Monday, February 27, 2006

Document delivery for all from Public Libraries

The Australian public can now look up library books online and borrow the book via mail or get pages emailed or photocopies posted to them. The email option would cost $13 for each 50 pages sent and is subject to copyright. It is part of a scheme to make libraries more accessible and the entire collection of 800 libraries is available, including pictures and maps. The search engine is from www.librariesaustralia.nla.gov.au via a link on the right hand side of the page.

Our Library Blog

A little inspiration for an overcast Monday

Library
Here is where people,
One frequently finds,
Lower their voices
And raise their minds.
? Light Armour. McGraw-Hill, 1954.
Richard Armour

Clare O'Dwyer
"In a world where information swells out of control drowning people in a sea of data, comes a fellowship willing to hold back this information tsunami . . . They are the librarians."

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

The old refrain - reference

You can visit the Thomson-Gale site for reviews of reference resources, both digital and old fashioned print.
http://reviews.gale.com/
There are some 'free resources' also available on this site.

Mobile Libraries

We may think that 'digital libraries' are the way of the future - flexibility and 'just in time' reference, but once upon a time (and still today) mobile libraries occupied the space between the fixed branch library and 'flexible delivery' of library services. The following sites are on the ways in which bookmobiles have been used and other 'flexible' modes of providing a library service. The first has some quite striking images.
http://www.ifla.org/VII/s38/news/mobpos.htm
I like the Donkey, but if you prefer you can try the Camel Mobile Services in Kenya. An amazing service concept.
http://www.knls.or.ke/camel.htm
They are desperate for more money.

Monday, February 13, 2006

VALA - inspiration and mundane

My VALA experience included 3 sessions on Friday. Two inspirational and one not so.
First up session by one of my favourite RMT lecturers now at Monash, Graeme Johanson on ICT policy, and Australian civil society. There has been a lot of high level international discussion at WSIS (World Summits on the Information Society) and then research by Graeme and others on how we can take lofty principles of creating an informed"civil society" and put them into practice in Australia.
His paper challenged librarians to take seriously their responsibility for supporting information equity. Not only by providing information access via publically funded libraries but also contributing to a "civil society" through creating information that is usable and training/encouraging people to be functionally information literate. Having a vision of how international policy can filter down to action at the community level was fascinating.
Mr Barry Nunn of the State Library NSW talked about "connectivity, content and confidence" . He discussed how the SLNSW provided the necessary Internet connections for the councils and public libraries, provided training both for users and train the trainer coaching for staff. A great project just presented in far too much detail and presented in a manner that made you contemplate your shopping list or how many days until your birthday.
Final paper from Andrew Wells of Uni of NSW about the newish ARC funded project to create the Dictionary of Australian Artists Online (DAAO). He is also a very engaging speaker who gave some enjoyable insight into the huge undertaking and detailed journey that this project will take from the lobbying of academic staff and scoping of the project through to its ongoing growth.
It started in 2005 and though the project is funded for 3 years, as with other similar undertakings, it is an ongoing commitment for UNSW and their other partners. They are at the stage of data mining 6000 biographies and we were given a little peek into how this works.

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Libraries and public knowledge

It looks like 2005 was the year for soul searching and research on what people think or know about libraries. A place for print media. This report can be downloaded for free. What people don't know is most important.
http://www.oclc.org/reports/2005perceptions.htm

Who wants to be a librarian?

Do libraries matter? Who cares? What will libraries be like in the near future? This 'white paper' by a library technologist looks at what he calls 'Library 2.0'
http://www.talis.com/downloads/white_papers/DoLibrariesMatter.pdf
Amazingly, this library is supposed to work according to the expectations of library users. What a novel idea. I wonder where I have heard it before? You want it and we've got it.

If we could just get 'Library 1.0' to work properly...