August 22 – August 26, 2016
US College Libraries Reinvented for Digital Age
via Voice of America News
July 6 – July 26, 2016
Libraries and the Curse of Knowledge
via Lorcan Dempsey’s Weblog
What Is the Decentralized Web? 24 Experts Break it Down
via iSchool@Syracuse
via The Atlantic
June 20 – July 6, 2016
Now You Can Visit the Oldest Library in the World
via MetaFilter
14 projects win 2016 Knight News Challenge on Libraries
via Knight Foundation
via The Kernal
June 13 – June 20, 2016
Will the Supreme Court Really Take on Net Neutrality?
via Slate
The Web’s Creator Looks to Reinvent it
via New York Times
via New Media Consortium
June 1 – June 13, 2016
Current Game Preservation is Not Enough
via How They Got Game
OpenArchive
via Jason Griffey
via Twitter
May 25 – June 1, 2016
PodRef
Creating the definite metadata repository for podcasts and their contributors, via Twitter
David Mitchell buries latest manuscript for a hundred years
An update on the Future Library Project, previously featured in this Unbound post, via The Guardian
Featuring an interview with Unbound contributor Laura Saunders, via the Boston Globe
May 10 – May 25, 2016
Everywhere, Every When
via Bethany Nowviskie
There Will Be No Digital Dark Age
via the Society of American Archivists
Digitizing Books, Obscuring Women’s Work: Google Books, Librarians, and Ideologies of Access
via Ada
May 2 – May 10, 2016
Algorithmic Bias in Library Discovery Systems
Net Art Archive Turbulence.org Going Offline, Raising Preservation Concerns
via ArtFCity
Beyond the Stacks: Jason Griffey on Inventing Open Hardware
A new episode of an interview podcast by the creators of Unbound, via Beyond the Stacks
April 25 – May 2, 2016
LA Archives Have Their Own TV Show
via LibraryJournal
The Once and Future Library
via MIT News
Implications of Archival Labor
via Medium
April 11 – April 25, 2016
Library of Congress Nominee Gets Senate Hearing
via New York Times
The Rise of Pirate Libraries
via r/libraries
American Libraries launches Dewey Decibel podcast
A new LIS podcast. Episode 1 features Michèle Cloonan of SLIS! via ALA News
April 4 – April 11, 2016
Forget Apple vs. the FBI: WhatsApp Just Switched on Encryption for a Billion People
via WIRED
Data-Driven Design | The User Experience
On UX design at a Public Library, via LibraryJournal
ALA applauds Lifeline program modernization to include broadband
via ALA News
March 28 – April 4, 2016
How libraries can save the Internet of Things from the Web’s centralized fate
via BoingBoing
Here we go again: latest GSU ruling an odd victory for libraries
via @dancohen on Twitter
Beyond the Stacks: Eben English on Developing Digital Repositories
A new episode of an interview podcast by the creators of Unbound, via Beyond the Stacks
March 17 – March 28, 2016
Courtesy notice: the Microkorg is due in one week
Innovative collections at Ann Arbor District Library and elsewhere, via MetaFilter
Oculus Rift Launch Makes A Splash. Will It Lead A Wave Of VR Tech?
