| |
|
|
|
Acme Book News
|
(# Link to this item)
OCLC announces ALA Midwinter pre-conference
Knowledge Access Management Tools and Concepts for Next-Generation Catalogers
Descriptions
This 1 day pre-conference seminar provides a practical understanding of cataloging Internet resources through examining key USMARC fields and AACR2 rules. An introduction to metadata, focusing on the Dublin Core and other alternative description methods, including TEI, EAD and GILS. A guided lab provides an opportunity to interact with leading-edge concepts and systems such as automated classification and metadata record creation. Facilitated small-group discussions enable participants to assess the impact of their learning and begin the process of transforming knowledge into action.
Intended audience
Head of cataloging, chief cataloger, cataloging team leaders, digital cataloging principals, special format catalogers, electronic resource librarians, digital librarians, metadata librarians, Internet resource librarians
Who owns the internet?
The Internet Under Siege by Lawrence Lessig
Who owns the Internet? Until recently, nobody. That's because, although the Internet was "Made in the U.S.A.," its unique design transformed it into a resource for innovation that anyone in the world could use. Today, however, courts and corporations are attempting to wall off portions of cyberspace. In so doing, they are destroying the Internet's potential to foster democracy and economic growth worldwide. [read more]
|
|
(# Link to this item)
Books return home
Kafka's work goes back to Prague
The personal library of author Franz Kafka is to be returned to his native Prague.
The manuscripts, including some of the first editions of his work, had been owned by car giant Porsche.
The German auto manufacturer said it had acquired his library from an antiquarian book dealer in Stuttgart with a view to handing it over to the Franz Kafka Society in the Czech Republic.[read more]
Nine Lives?
How a Librarian Can Live Nine Lives in a Knowledge-Based Economy by Bunella Longo
"Like cats moving through their fabled nine lives, I think that teachers and librarians should redefine their own roles beyond the confines of their respective traditions." [read more]
What happens when...?
What happens when a library removes a formerly available print journal and replaces it with an electronically accessed version? From October 2001 through September 2002, University of California libraries are conducting a grant funded study to find out. Collection Management Initiative
The Future
Technology 101: What Do We Need To Know About the Future We're Creating? by Howard Rheingold
Are we awake to the world we're building, or are we, as an old Sufi saying goes, merely asleep in life's waiting room?
The petroleum economy, nuclear power, biotechnology, artificial intelligence, lasers, organ translants, telephone and television and personal computer networks -- today's technologies have put staggering amounts of power into the hands of billions of people. More power is on its way in the next several decades, as present scientific knowledge drives future technological capability. Do we know what to do with the powers over matter, mind, and life that tomorrow's technologies will grant us?
If we don't already know the answers to these questions, what do we need to know to design, deploy, control, and live humanely with the tools we are creating? [read more]
|
|
(# Link to this item)
You can never have too many books
(Some Of) The Best Books of 2001: Suggestions for getting and giving by Benjamin Schwarz
History of the Book
Fact, Fiction & the New World: The Role of Books in the Making of America
Books played a major role in the European discovery and settlement of the New World. Explorers looked for people, places, and things that were described in books, and they defined their encounters by referring to names and ideas from popular stories and ancient legends.
An Animated History of Books
Craig Charles narrates our animated history of books. He takes us back in time to where it all started with cave paintings and then leads us through the years ending with a glimpse of what the future might hold.
|
|
|
|
|
|