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Hey, I just realized I didn't congratulate Roy and the Hawks for heading back to the Final Four for the first time since 1993. That may not be a lot of time to you, but it is to us. It was great to see Roy smiling like that! Onward to a national championship! Rock chalk Jayhawk KU!
I don't know why on earth I thought I'd get anything done during a weekend that included the re-release of E.T., March Madness, and the Oscars. What was I thinking?
This version is aimed at 6th, 7th, and 8th graders, and it makes a good link for library web pages.
Even more zen - Can You Spot the Hidden Bird? [via CamWorld]
The Flo Control Project"And now, here's your moment of zen."
Modifying Dreamweaver to Produce Valid XHTML by Carrie Bickner [via meryl's notes] Mostly a note to myself since we may head down the Macromedia path.
Make sure you read the rest of John's post, because what he is referring to is the Heavenly Jukebox, a concept I talk about a lot in my presentations. It's like the internet in that it's a mysterious cloud of digital content that exists somewhere "out there." You subscribe to the service, so you're really paying for access, not ownership. As much as I like this concept on a personal level (a flat fee for access to all-things-digital), there are many problems inherent in this type of setup.
When I first started talking about the heavenly jukebox, it was in the context of advocating that libraries position themselves in the loop so that they can still circulate digital content. Now when I talk about this, it will be in the context of how the DMCA and CDBTPA are going to cut libraries out of that loop altogether. Thumbs Are the New Fingers for GameBoy Youth
See - I told you NetGens are different.... Michael Fraase has written the best dissection I have seen to date of the whole DMCA, SSSCA, and CDBTPA issue. Titled When Elephants Dance, this is the article I will be using as a handout at presentations. [via Daypop Top 40] The only thing I would have added to it is a discussion about libraries and our users because our right to collect and circulate legitimate digital information is getting lost in the overall debate about the entertainment industry versus the technology industry. Wired reports about the problems the CDBTPA will cause for the software industry (including open source authors), but no one on the national level seems to recognize that this could be disastrous for library's ability to circulate digital information. Why? Because they want to completely restrict how individuals use information. Libraries are not individuals, even though we lend to them. So there we are, caught in the middle. Restricting all digital information because some of it might be from the entertainment industry and could be pirated is insane. It means legitimate uses and legitimate information becomes the baby that gets thrown out with the bathwater. That means shutting out those who traffic in information, too. Publishers already view libraries as the enemy, and I'm sure they see this as one way to end the threat they seem to think we pose. One more added benefit of this legislation for them. On my list of things to do today: install rssDistiller. I'm not reading a lot of great sites as regularly because they're not in my news aggregator, so I need to get them there manually. For example, check out Lori's update on the PDA project at OSF Saint Francis Medical Center. This sounds fascinating, and it makes me wish I was part of it. Seeing this stuff in action... watching users get excited about it... it must be thrilling!
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Blogroll (Sites I Read in My Aggregator) Mobile Blogroll (Sites I Read on My Treo 600) Spreading the meme: Why You Should Fall to Your Knees and Worship a Librarian Unabridged: |
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