via NPR
How Libraries Are Becoming Modern Makerspaces
via The Atlantic
February 29 – March 17, 2016
LibraryJournal’s 2016 Movers & Shakers
via LibraryJournal
One year later, net neutrality fight enters new phase
via The Hill
Beyond the Stacks: Henry Lowood on Software History & Preservation
A new episode of a podcast by the creators of Unbound, via Beyond the Stacks
February 22 – February 29, 2016
Obama Nominates Carla Hayden To Lead Library Of Congress
via NPR
The Impact of Bitcoin on Fried Chicken Recipe Archives
A helpful explanation of how Bitcoin works, using a goofy metaphor, via Go To Hellman
An Introduction to SQL for Librarians
via r/libraries
February 9 – February 22, 2016
Artists Covertly Scan Bust of Nefertiti and Release the Data for Free Online
via MetaFilter
Fair Use in a Day in the Life of a College Student
An infographic celebrating Fair Use Week, via LibraryJournal InfoDocket
Scholarship Related to Transgender Issues to Benefit from First Digital Archive
via College of the Holy Cross
February 1 – February 9, 2016
The Malware Museum
A new collection of emulated malware programs, usually viruses, that were distributed in the 1980s and 1990s on home computers, via the Internet Archive
What happens when libraries are asked to help the homeless find shelter
via Washington Post
Beyond the Stacks: Alex Wade on Tech Sector Librarianship
A new episode of a podcast by the creators of Unbound, via Beyond the Stacks
January 25 – February 1, 2016
Political TV Ad Archive Launches Today
Internet Archive’s new online archive of political advertisements, via MetaFilter
Google Will Soon Shame All Websites That Are Unencrypted
via Motherboard
Tools for Working with Data
A list of tools for working with data, many of them free or open source, via MetaFilter and Data Driven Journalism
January 12 – January 25, 2016
Let’s Light Up the Global Commons
via Creative Commons
What Facebook’s On This Day shows about the fragility of our online lives
via The Guardian
FilmCare.org
A new decision-making tool and comprehensive learning resource for film preservation, via NYU’s preservation blog.
December 15 – January 12, 2016
David Bowie (1947-2016): Interviews, Images, and More
via LibraryJournal
New York Public Library Makes 180,000 High-Res Images Available Online
via NPR
CES 2016 Is Your Library’s Technology Crystal Ball
via Twitter
December 8 – December 14, 2015
State of the Commons 2015
via Creative Commons
GAMECIP Metadata Base Element Set and Recommendations
GAMECIP’s metadata element set and usage recommendations for describing computer and video games in institution collections and catalogues. via Twitter
Digitizing Motion Picture Film: FADGI Report on Current Practices and Future Directions
via Library of Congress
December 1 – December 8, 2015
Internet Archive Emulation
A rundown of how the Internet Archive’s browser-based software emulation works, via the Internet Archive
Building the Tamagotchi Singularity
An explanation of how the author developed hardware emulators and AI to create an idyllic hive for Tamagotchis, via MetaFilter
Information is Beautiful Awards winners 2015
A selection of very impressive data visualization projects, via Information is Beautiful
November 23 – December 1, 2015
Erin O’Meara on Archiving Electronic Records
via Beyond the Stacks: Innovative Careers in Library and Information Science (Podcast)
At Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Art on the Walls, and on the Plates
via New York Times
What Will Libraries Be Like in 2100?
via Slate Future Tense
November 16 – November 23, 2015
VR3D launches Vietnam’s first virtual museum with 3D scans of ancient relics
via 3Ders
The missing decades: the 20th century black hole in Europeana
via Europeana
WGBH News To Open Satellite Studio At Boston Public Library
via WGBH
November 2 – November 16, 2015
ALA announces Center for the Future of Libraries advisory group
via ALAnews
As U.S. Libraries Are Outsourced, Readers See Public Trust Erode
via Bloomberg Business
This Snowden-Approved Encrypted-Communication App Is Coming to Android
via Slate Future Tense
October 27 – November 2, 2015
Miguel Figueroa & the Future of Libraries
A new podcast interview with the Director of ALA’s Center for the Future of Libraries, via Beyond the Stacks
Zoom in to 9.3 Million Internet Archive Books and Images– through IIIF
via The Internet Archive
In Google case, court finds creating an index is fair use
via ALA District Dispatch
October 19 – October 27, 2015
Placements & Salaries 2015: Explore All the Data
A new, comprehensive survey, via LibraryJournal
IIT Humanities Professor Discusses What Happens To Our Data Once We Die
via ChicagoInno
With no fixed address, two men start Toronto’s only underpass library
via CBCNews
October 13 – October 19, 2015
Opening Up Open Access
via Planned Obsolescence
Senate Passes 10 Year Term for Librarian of Congress
via LibraryJournal
Questions to Ask When You Learn of Digitization Projects
via Wynken de Worde
October 5 – October 13, 2015
‘Makers-In-Residence’ Let Their Imaginations Roam Free At The DC Public Library
via DCist
Boston Public School Desegregation project commences
via SNELL Snippets
‘Libraries are forever’: The future of libraries in the digital age
via Beta Boston
September 28 – October 5, 2015
Beyond the Stacks: Innovative Careers in Library and Information Science
A new podcast launches, hosted by Unbound writer Derek Murphy! via Simmons School of Library and Information Science
The OCLC officially sunsets its library card catalog program
via TeleRead
Why Don’t Libraries Have Dungeons & Dragons Gamebooks?
