June 2000

Publishing House donated to University

Cabot writes
\”Canadian publishing company McClelland and
Stewart was donated by owner Avie Bennett to the
University of Toronto. Bennett is donating 75% of the
company\’s shares to the university. The remaining 25%
was sold to Random House.
Infoculture.cbc.ca
\”

\”
U of T President Robert Prichard says the publisher will
be completely independent and will have no
relationship with the University of Toronto Press. Any
income received from ownership of the shares will be
used to fund an endowment in support of Canadian
writing and culture.\”

Book Reviews From Bookdragon

Fiction Reviews from The Bookdragon Review

The Bookdragon Review
delivers genre fiction reviews, news and forthcoming title information to
subscribers on a monthly basis. This month\’s reviews include:

Mercedes Lackey\’s Brightly Burning \”is tragic, depressing and yet
hauntingly beautiful as Lackey produces one of her strongest titles in
recent years\”;

More….

Fiction Reviews from The Bookdragon Review

The Bookdragon Review
delivers genre fiction reviews, news and forthcoming title information to
subscribers on a monthly basis. This month\’s reviews include:

Mercedes Lackey\’s Brightly Burning \”is tragic, depressing and yet
hauntingly beautiful as Lackey produces one of her strongest titles in
recent years\”;

More….C. J. Cherryh\’s Fortress of Dragons is \”[not] recommended for anyone
who has not read the first three books,\” yet is \”quite addictive\”;

Randy Alcorn\’s Lord Foulgrin\’s Letters is where \”the basic message
behind this book is beaten into the dust\”;

Sylvia Bambola\’s Refiner\’s Fire based \”on first-hand accounts of
atrocities committed under Nicolae Ceausescu\” that \”powerfully portrays the
unbearable cruelty of humans and the helplessness of the Christians\”;

Thomas Harlan\’s The Shadow of Ararat is set in the Roman Empire
which Harlan writes of \”captivatingly to draw the reader in and introduce a
wonderful cast of characters\”;

Diana Wynne Jones\’s Deep Secret \”takes a slightly more serious tone
than Jones\’s Rough Guide to Fantasyland, or Dark Lord of
Derkholm
\”;

Stephen Bly\’s Fool\’s Gold (Goldfield Skinners Bk. 1) \”provides a
rip-roaring Western in the tradition of Louis L\’Amour\”;

Linda Medley\’s Castle Waiting: The Lucky Road
is a graphic novel
\”is full of subtle wit and humor and is a refreshing change from
the usual superhero comics suffusing the market today\”;

Lyn Cote\’s Echoes of Mercy (Blessed Assurance Bk. 3) is a
\”sensational romantic thriller\” set during the Roaring Twenties; and

T.K. Sheils\’s Knight\’s Tiger, an e-book, containing \”[r]omance,
fantasy, horror, adventure, crime, [and] dark family secrets.\”

For the full reviews, visit http://www.bookdragonreview.com.
Subscriptions are always free, and this month, TBR is holding free
autographed book drawings.

What does it take to be a Webmaster?

A while back we ran a poll “Librarians as Webmasters” to see what LISNews readers thought of the move of librarians out of the library, and into the web world. More and more employers are realizing that it takes more than basic programming and graphics skills to make a complete web site. Employees (Webmasters) also need to be able to organize the ever increasing amounts of information on the web. Librarians are uniquely suited for such a job. Afterall, who can organize better than a librarian. So what does it take?

A while back we ran a poll “Librarians as Webmasters” to see what LISNews readers thought of the move of librarians out of the library, and into the web world. More and more employers are realizing that it takes more than basic programming and graphics skills to make a complete web site. Employees (Webmasters) also need to be able to organize the ever increasing amounts of information on the web. Librarians are uniquely suited for such a job. Afterall, who can organize better than a librarian. So what does it take?

Being a webmaster takes a wide range of technical and people skills. You need the obvious techie skills, HTML, programming, and computer skills, but you also need to be able to work with people, and not the way a typical librarian works with people. I know that sounds like a horrible cliche, but it is true. As webmaster you will be pulled in a million directions by a thousand people. Marketing wants one thing, technology needs one thing, and upper management needs another. Being able to deal with the entire organization requires some serious patience and social skills. In many ways you could be the central point of the organization. So what is a webmaster?


