list of shared items widget. If they are of direct relevance, I will post them directly into the blog. Nifty, huh?

New PBS Video Portal



 
 

Sent to you by john taube via Google Reader:

 
 

via ResourceShelf by resourceshelf on 4/21/09

From the Article:

…public TV stations are taking more risks, and on Wednesday they introduced a fancy video portal at PBS.org/video. It replaces a hodgepodge of sites, with different features, run by the producers of each of the network's programs and by its member stations.

The sleek animation and the features of the site will be familiar to users of Hulu, the NBC-Fox joint venture. You can search and browse among thousands of programs, contributed both by PBS and its member stations. You can watch full episodes, and also search for clips and segments.

The site is built on new technology that will also allow users to upload video, make comments and otherwise interact with the site and one another. For example, in conjunction with the Ken Burns documentary series "The National Parks," which will be introduced this fall, users will be invited to upload videos of parks.

Direct to the New PBS Video Portal

Source: New York Times
Hat Tip: LS

See Also: You Find Also Find Some PBS Content on the Hulu Site


 
 

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

ACLS System Communications

At yesterday's Branch managers meeting, we discussed how to respond to the feedback we received about responding to the 2009 quality of work life survey. As you recall, we decided to focus on the area of communication to improve the quality of work life at ACLS.

The feedback (3 responses) sent to Jennifer was anecdotal and hard to select an appropriate direction to respond. There seemed to be a under-current of a theme around "trust." At the conclusion of the discussion yesterday, we decided to create a staff ombudsman or staff advocate. The staff ombudsman would serve as the "spokes person" for library staff. Pat Merrbach agreed to serve in that role.

If at any time, you do not feel comfortable making a suggestion or comment directly, please send it to Pat so that it can be heard. Pat is willing to receive your ideas, comments, suggestions, complaints, gripes, etc etc in email., paper, anonymous note. Pat has taken the Girl Scout oath that your name will remain anonymous.

thanks and thank you Pat.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Budget Update

Hi All,

State Funding:
It looks like a last day change to the state budget funded libraries at the same per capita rate as the current year.    This is good news as it will eliminate the $22,500 reduction in state aid had they gone ahead with the 10% decrease in fy10 funding.

The state will still seek $4719 in repayments from what they consider overpayments in prior years.

County Funding
The County is asking all departments and outside agencies to respond to a possible 1 or 2% reduction in county funding in FY2010.     Given that our FY10 recommended funding level is $905,000, it would mean either a $9050 or $18,100 reduction in County funding.    Given the scenarios we prepared for the State reduction in funding, I replied with those potential measures.

The County is working as fast as it can to get something solid to work with, and I hope to be able to provide that to you after the County's April 30 meeting.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Washington Post Mobile - 'Dumb Money's' Smart Gamble on Allure of E-Books

washingtonpost.com


Jtaube@Allconet.org sent this to you from http://www.washingtonpost.com

'Dumb Money's' Smart Gamble on Allure of E-Books
By Bob Thompson
Updated: 04/14/2009



Here's a publishing riddle for you, not to mention a sign of the times:

Daniel Gross has had a book out for almost two months now, but you couldn't buy it in your local bookstore until this week.

How can that be?

Well, if you guessed that "Dumb Money: How Our Greatest Financial Minds Bankrupted the Nation" came out first as an e-book, give yourself points for having your head out of the non-digital sand.



E-book exclusives -- as opposed to e-books published as spinoffs of a printed version -- remain rare, because the market is still too small to sustain them. But Gross's book offers a revealing window on how such exclusives could reshape "p-book" publishing. The decision to bring "Dumb Money" out in paperback, for example, was made only after the e-book's appeal had been established.

Perhaps the most revealing thing about the "Dumb Money" story, in fact, is that everyone involved -- author, agent and publisher -- saw it as an experiment, the kind of small-scale trial run that a late-adopting industry needs to do a lot more of.

It started with the biggest bankruptcy case in U.S. history.



On Sept. 15, the giant financial services firm Lehman Brothers filed for Chapter 11. Not long afterward, Gross, who had been tracking the economic implosion as a financial columnist at Newsweek and Slate, sent an e-mail to his agent, Sloan Harris of International Creative Management.