via Gizmodo
September 21 – September 28, 2015
Happy Birthday To Everybody: Victory For The Public Domain (With An Asterisk)
via the Electronic Frontier Foundation
Privacy is UX
via A List Apart
U.S. Senate Confirms Dr. Kathryn K. Matthew as Director of the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS)
via LibraryJournal
September 14 – September 21, 2015
A question about the future of the World Wide Web
via Charles Stross
The rise and fall of text on the Web: a quantitative study of Web archives
via Information Research
De Blasio to Announce 10-Year Deadline to Offer Computer Science to All Students
via The New York Times
September 8 – September 14, 2015
First Library to Support Anonymous Internet Browsing Effort Stops After DHS Email
via ProPublica
The International Fight Over Marcel Duchamp’s Chess Set
On a recent copyright controvery in 3D printing, via The Atlantic
#NextLOC
On this episode of the Circulating Ideas podcast, Jessamyn West talks about the next Librarian of Congress. via Circulating Ideas
September 1 – September 8, 2015
Libraries’ tech pipeline problem
via MetaFilter
Introducing the Archive Corps
via The Atlantic
Manuscript Road Trip: The Promise of Digital Fragmentology
via Manuscript Road Trip
August 24 – September 1, 2015
Google is not the answer: How the digital age imperils history
via Salon
Hundreds of “black hat” English Wikipedia accounts blocked following investigation
via Wikimedia Blog
“The Dregs of the Library”: Trashing the Occupy Wall Street Library
via MetaFilter
August 17 – August 24, 2015
Libraries of the future: Super connectivity and a national stature
via KnightBlog
The Network is Hostile
via A Few Thoughts on Cryptographic Engineering
Developing Trends: Income Inequality
via Center for the Future of Libraries
August 10 – August 17, 2015
Library Privacy and the Freedom Not To Read
via Go To Hellman
Found in Translation | Language Learning
Discusses new kinds of language learning programs in public libraries. via LibraryJournal
How to Destroy Special Collections with Social Media in 3 Easy Steps: A Guide for Researchers and Librarians
A very sarcastic guide to how social media can help or hurt Special Collections. via MetaFilter
July 27 – August 10, 2015
ArchiveReady: Website Archivability Testing Tool
Tests whether a website will be archived correctly by web archives, such as the Internet Archive. via MetaFilter
Crowdsourcing as Interesting Decisions: Update from BL Labs 2015 Competition Winner
Announcing a game jam to come up with a videogame that makes crowdsourcing fun. via the British Library Digital Scholarship Blog
The Library of Congress Wants to Destroy Your Old CDs (for Science)
via The Atlantic
July 15 – July 27, 2015
There’s a library-shaped hole in the Internet
via The Boston Globe
All Those Techies Who Predicted the Demise of the Public Library Were Wrong
via Alternet
The Role of Libraries in Science 2.0: Focus on Economics
via D-Lib Magazine
July 8 – July 14, 2015
The Copyright Office and the Orphan Works Report: Top Three Problems
via Kyle K. Courtney’s blog
Academic Libraries Look Toward the Future | ALA Annual 2015
via LibraryJournal
Beinecke Library digitizing 2,000 ‘largely undiscovered’ videocassettes
via YaleNews
July 1 – July 7, 2015
Librarian of Progress
A set of recommendations for the next Librarian of Congress, via Librarian.net
Does the Copyright Office Belong in a Library?
