One of my plug-ins has caused instability in the database structure of the blog when it froze during a re-indexing of data… I have attempted to fix it (attempted to re-re-index, removed plugin, etc.) but am still having troubles.  I think it is time to see if the backup plug-in does what it is supposed to do.

If you are seeing this message, it means I haven’t fixed it yet (since this wasn’t part of the backup).

Oh, and by the way, this is a great reminder of the idea of backing up often.  I had backed up the entire database just before running the re-indexer doohickey.  I should have all the posts when restored.

Until then, sorry for things not working well….

Read Lori Ayre’s blog post at TechEssence to find out what she means by “Learned Helplessness”.  I think she hits the nail on the head, then drives it home.  I will be watching her future posts….

After more than a year, there has been a bit of activity at the Google Librarian Central site, though not what was hoped for when I heard that they were preparing an update.

What they announced in a post titled “Endless Summer” was that they were closing down the Librarian Central Blog and communicating via their newsletter.  Comments and suggestions will be handled by a web form submission.

Ouch!  Double-Ouch!!  This is better than the dead silence of the past year, but just barely.  We have been moved back in time, relegated to Web 1.0.

They could have kept the blog alive by posting the individual newsletter items one-by-one.  They could have used the blog for items posted or discussed elsewhere, but posted there because of their interest to libraries.  They could have opened things up a bit and asked for volunteers to coordinate topics and ideas for better incorporating Google into libraries.  Any of these would have been about the same amount of work, and would have preserved or improved the dynamic and social aspects of the site.  They backed away instead.

We are left to wonder why.

Classify is a new service from OCLC which returns class numbers (Dewey, LC, and National Library of Medicine) assigned to books in WorldCat.  This could be a good way to use the “wisdom of the crowd” when you are not 100% sure where to group a particular book.

I noticed that the url had a “2″ at the end, so I removed it to see what would happen.  It appears to be an earlier version of the service.  I didn’t have any luck with the first few ISBNs I entered, but the example links work well.

Any other changes to the url bounce the user to the DeweyBrowser, which is a lookup service from a couple of years back.  Although it also has a “2″ at the end of the url, nothing happens when one changes it.  So much for rewarding curiosity ;-)

Classify found via Lorcan Dempsey’s weblog

Tim Spalding of LibraryThing has started a new ambitious project:  develop a new shelf classification system that would eliminate the baggage of the 100+ year-old systems many libraries have in place, as well as create a system free from the trademark, copyright, and license issues connected with Dewey.

He is looking for a few librarians (one to five) to manage the project, and has started a LibraryThing group for everyone to join in the conversation.

This just started up this morning, folks… they’re still talking letters vs. numbers and general classification philosophy.  We’re talking ground floor timing, so sign up and begin discussing!

found via Tim Spalding’s post to the Web4Lib list

100 Unbelievably Useful Reference Sites You’ve Never Heard Of is the title of a post on the TeachingTips blog.  And yes, there are a lot of interesting and useful links to be found (though I suspect you may recall hearing about a few of them before…)

found via LISNews

In February, I wrote about the shootings at Northern Illinois University, which happened about 100 yards away from a former co-worker (and current friend).  I stressed that until something like this happens in your community, it seems remote and somehow not fully real.  However, we must strive to remember that these things happen in real communities, to real people, and that individuals, organizations and institutions (such as libraries) can do much to be better prepared for tragedy.

Jessamyn at Librarian.net writes about a horrific murder which indirectly involved the local public library, and how they have reacted.  As you read her post, and the news articles she links to, ask yourself what your library or organization can do now to be prepared for not only this type of event, or a shooting, or a book challenge, but what you can do to simply be prepared.

Once you have thought about it, discuss it with your co-workers and community members.  Solicit ideas.  Take the best ideas and put them into action.  You may never need this, but if the unthinkable happens you will be in far better shape than if the only response is “we never imagined it could happen here!”

Do it this time, starting today… because you cannot predict where, or in what form, the next horrific event will occur.  At worst, you will be prepared for something that may not happen; at best you may save lives.

To celebrate the 100th birthday of Louis L’Amour, Bantam Books is providing a free copy of “Education of a Wandering Man : The Centennial Hardcover Edition” to any free lending library in the United States.

found via the Unshelved blog

Peter Suber at Open Access News has an excellent post on the language being used when discussing copyright infringement of textbooks.  I personally prefer what I have in the title of this post; results may vary.

We have been through this with digital music.  Music publishers and distributers were all up in arms about downloading music, but now they have come to see that the paradigm is shifting and what was needed was a change in their approach.  People will follow the rules, generally, as long as those rules make sense to them.

Watch for the misuse of language on both sides of the argument, and remember that the movement in publishing is towards open access and digital downloading.  The sooner everyone understands this and adapts, the sooner people will get what they want/need at a fair price, and publishers will make a fair profit.

Marketing Your Library is a blog chock full of ideas, lists, and links for marketing, you know, your library!

from LISNews

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