A very simple and generic definition for a webmaster is a person who is responsible for developing and maintaining a web site. Being a webmaster takes many skills. Some of the technical skills a webmaster should have are:

  • knowledge of html
  • a good knowledge of aesthetic design
  • graphic skills
  • ability to solve problems
  • programming experience.


While in the past programming experience was considered helpful but not necessary, this is no longer so. Web sites are becoming more depedant on back end coding every day.


Some languages which are good to serve as a foundation for a webmaster position are Java, Javascript, Visual Basic, PHP and Perl.

In our opinion, one personality skill that would be beneficial for a webmaster position is a person who likes dealing with data and structures. Especially important would be someone who is a “tinkerer”. Much of programming and web design is fixing problems, and tinkering with work someone else has already done. Other traits that would be helpful are the desire to learn new technologies, ability to be flexible, open-minded, and be a creative thinker.

A webmaster\’s duties and responsibilites can vary to reflect the specific needs of a company. For example, a webmaster\’s role for an e-commerce company can be very different from that of a library\’s web site. Some positions may require strong graphics skills (Photshop and Illustrator) and others may require strong programming skills. The position of webmaster could change rapidly in the future with the proliferation of new technologies.


The responsibilities of webmasters can include such things as:



  • Keeping up to date with new technologies and web development
  • Coding HTML
  • Designing web graphics
  • Creating forms using CGI
  • Writing technical reports
  • Designing web pages for internal/external departments within a company
  • Training others in a company to construct web pages

Many webmasters are self-taught and some seem to fall into the position by accident. A librarian can start on the path to becoming a webmaster by volunteering to work on the home page for their library or learn about new web technologies and use these skills to create different types of web pages. A good way for librarians to market their webmaster skills is to build a portfolio of work they have done. Employers always want to see the work you have done. You can hide your name in the code if you are not allowed to put it on the site , or, include your name on the bottom of every page you create and market your web sites.


There is an excellent collection of Links for Webmasters at http://www.metronet.lib.mn.us/libpage/ and this site covers everything from general guides, html and graphics to how to administer your web site to how to make it interactive.


We believe more and more librarians will become webmasters in the future as new technologies emerge and old ones fade away. Librarians must not be reluctant to change and never lose sight of the fact that we are in a profession that is based on the concept of learning information and new technology.


If you are considering being a webmaster, stayin current is easy by reading up on the web. Read up on XML, XHTML, and other upcoming languages. Get yourself a copy of Photoshop, and learn it well. Most of all, just sit down and start making web pages!


Susan McClellan wrote this story, with a little help from Blake.

Small Manitoba town prints secret Potter book

The CBC has a nifty little Story on the location of the printer that is turnging out the new Harry Books.

\”The project, being bound and boxed south of Winnipeg, has been as closely guarded as a sorcerer\’s volume of incantations.

The CBC has a nifty little Story on the location of the printer that is turnging out the new Harry Books.

\”The project, being bound and boxed south of Winnipeg, has been as closely guarded as a sorcerer\’s volume of incantations. Friesen\’s Corp. in Altona, Man. was chosen to print 300,000 copies of the latest Potter book for all of Canada, mainly because of its central location. Shipments can be easily sent across the country.

But the printer also has a history of handling secret projects, including Princess Diana\’s biography, and Salman Rushdie\’s The Satanic Verses.


Although outsiders are not allowed into Friesen\’s, it\’s hard to keep a famous hardcover hushed up in a small town.

Security in Libraries

Security guards in libraries. The News Gazette has an article about a library dealing with the issue. My take on it, keep the customers safe, hire the guard.

\”Staff members have been lobbying for heightened security for more than a year. Sparking the recent call for more security was a March 30 incident in which a patron lost control, threatened librarians, threw a book and eventually had to be subdued by police in the parking lot.\”

Security guards in libraries. The News Gazette has an article about a library dealing with the issue. My take on it, keep the customers safe, hire the guard.