An evaluation of recent proposals to make the US Copyright Office independent. via LibraryJournal
Reflections on radical librarianship and #radlib15
via Infoism
June 23 – June 30, 2015
ALA Releases National Policy Agenda for Librarians
via LibraryJournal
First Knight News Challenge of 2016 to focus on libraries
via The Knight Foundation
Choosing the Next Librarian of Congress
via Medium
June 11 – June 22, 2015
New Research Report: “Mobile Video Usage, A Global Perspective”
via LibraryJournal
Two House Judiciary Committee Members Release Draft Legislation to “Modernize” U.S. Copyright Office
via InfoDocket
Library as Infrastructure
via Places Journal
June 5 – June 10, 2015
James H. Billington to Retire as Librarian of Congress Effective Jan. 1, 2016
via Library of Congress News Releases
Copyright Office Releases Report on Orphan Works and Mass Digitization; Recommends Burdensome Legislation
via ARL Policy Reports
2015 Gale/LJ Library of the Year: Ferguson Municipal Public Library, MO, Courage in Crisis
via LibraryJournal
May 29 – June 4, 2015
How libraries in Germany are fighting extinction – and winning
via DW
UCL presses ahead with open access
via Times Higher Education
The Utopia Of Records: Why Sound Archiving Is Important
via The Quietus
May 23 – May 28, 2015
Why Libraries Matter More Than Ever in the Age of Google
via Alternet
How copyright law threatens your right to repair your car
Considers the DMCA and the new use of DRM on in-car software, via Vox
California’s Homeless Find a Quiet Place
via National Geographic PROOF
May 16 – May 22, 2015
Into the Okavango
An expedition with an innovative approach to real-time open access data, via Jer Thorp
Making Archival and Special Collections More Accessible [PDF]
A new report from OCLC Research, via InfoDocket
What’s Next for Design Thinking
via Designing Better Libraries
April 25 – May 1, 2015
Libraries Make Room for High-Tech ‘Hackerspaces’
via WBUR
Personal Digital Archiving 2015, Keynote Talk by Howard Besser & Rick Prelinger
via Slideshare
Who’s Reading the Reader?
via Choose Privacy Week 2015
April 18 – April 24, 2015
The MIT Media Lab is launching a new Digital Currency Initiative
via Medium
Wander (1974) — a lost mainframe game is found!
via Retroactive Fiction
Cherokee Language Comes to a Library Near You
via LibraryJournal
April 11 – April 17, 2015
The Real Purpose of Libraries, by Ferguson Library Director Scott Bonner
via Reading Rainbow
The girl game archival project that’s rewriting geek history
via The Verge
Library of Congress Launches Archive of Recorded Poetry and Literature
via MetaFilter
April 4 – April 10, 2015
Not Just Space Photos: Flickr Now Allows All Users To Expand the Public Domain
via The Electronic Frontier Foundation
Reaching out to politicians about LIS issues
via Hack Library School
Getting to 5 Million: HathiTrust’s Collection of Open Books
via HathiTrust
March 27 – April 3, 2015
Bypassing Interlibrary Loan Via Twitter: An Exploration of #icanhazpdf Requests (PDF link)
via ACRL 2015
Association of College and Research Libraries Environmental Scan 2015 (PDF link)
via ACRL
Mobile usability testing – a simple tech solution
via Digitalist
March 20 – March 27, 2015
ALA President responds to House proposal to eliminate IMLS
via the American Library Association
Qatar Digital Library Preserves the Music of a Vanishing Past
via NPR Parallels
Microbiologist plays sleuth to save decaying artifacts
via The Boston Globe
March 9 – March 20, 2015
Movers and Shakers 2015: The People Shaping the Future of Libraries
via LibraryJournal
Where Are They Now? The People’s Library Today
via Librarian Shipwreck
Inside Oslo’s Public Comics Library
via Comic Books Legal Defense Fund
February 23 – March 6, 2015
Robots Open up the World of Art
via CBS News
Google has developed a technology to tell whether ‘facts’ on the Internet are true
via The Washington Post.
Reviving the Library in Greece: The Future is Now for the Future Library Network and the INELI-Balkans Project
via The Huffington Post
February 2-February 20, 2015
Fair Use Fundamentals infographic (.PDF link)
Fair Use Week is next week! via FairUseWeek.org
Video from a dystopian future: how location data can be abused
A video from the ACLU, demonstrating possible government uses for location data, via BoingBoing.
Never Neutral: Libraries, Technology, and Inclusion
A transcript of Chris Bourg’s great OLITA Spotlight talk from the OLA Super Conference, via Feral Librarian
January 26-January 30, 2015
22 ideas win Knight News Challenge: Libraries
“How might we leverage libraries as a platform to build more knowledgeable communities?” Here are 22 proposals. via The Knight Foundation
75 million Americans don’t have internet. Here’s what it’s like.