"Literally at the same time, he called me," Gross recalls. They agreed that "we should do something."

But what? Gross didn't want to write a standard boardroom narrative. It's not what he's good at, he says, and he's watched too many writers spend years writing books that didn't sell.



"If I could do something quickly, get out before all the people who are doing doorstoppers," he thought, "then I will have had my say, got a book out, everyone will have to account for me or ignore me -- and I'll move on."

Harris knew publishers were looking to experiment with e-books, and he suggested an e-book exclusive. The need for speed was an obvious factor, but the agent had another reason as well:

"There's a kind of writing, 25,000 to 50,000 words, that no longer fits in magazines," he says, yet isn't long enough to package as a traditional book. So "there's an opportunity to grow a business that didn't previously exist."



Harris called "a small handful" of publishers to pitch the book and the e-book exclusive notion. The most enthusiastic response came from the Free Press, an imprint of Simon & Schuster. Free Press executives Dominick Anfuso and Martha Levin, in turn, scheduled a meeting with Simon & Schuster CEO Carolyn Reidy to seek her blessing.

How long did it take before she gave it?

"I don't know -- one second?" Reidy says.



She'd been looking for "a serious writer who was interested in experimenting using the digital form." The problem was that "good writers want to be paid, and there's not a huge market yet" for e-books. So finding someone "willing to take the financial risk with us" (by not demanding too much money up front) was key.

Gross wasn't expecting to break the bank.

"I wanted to get paid something," he says. But he knew that "a couple of good speaking engagements" -- which "Dumb Money," of course, might help generate -- could pull in as much as his low five-figure advance.



Besides, he was writing only 30,000 words. He had most of his material in his notebook already, so he could keep his day job. Most important, he could avoid the traditional, tortoiselike book publication schedule -- and with it, months of anxiety about "Dumb Money" being overtaken by events.

"We all know what can happen to the market in a week," he says.

Gross and Harris did a handshake deal with the Free Press in October, though the paperwork took longer. By December, Gross was turning in chapters. He filed the last one in late January. By Feb. 9, he had an edited book to approve.

Two weeks later, "Dumb Money" went on sale, priced at $11.99 -- and the advantages of being an e-book exclusive kicked in.



"We got an enormous amount of support, especially from Sony and Amazon, because it was an e-book original," says Free Press associate publisher Suzanne Donahue. Amazon's Kindle, Sony's Reader and digital audiobook purveyor Audible plugged it on their home pages.

With the appropriate application, you can also get "Dumb Money" on an iPhone. That's what Gross did to check out his own digital work.

The e-book outlets don't make sales figures available. (Heck, Amazon won't even say how many Kindles it has sold.) But the Free Press's Anfuso says sales have been "in the thousands."

Sounds like time for an e-book reality check.



Anfuso says he's been happy with the "Dumb Money" sales, given the limited number of potential customers equipped with the technology to acquire and read it. But he's also "really pleased" that with the paperback edition, "we get to sort of publish it again."

Translation: Success for an e-book exclusive, at least for now, means doing well enough that your publisher decides to sell physical books.

The Association of American Publishers reports that January 2009 sales of e-books rose more than 170 percent over the January 2008 total. Yet 170 percent of not very much is still not very much: Those sales represented just $8.8 million of the $785 million in overall book sales.



The tipping point for e-books may be coming -- "we really are close," Reidy says -- but it's not quite here yet.

Something else to consider about the "Dumb Money" experiment is how fundamentally conservative it was.

Yes, the format allowed Gross to get time-sensitive material to market quickly, but otherwise, the e-version doesn't look that different from an ink-and-paper book. It is searchable, of course, and thus requires no index, but it is not enhanced with background material, explanations of financial arcana or any of the myriad bells and whistles digital publication theoretically makes possible.

And it certainly doesn't meet the revised definition of a "book" proposed by new-media futurists like

Jeff Jarvis.

Jarvis came through Washington recently to promote his own new book, "What Would Google Do?" -- but he calls himself "an utter and complete hypocrite" for putting out a printed text at all. "If I had eaten my own dog food," he says, "I would have put out a digital book that was searchable and linkable and clickable and correctable and discussable. Why didn't I? I got an advance. The system still pays."

But for how long?



