Saturday, 19 July 2008

A Vision of Students Today

A short video summarizing some of the most important characteristics of students today

Use of social software - flickr

North Carolina State University Libraries using flickr on their special collections
http://flickr.com/photos/ncsu_scrc/

Sunday, 13 July 2008

Experiments with NetVibes

I'm wondering if NetVibes might be a useful tool and have mocked up a sample. Comments welcome.

Michael Wesch's Manitoba Lecture




Most people have probably seen Michael Wesch's YouTube videos about Web 2.0, but this is the first full-length exposition of his work that I've seen. It's over an hour in length, so you need to make some time (and maybe coffee) for it. But it's worth it IMHO, especially the first 30 mins in which he explains why the current pedagogical model of most universities is broken.

Thursday, 10 July 2008

Critical article on Google Books project

ABSTRACT

The Google Books Project has drawn a great deal of attention, offering the prospect of the library of the future and rendering many other library and digitizing projects apparently superfluous. To grasp the value of Google’s endeavor, we need among other things, to assess its quality. On such a vast and undocumented project, the task is challenging. In this essay, I attempt an initial assessment in two steps. First, I argue that most quality assurance on the Web is provided either through innovation or through “inheritance.” In the later case, Web sites rely heavily on institutional authority and quality assurance techniques that antedate the Web, assuming that they will carry across unproblematically into the digital world. I suggest that quality assurance in the Google’s Book Search and Google Books Library Project primarily comes through inheritance, drawing on the reputation of the libraries, and before them publishers involved. Then I chose one book to sample the Google’s Project, Lawrence Sterne’s Tristram Shandy. This book proved a difficult challenge for Project Gutenberg, but more surprisingly, it evidently challenged Google’s approach, suggesting that quality is not automatically inherited. In conclusion, I suggest that a strain of romanticism may limit Google’s ability to deal with that very awkward object, the book.


Link

Wednesday, 9 July 2008

Another way of shortening long URLs

A new web-service -- bit.ly. Brief explanation (for programmers) of why it's smarter than TinyURL here.

Tuesday, 8 July 2008