A video on the digital divide, with a focus on public libraries, via MetaFilter.
U-M helps open more than 25,000 early English books to public
via the University of Michigan Record.
January 12-January 23, 2015
Finally, the Museum of the Future Is Here
via The Atlantic
Terms of Service: understanding our role in the world of Big Data
A very well done non-fiction graphic novella, via Al Jazeera.
Monoculture and the Future of Hardware
via Model View Culture.
January 5-January 12, 2015
Cultural Appropriation: Using Museum Collections For Free Digital Work
A helpful list of digitized museum collections, including the new “Open FIS” by The Smithsonian’s Museums of Asian Art. via demosthenes.info.
The Software Library: MS-DOS Games
The Internet Archive has launched a new collection of emulated historical MS-DOS games, playable in-browser!
New Clues
A new manifesto covering all aspects of the contemporary internet, from two of the authors of the historically important 1999 manifesto Cluetrain. via cluetrain.com.
December 8-December 16, 2014
Creating Creative Communities: 3D Printing in Library Programming
via the SLIS News & Events Blog
When the Art Is Watching You
On museums and big data. via the Wall Street Journal.
Gifts for archivists and librarians: from the practical to the luxurious
Happy Holidays! via hangingtogether.org.
December 1-December 5, 2014
New FADGI Report: Creating and Archiving Born Digital Video
via The Signal: Digital Preservation
ACTION ALERT: Support the Freedom of Information Improvement Act!
It’s not too late to act, Senator Jay Rockefeller currently has a hold on the bill. Link via the Society of American Archivists.
New York City libraries soon will let patrons ‘check out the internet’
via the Washington Post
November 17-November 21, 2014
The Rise of the University Museum
via The Boston Review
5 tips to run a sustainable digital preservation project
via the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals
Cataloging Board Games
via the Library and Information Technology Association
November 10-November 14, 2014
Stanford Libraries Unearths the Earliest US Website
via Phys.org
Obama says FCC should reclassify internet as a utility
via The Verge
America’s libraries to push for passage of USA Freedom Act
via the American Library Association
November 3-November 7, 2014
Digital Lessons From the Museum and Art World
via The New York Times
Last of Pirate Bay Architects is Arrested by Thai Police
via The Wall Street Journal
The Sixth Stage of Grief is Retro-computing: Networks Within Networks
A brilliant article about the author’s experience emulating outdated operating systems and how it helped him grieve, via Medium
October 27-October 31, 2014
Building Libraries Together: New Tools for a New Direction
via The Internet Archive
San Antonio Airport Installs Digital Library Kiosks for Travelers
via San Antonio Business Journal
Share your photos of Halloween with the American Folklife Center and Library of Congress!
via Library of Congress
October 20-October 24, 2014
Results From the 2013 NDSA U.S. Web Archiving Survey
via The Signal: Digital Preservation
Google Trial Lets You Chat With Doctors When You Search for Symptoms
via Engadget
The Next Wave of Tech-Change | Self-Publishing and Libraries
via LibraryJournal
October 13-October 17, 2014
Open Access (or, why I love the internet)
via Hack Library School
Publishers Win Reversal of Court Ruling That Favored ‘E-Reserves’ at George State U.
via The Chronicle of Higher Education
Is E-Reading to Your Toddler Story Time, or Simply Screen Time?
via The New York Times
October 6-October 10, 2014
The Third Great Wave
A report on the digital revolution’s impact on future employment, via The Economist
Librarians, IT Experts Respond to Adobe Spying Accusations
via Library Journal
Ebooks Choices and the Missing Soul of Librarianship
An exploration of the ethical tradeoffs librarians encounter when working with ebook DRM, via Andromeda Yelton
September 29-October 3, 2014
UK legalises music, film and e-book back-ups
via BBC News Technology
When Robots Join the Library
via Library Journal
Knight News Challenge’s list of entries.