Books are fated to become "less of a product and more of a process," Jarvis says. He's talking about the mutually advantageous exchange of information and ideas between authors and the community of readers that is made possible online (though not on proprietary e-book devices). There's only one drawback, he notes: Authors will have to figure out new ways to get paid.

Details, details.

If there's one point on which everyone involved agrees, however, it's that the change digital books represent -- whatever form or forms they eventually take -- is long past inevitable.

"I have come to believe that all variations of this model are possible," Harris says.



"It is definitely a new economy for our industry," Anfuso says, "and I can't imagine it doing anything but grow."

As for Dan Gross, whose modest experiment hints at an earthquake of dislocation for the people who write and publish books, he's not looking back.

"There are a lot of people in our industry who are resistant to change," Gross says. "And there are some people in our industry who have 30-year mortgages and kids and families we love, and we love what we do -- and we're trying our darnedest to figure out how we can keep doing this as things change."





(c) 1996-2009 The Washington Post Company

Friday, April 10, 2009

Research paper assistance calculators



Ever been stuck as to where to start a research paper or assignment?

The University of Missouri Library staff have assembled this list of Research Paper Assistance Calculators.

After selecting an assistance calculator,
  1. you enter the due date of your paper or assignment and then
  2. enter you topic area.
The Assistance calculator responds with a provides an outline of what steps need to be take and due dates for each step.

For each step they provide useful links to resources and additional how to guides for that step.
Some will even email you reminders to stay on track.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

April 2009 | SELLSUMERS



 
 

Sent to you by john taube via Google Reader:

 
 

via trendwatching.com by newsletter@trendwatching.com on 4/1/09

SELLSUMERS

SELLSUMERS

Whether it's selling their insights to corporations, hawking their creative output to fellow consumers, or renting out unused assets, consumers will increasingly become SELLSUMERS, too...

Read SELLSUMERS »


 
 

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20+ Tools for Price Watching and Protecting



 
 

Sent to you by john taube via Google Reader:

 
 

via ResourceShelf by resourceshelf on 3/10/09

From the Article:

…there are tools aplenty to help you keep an eye on the price of something, and swoop in to get it when it goes on sale or the manufacturer offers a rebate.

We've put together a list of 22 different tools that let you do this with relative ease. Most only work on Amazon.com, but a few will keep an eye on the entirety of the Web to let you know about sales, price drops, and increases.

Source: News.com/Webware


 
 

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How to Delete Accounts from Any Website



 
 

Sent to you by john taube via Google Reader:

 
 

via iLibrarian by Ellyssa on 3/10/09

This helpful article by Eric Griffith at PC Magazine will let you know How to Delete Accounts from Any Website. The author provides step-by-step instructions, phone numbers, fax numbers, links, consequences and tips for how to opt-out of the following websites:

  • Classmates.com
  • Facebook
  • Friendster
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace
  • MyLife.com (formerly Reunion.com)
  • Amazon.com
  • Audible.com
  • Blockbuster Online
  • eBay
  • iTunes
  • Netflix
  • PayPal
  • Blogger
  • Twitter
  • Flickr
  • Photobucket
  • YouTube
  • AOL/AIM
  • Apple's MobileMe
  • Google
  • Windows Live ID
  • Yahoo

 
 

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NYTimes: Three Cushions, a Million Guests

From The New York Times:

FRUGAL TRAVELER: Three Cushions, a Million Guests
By MATT GROSS

CouchSurfing, a social-networking Web site, lets travelers link up
with like-minded people who have a couch or spare bedroom to offer —
absolutely free....

http://frugaltraveler.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/08/3-cushions-a-million-guests/index.html

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Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Recession Fuels ’ Demand for Romance Novels - NYTimes.com

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John Taube
6:00am Apr 8th
Recession Fuels ' Demand for Romance Novels - NYTimes.com
To jetaube.blahblahblah@blogger.com
 


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Reading Into the Future | Print Article | Newsweek.com

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John Taube
5:59am Apr 8th
Reading Into the Future | Print Article | Newsweek.com
To jetaube.blahblahblah@blogger.com
 


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Tuesday, April 7, 2009

LaVale Teen Area Debuts

Thanks to a group of industrious teens, our LaVale branch has a brand new Teen area. Check it out.