Podcasting Course

Discussed, in a podcast of course: A very fun and candid conversation with Gwen Dapper on December 2, 2005. Gwen is a web developer and an Instructional Technologist from San Jose State University. Gwen has just finished a course description for a proposed class on podcasting at San Jose State University. She and I talk as we look over her course outline. She hopes to teach this course at San Jose State.

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Will Fair Use Survive?

A report is now online regarding fair use, something that should interest everyone. It looks like you can request free printed copies as well. Are increasingly heavy assertions of control by copyright and trademark owners smothering fair use and free expression? The product of more than a year of research, Will Fair Use Survive? paints a striking picture of an intellectual property system that is perilously out of balance. Will Fair Use Survive?

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Lessons Learned from Lib2.0

Blyberg has a nice overview of what he’s learned so far in implementing what I would presume is a huge overhaul of a library presence. I recommend reading the whole thing, especially if your planning such changes yourself. Lessons learned: aadl.org 3.0 If your implementing changes please share your experience.

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Books for Looks

A humorous look at book buying: Books: Seen, and Not Read - Newsweek Periscope - MSNBC.com. A recent study of 2,100 Brits found that more than a third of them buy certain titles solely to look intelligent I own A Brief History of Time but I did actually read it, though I was once a physics major. I also have a large collection of other books I have yet to read though really want to.

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Patron History

The 100+ Johns Talis warned us about are at it again. This time providing Enhanced Patron History outside of the OPAC. What I like about this implementation is that it’s Opt-In and extensible. I have a feeling that the data will be much more usable being it’s outside the OPAC. Add on that it’s opt-in and you have a very useful service that patrons can use if they choose. I have a feeling that if this was a product that there wouldn’t have been that consideration.

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Utility of Offering Book Pages Online

In the debate over Google Book Search there’s always discussion over the usefulness of limited pages, people reading online, copyright and whether there’s even a point. I’m of the camp that thinks it will be a great achievement. For those wondering about whether such a thing would help sell books here’s a real-world example (using Amazon’s offering): Semco: The Success Story Behind the World’s Most Unusual Workplace - Signal vs. Noise (by 37signals)

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HigherEd BlogCon

Planning appears to be happening regarding an online conference about higher ed and new technologies. Nice to see that they are having a Library/Information track. As a former education major (and one that was into the tech side) I’ll definitely be keeping my eye on this one. Being online I might actually be able to “go” for once. More info at: Information Wants To Be Free » Blog Archive » HigherEd BlogCon

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Amazon now supports Tags

Noticed this the other day when I was shopping for cameras. Allows private and public tags. Seems like a beginning to test the waters. More info at the site below: Amazon Tags Help Page

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'LawGeek: Regulating Search conference at Yale next month'

LawGeek: Regulating Search conference at Yale next month An interesting looking conference especially in light of all the debate over google print lately. Hopefully they will have archives of presentations online. I’m sure there will be bloggers at least.

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BBC Audio Annotation Project

All I can say is wow. Having the ability to comment on shows at Odeo was nice, but I never thought about the ability to collaboratively annotate audio, including snippets. If you haven’t already go over and read the full post about it, including screencasts. I’ve posted over at LibDev regarding the possible uses of user data in the library. I have to let this sink in before I can comment more.

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