Browse a variety of interesting proposals for future-focused projects in LIS. via Knight News Challenge
September 22-September 26, 2014
Unhappy Medium: The Challenges With Archiving Digital Video
via The Washingtonian
Weirder than old: The CP/M File System and Legacy Disk Extracts for New Zealand’s Department of Conservation
A fascinating walkthrough of a data extraction challenge, via The Open Planets Foundation
We’re All Digital Archivists Now: An Interview With Sibyl Schaefer
via The Library of Congress
September 15-September 19, 2014
Bookworm: Movies
A fascinating data visualization tool by Benjamin Schmidt which allows one to search for trends in the dialogue of thousands of movie and TV shows, based on subtitles from Open Subtitles.
Radical Librarianship: how ninja librarians are ensuring patrons’ electronic privacy
via BoingBoing
Analysis of Privacy Leakage on a Library Catalog Webpage
via Go To Hellman
September 8-September 12, 2014
Libraries may digitize books without permission, EU top court rules
via PCWorld
Younger Americans and Public Libraries
via Pew Research Internet Project
Everything You’ve Wanted To Know About Net Neutrality But Were Afraid To Ask
via TechDirt
September 1-September 5, 2014
Floating Library to Open on New York’s Hudson River
via NPR
Help Wanted: Librarians, Sea Captains – Labor Shortages Forecast in Many Professions
via The New York Times
Millions of Historic Images Posted to Flickr
via The Internet Archive
August 25-August 29, 2014
How Streaming Media Could Threaten the Mission of Libraries
via The Chronicle of Higher Education
Librarianship Unplugged
via hls
Don’t Dismiss the Humanities
via The New York Times
August 11-August 22, 2014
As Data Overflows Online, Researchers Grapple with Ethics
via New York Times
Why the Public Library Beats Amazon
via The Wall Street Journal
Custom Library Book Bikes Roll Out Across US
via American Libraries
August 4-August 8, 2014
How Your Local Library Can Help You Resist the Surveillance State
via Free Press
Golden Library Upgrade Meant to Showcase Library of the Future
via Denver Post
Want To See The World? Try A Library In Queens
via NPR News
July 28-August 1, 2014
Library Introduces New Digital Library Community Project
via My San Antonio
Library Expo Focuses on Babies, Toddlers
via Orlando Sentinel
Wikipedia’s Library Project Works to Expand Local History With Material From Scholarly Sources
via WikiLibrary
July 21-July 25, 2014
Harvard Library Will Launch Copyright First Responders Program
via InfoDocket
Courtney Young ’97LS Begins Term as American Library Association President
via Simmons GSLIS InfoLink
Fourth Annual Library 2.014 Worldwide Virtual Conference: The Future of Libraries in the Digital Age will be held October 8 – 9, 2014
via Library 2.0
July 14-July 18, 2014
Queens Library to Offer Universal Pre-K in Local Branches
via New York Daily News
What Does the Next-Generation School Library Look Like?
via KQED MindShift
NY Public Library Pilots Program to Rent Out Free Wifi
via NY1
July 7-July 12, 2014
Seven Surprises about Libraries
via Fact Tank
Researchers Reorder and Reinterpret Ranganathan’s 5 Laws of Library Science For Today’s World
via InfoDocket
US National Archives To Upload All Holdings To Wikimedia Commons
via TechCrunch
June 30-July 4, 2014
U.S. Pediatrics Group to Recommend Reading Aloud to Children From Birth
via New York Times
Wikipedia Library Programs Expands With More Accounts From JSTOR, Credo, & Other Database Providers
via Infodocket
14 Google Glass Innovative Uses In Education
via Huff Post
June 23-27, 2014
Kids become Rovers Navigating on Mars at your Library!