\”Staff members have been lobbying for heightened security for more than a year. Sparking the recent call for more security was a March 30 incident in which a patron lost control, threatened librarians, threw a book and eventually had to be subdued by police in the parking lot.\”


\”Staff members have been lobbying for heightened security for more than a year. Sparking the recent call for more security was a March 30 incident in which a patron lost control, threatened librarians, threw a book and eventually had to be subdued by police in the parking lot.\”


\”Subsequent inquiries showed that from Jan. 1, 1997, through April 11 this year, the library staff had reported 349 incidents in the library ranging from rowdy teen-agers to intoxicated patrons, and intimidating sexual behavior including exposure, to public urination.\”


\”Among library board members, only Michael LaDue, also a Champaign council member, expressed reservations about security. He said he wasn\’t sure the council would be agreeable, either.\”


\”Library board Chair Rusty Freeland said it\’s not clear whether the city council, which will be asked to help pay the cost, clearly understands the extent of the problem.\”

Library gets tough on Patrons

Jacksonville.com has this article about a library that has doubled its overdue fines from a nickel to a dime. Yeah, that will make them bring back the materials on time.


\”Clay County libraries are cracking down on delinquent book-returners. From a nickel to a dime per day late, the overdue book fine doubled on June 1.\”

Jacksonville.com has this article about a library that has doubled its overdue fines from a nickel to a dime. Yeah, that will make them bring back the materials on time.


\”Clay County libraries are cracking down on delinquent book-returners. From a nickel to a dime per day late, the overdue book fine doubled on June 1.\”



\”The increase was approved by the County Commission two months ago, and libraries were sent notices to post informing all patrons of the change.\”

\”Arnold Weeks, director of Clay County libraries, said the libraries circulate about 500,000 books a year with 85 to 90 percent of patrons returning the books on time, a standard check-out period of about three weeks. Last year, about $30,000 was collected in overdue fines and lost materials.\”

\”The fine increase comes primarily an increase in costs to replace library books and other items, said Pat Coffman, assistant director of the Orange Park branch library. She said the five cents a day overdue fine had been in place since about the early 1980s.\”

Will e-books fall into music’s piracy trap?

ZDNet has a very interesting Story on the coming E-Book revolution. They are worried about piracy as more books become digitized. Of course some folks already have a solution. DOCSTER should be useful in that it has copywrite concerns built in! Imagine all the researchers you know, with a new bibliographic management tool that combined file storage with a napster-like communications protocol — docster. Be sure to check out OSS4LIB.org for more on this. Publishing executives are worried about the future.

\”We don\’t want to be in a reactive mode the way the recording industry is,\” says Peter Jovanovich, former chairman of the Association of American Publishers and chief executive of Pearson PLC\’s Pearson Education unit.\”

More on Docster…

ZDNet has a very interesting Story on the coming E-Book revolution. They are worried about piracy as more books become digitized. Of course some folks already have a solution. DOCSTER should be useful in that it has copywrite concerns built in! Imagine all the researchers you know, with a new bibliographic management tool that combined file storage with a napster-like communications protocol — docster. Be sure to check out OSS4LIB.org for more on this. Publishing executives are worried about the future.

\”We don\’t want to be in a reactive mode the way the recording industry is,\” says Peter Jovanovich, former chairman of the Association of American Publishers and chief executive of Pearson PLC\’s Pearson Education unit.\”

More on Docster…Instead of just citations, docster also stores the files themselves and retains a connection between the citation metadata and each corresponding file. Somewhere in the ether is a docster server to which those researchers connect. They\’re reading one of their articles, and they find a new reference they want to pull up. What to do? Just query docster for it. Docster will figure out who else among those connected has a copy of that article, and if it\’s found, requests and saves a copy for our friendly researcher.


Of course, we cannot do this. Libraries depend too much on copyright to attack the system so directly. But what if we focused instead on altering the napster model enough to make it explicitly copyright-compliant? After all, many cases of one researcher giving another a copy of an article are a fair use of that article. Fair use provides us with this possibility and it\’s not a giant leap to argue that perhaps coordinated copying through such a centralized server could constitute fair use, especially if docster didn\’t compete with commercial interests.


http://www.oss4lib.org/readings/docster.php

COPPA Shot Down

Pretty much every new site on the web is carrying a story on COPPA being unanimously ruled unconstitutional. A three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled The Child Online Protection Act violated the First Amendment right to free speech. Appeals court Judge Leonard Garth said \”Sometimes we must make decisions that we do not like, we make them because they are right, right in the sense that the law and the Constitution, as we see them, compel the result.\”

Friday Updates

Here are the Friday updates for this week. Topics include updating libraries, magic highlighters, database copying, Books for the visually impaired, computers (not books) focus of library update, Blondie honored by LOC. Enjoy!

