Deutsch | English | Français | 中文 Zhōngwén
SOCIAL NETWORKS : Facebook | Flickr | MySpace | Twitter | XING | Youtube | Newsblog RSS-Feed

Newsblog

Printer-friendly version Send to friend

eReader or Librarian?

Eric Hellman wonders which is more important, a librarian in every school, or an ereader in every backpack? [read more at libraryjournal.com]

Devastating flood closed library

Two youths are being sought in connection to the devastating flood which has closed Portsmouth Central Library.

Thousands of pounds worth of damage was caused to the library after intruders blocked sinks in toilets on the third floor and left the taps running all Wednesday night, as reported yesterday [read more at portsmouth.co.uk]

NYPL honors Steve Martin

The library was clearly hoping to drum up a little buzz for its Library Lions black-tie gala with the selection of Martin (who, it's true, has written a whole bunch of books and plays) as one of its five Lions [read more at nymag.com]

Anti-Latino-Library

East Hampton Village’s quiet library is providing the hamlet’s loudest controversy.

In a decision that some are ripping as elitist and exclusionary, the tony village’s zoning board last week rejected a bid to expand the enclave’s tiny Main Street building by roughly 6,000 square feet.

Livid library officials say the board rejected the project to avoid having children from less sparkling areas of East Hampton Town pour into an inviting new facility.

"The old guard is scared that the Latino kids and their parents from Springs are going to invade their precious downtown area," said one seething library source. "It’s really that simple." [read more at nypost.com]

Green Library - the changing Face

Libraries could become the new "village green" of the future, and are becoming a cultural center destination in communities, former Pennsylvania first lady Michele Ridge told a crowd of several hundred gathered for the dedication of the new William H. and Marion C. Alexander Library in Hummelstown Tuesday afternoon.

Ridge, a former librarian and executive director of the Erie County Library System, recited a litany of reasons libraries will remain important in communities, even as people rely increasingly on Internet sources for information.

"The more technologically complex we become, the more isolated and fragmented we become as a society, the more necessary it is to support community institutions that remind us of a community and keep us connected to each other," such as libraries, Ridge said.

Libraries are a place to do homework, help senior citizens and the unemployed in job searches, and “level the playing field” for the less advantaged who can’t afford books or computers, she said. During the years her husband, Tom Ridge, was governor, state library funding increased steadily. Michele Ridge said the responsibility to support libraries "starts at the local level," and said the Dauphin County Library System understands how to maintain and expand libraries in this challenging economic environment [read more at pennlive.com]

iPhone hacking becomes legalized by LoC

Until this week, hacking an iPhone was like jaywalking for techies: easy, common and illegal.

But the Library of Congress has legalized this hacking -- known as "jailbreaking" -- and given amnesty to the millions of users who have already done it.

Jailbreaking allows savvy iPhone users to hack into their devices and run applications that weren't approved by the official Apple app store.

It's a popular process that's been an open secret since the smart phone premiered. Apple, known for its tight control on all products, has responded by refusing to honor warranties for jailbroken devices.

The Library of Congress decision has been interpreted as a victory for the amateur who wants some say -- and maybe some pay -- for altering a device's capabilities and vulnerabilities. Companies already shell out cash to "bug hunters" who alert them to security gaps.

It's also a victory for open-source software, which emphasizes the community in improving software rather than one-size-fits-all corporate management [read more at post-gazette.com]

Drinking between the lines

It is now more than three years since the manager, Peter Maurer, came up with the idea of this unique communal hybrid of a public library inside a pub, and, if customer satisfaction is any measure, the project has been a success [read more at washingtonpost.com]

The Library Lady

On the street, kids call Jenna Kahly the "library lady."

The youth librarian at Moorhead Public Library, Kahly leads weekly story times and craft projects and helps kids and teens find books.

“It’s really fun when kids come in. I get a lot (of) "Hey, I know you’ because I visit the schools several times a year and talk to the kids about libraries and the programs we have and try to get them to sign up for library cards," she said [read more at inforum.com]

Speed-Dating at your Library

Books, videos and soul mates: just some of the services provided by your local library.

Starting July 23, the Poudre River Public Library District is trying its hand at playing Cupid with the inaugural "Speed Dating for Booklovers."

Communications manager Paula Watson-Lakamp said the event is an innovative way to create more interaction with the library and help people "find their special book lover." [read more at coloradoan.com]

New Library goes Book-Less

More and more, it seems the future of libraries has no room for actual books. And a new Stanford University library is welcoming this book-less future with open arms.

The new engineering library at the college, set to open in August, will have 85% less books than the one it’s replacing -- a drop from 80,000 to a mere 10,000 books [read more at designtaxi.com]

Share this
Syndicate content