via NASA Wavelength
Library Broadband is Growing in Rural Communities Where Poverty is High and Internet Service is Poor
via District Dispatch: The Official American Library Association Washington Office Blog
American Library Association Annual Conference & Exhibition: Transforming Our Libraries, Ourselves, June 26-July 1, 2014
via American Library Association
June 16-June 20, 2014
Appeals Court Rules Digital Library Doesn’t Violate Copyright Law
via NPR
American Library Association’s Annual Conference & Exhibition: Transforming Our Libraries, Ourselves, June 26-July 1, 2014
via American Library Association
National Archives Australia Reports 95% Digital by 2015
via Image and Data Manager
June 9-June 13, 2014
A New National Public Library Service For Those with Print Disabilities Officially Launches
via InfoDocket
Libraries Forge New Roles in Digital Content Ecosystem
via Digital Book World
How the “Dark Matter” of the Internet is the Future of Museums
via Michael Peter Edson’s Blog
June 2- June 6, 2014
Library of Future Ready to Open in Colorado Springs
via InfoDocket
Popular Items Used to Lure Library Patrons
via The Columbus Dispatch
Best Guesses: A Q&A with Center for the Future of Libraries’ Miguel Figueroa
via Library Journal
May 26 – May 30, 2014
Why Libraries Matter
via The Atlantic
Cranky Lines for Library Story Time
via the Wall Street Journal
This Library is Anything but Quiet
via The Wisconsin State Journal
May 19 – May 23, 2014
Chicago Public Library Cardholders Can Now Borrow a Robot
via InfoDocket
The History and Evolution of #Library Services to Teens in the United States
via InfoDocket
Libraries matter: 10 Fantastic Library Infographics
via EBook Friendly
May 12 – May 16, 2014
Why the Smart Reading Device of the Future May Be…Paper
via Wired
Palm County to Let Kids Read Their Way Out of Book Fines
via Sun Sentinel News
UK’s National Archives Saving Tweets & YouTube Videos as Historic Media
via Engadget
May 5, 2014 – May 9, 2014
Libraries From Now On: Imagining the Future, May 2- 3, 2014 at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.
via American Libraries Association’s Invitational Summit
Online Education: New York Public Library Announces Partnership with Coursera
via InfoDocket
How School Libraries Are Staying Relevant
via Livability
April 28 – May 1, 2014
What Will Become of the Library? How Will It Evolve As the World Goes Digital?
via Slate
Librarians Seek High-Speed Broadband
via New York Times
What are Researchers Looking for in Corporate and Academic Library Services?
via InfoDocket
April 6 – April 12, 2014
There’s No Shushing at This Library — and You’ll Want to Bring a Trowel {takepart}
“The Northern Onondaga Public Library in Cicero, N.Y., was in an envious predicament: It owned some land and didn’t know what to do with it. While another library might have built a new wing on the half-acre parcel, or sold it to raise money for more programming, the Cicero branch put it to the community to decide. What did the people ask for? A farm.”
March 30 – April 5, 2014
Partnering for Possibilities: NHS Media Center, Gwinnett County Public Library, 3D Printing, and More {The Unquiet Librarian}
The NHS Media Center & Gwinnett County Public Library recently teamed up for Teen Tech Week 2014 to host a 3-D printing workshop where students got a chance to see the 3D Makerbot Replicator 2 printer in action! The looks on their faces is priceless. Great work, friends!
New Archive Traces Oregon’s Brewing History from Farm to Keg {Library Journal}
Just when I thought archives couldn’t possibly be any cooler, we start archiving hops. Cheers to you, Oregon State University! Pints for history!
Unbinding the Atlas: Working with Digital Maps {NYPL Map Division}
NYPL has now scanned nearly all of its public domain New York City atlases (a collection of now more than 10,000 maps, the wonderfully graphical title page at left is from a recently scanned Sanborn atlas of Staten Island) and built a web tool where users both inside and outside the Library can virtually stretch old maps onto a digital model of the world à la Google Maps or OpenStreetMap. This is AWESOME!
Medical First: 3-D Printed Skull Successfully Implanted in Woman {NBC}
I’m still not over the excitement of the 3-D printed prosthetic hand – and now this! I’m constantly amazed by the endless possibilities of 3-D printers. However, I’m still skeptical about their placement and role in the future of libraries.
March 16 – 22, 2014
Voices from the Past Reflecting on the Future (Number 5): Status & the Inferiority Complex {The Ubiquitous Librarian}
Still not sure how I feel about this. Should librarians have to be fighters and is this conversation still relevant? Having many mixed emotions.
Weekly Innovation: Paper Notebooks that Become Digital Files {NPR: All Tech Considered}
Darn, I still thought Moleskines were cool….