Here are the Friday updates for this week. Topics include updating libraries, magic highlighters, database copying, Books for the visually impaired, computers (not books) focus of library update, Blondie honored by LOC. Enjoy!From the
Bergen Record


Bringing Libraries up to date

\”At a time when everyone is stressing the need for a highly skilled
, technologically trained workforce, one would think the state
Legislature would jump at the opportunity to expand on-line access
to information for libraries and their members. Well, think again\”


From the
Ottowa Citizen


Pen-sized Scanner Takes Handy Notes

\”While it may well be a godsend for students who are constantly
taking notes in a library, and it will undoubtedly make student life
easier, it could also stop books from mysteriously disappearing from
libraries, and put an end to torn pages and ugly highlighting.\”


From the
Chicago Tribune


Battle Lines Form Over Copying Of Databases

\”…odd alliances of lobbyists have formed over the question of
whether databases–collections of facts such as telephone directories,
weather reports, stock tables and real estate listings–can be copied,
repackaged and distributed by anyone with an Internet connection.\”



From the Heraldnet.com

Hands-on reading…Sno-Isle program helps get books to vision-impaired kids

\”This summer, a partnership between the Sno-Isle Regional Library
System and the Washington Talking Book and Braille Library in Seattle
will allow Bobby and other blind or vision-impaired children to take
part in Sno-Isle\’s summer reading program.\”


From JS Online

Books to take back seat in revised plan for MU library

In first draft of new plans, officials steer toward cyber-center in new facility


\”Marquette University officials are in the midst of reworking plans
for a new library after discovering what could have been a huge flaw
in trying to create an information center for a major college:
too many books; too few computers.


From CNN.com

Long-lived \’Blondie\’ comic strip honored at Library of Congress

\”Not far from the display case of the revered 500-year-old Gutenberg
Bible, the Library of Congress is opening a show Thursday devoted to
one of the oldest surviving American comic strips — Chic Young\’s
\”Blondie.\”


More Workers Stealing From Libraries

Michigan Live has this article on another staff theft at a library. This time, it was via an unauthorized bonus. Yeah, when I want to steal money, libraries definitly come to mind first.

\”When Don Dely gave himself an unauthorized bonus of $4,876 last August, it took Ann Arbor District Library administrators three months to discover the misuse of public funds.\”

Michigan Live has this article on another staff theft at a library. This time, it was via an unauthorized bonus. Yeah, when I want to steal money, libraries definitly come to mind first.

\”When Don Dely gave himself an unauthorized bonus of $4,876 last August, it took Ann Arbor District Library administrators three months to discover the misuse of public funds.\”



\”But even then, they didn\’t report it to police and Dely wasn\’t fired from his job as finance director.\”

\”It was November before his supervisor, library Director Mary Anne Hodel, discovered that Dely had his assistant write the bonus check. Earlier in the year, Hodel told Dely he would not receive an annual raise because of accounting problems.\”

\”When Hodel learned about the unauthorized bonus check, she told board President Richard Dougherty, and Dougherty threatened to go to police unless Dely repaid the money immediately. Dely wrote a personal check and the matter was dropped.\”

\”But that wasn\’t the first time – or the last – that Dely misused library funds, according to a report released by police Wednesday under a Freedom of Information Act request filed by The Ann Arbor News.\”

\”The report contains extensive new details of the three years of alleged embezzlement that led to Dely\’s arrest and arraignment last week.\”

\”Ann Arbor police and library officials say that Dely took about $123,000 from the library from 1996 until he left in December for another job, just ahead of auditors who were closing in on him. The report documents how he wrote checks on library bank accounts, charged personal items on a library debit card, and wrote library checks worth more than $60,000 to a bogus consulting company that he created.\”