Turkish Airlines Launches Digital Library App for iPhone, Android {The Digital Reader}
In terms of libraries of the future, I never thought I’d see Sky Mall replaced by Sky Library – what an incredible idea!
March 9 – 15, 2014
Printing in more dimensions {Wicked Local: Newton}
In light of our recent questions about the lasting value of 3D printers in public library maker spaces, Newton Free Library has some excellent answers!
Report from Denmark: Designing the new public library at Aarhus, and the People’s Lab {Joho: the Blog}
Fab labs and maker spaces have been popping up everywhere. There’s also a trend in Denmark to repair rather than replace. The People’s Lab is a result of a collaboration among the library, community, and partners. Partners include public libraries, Aarhus School of Architecture, Moesgaard Museum, Roskilde festival, Orange Innovation, and more.
February 16 – 22, 2014
Google Offers a Guide to Not Being a ‘Creepy’ Google Glass Owner {NYTimes: Bits}
Finally! Google puts out a list of suggestions for how to use Google Glass in public without seeming creepy. Personally I have yet to see anyone engaging with Google Glass in a public setting, but I could imagine being put off by witnessing someone stare “directly into the air for no apparent reason” while focusing too much on using the product.
8 Book Historians, Curators, and Librarians Who Are Killing It Online {Buzzfeed}
Yes, Buzzfeed often posts questionable and intellectually vacant content, but this is an excellent compilation of book historians, curators, archivists, and librarians who are doing an excellent job showcasing their work online in an effort to engage with users. Nice!
Why libraries deserve to be hip {Salon}
“In a world in which educated, enlightened, planet-hugging types are all up in that composting and upcycling and no impact lifestyle,” why aren’t libraries more trendy?
Do People Need Libraries in the Digital Age? {Wall Street Journal: Speakeasy}
What can we learn from ancients about libraries in the 21st century? What does Egypt’s Great Library of Alexandria tell us about how we can continually seek innovation? Christopher John Farley provides insight and makes the claim that libraries of the future “shouldn’t be bookless because, like endangered species, the nondigitized physical texts of the past, and the ones that are still being printed, need a protected space.” Do you agree?
February 10 – 15, 2014
Who Needs Books? A Q&A with the ‘Bookless Library’ Head Librarian {Library Journal}
Head librarian Ashley Eklof of San Antonio’s BiblioTech discusses the challenges and benefits of leading the country’s first “bookless” library. Currently the library serves almost 300 patrons a day (more than expected), and many of them are jurors!
Quora and the Search for the Truth {NY Times: BITS Blog}
Is Quora a truth-seeking social network, or – does the truth matter less than building engagement through shared experience? With 450,000 topics on Quora, where a community of users poses and answers questions, it’s a challenge to keep it all straight, but necessary for a future ad business.
What Lord Byron’s Penis Tells Us About the Digital Humanities {Pacific Standard}
Does the term “digital humanities” invoke fatigue and distrust in the same way that the word “hipster” is said to frustrate the masses? Ted Scheinman thinks it should not, and concludes that “quarrels over a name occult a proper sense of the benefits of digital tools.” As an interesting case study, he examines the North American Society for the Study of Romanticism (NASSR) listserv as an interesting digital space where trained academics intersect with amateur überfans in an effort to learn from one another and perpetuate scholarship as well as fascination about Lord Byron.
Alternative Careers for LIS Grads {Hack Library School}
Simmons GSLIS Graduate Alex Berman encourages recent LIS Grads to consider non-traditional jobs that utilize LIS skills such as metadata management, information and content management, and ability to leverage existing knowledge resources that are emphasized by LIS education. She recommends searching for jobs by skills learned rather than by job title, as often our LIS skills are being sought more broadly outside of the traditional library/archives settings. Is this the future of LIS careers?
Learning to Think Outside the Box: Creativity Becomes an Academic Discipline {New York Times: Education Life}
Did you know that “creative” is the most used buzzword in LinkedIn profiles two years running? As employers such as IBM reveal that creativity is now the essential skill for success, many colleges and universities have begun to offer majors, minors, and coursework in creative thinking. Is it possible to teach creativity in the same way critical thinking has been taught, or must we also consider other less traditional pedagogical options that value trial-and-error over grades and outcomes? The latter seems to be the general consensus.
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