Archive for October, 2006

Welcome to ER&L Resources !

jgriffin October 31st, 2006

So what is the Resources tag all about? Use the Resources tag for entries that point the ER&L community to interviews, bibliographies, listservs, blogs, wikis, neat stuff the ER&L community should know about. We encourage anyone involved with e-resources to participate!

The long tail - creating your own books

Charlene Barina October 30th, 2006

I’m still playing around with the concept, but I first read about micropublishing several months back in the New York Times (the article unfortunately costs money now, but the link is here.
It’s a bit different from finding someone local to publish and more like a hybrid with such services as cafepress, where you create apparel with logos or designs you make that are printed on an as-ordered basis. The micropublishers give you a variety of options, ranging from submitting a pdf to standalone custom design software to put together books based on a few different templates and styles. Most all of them offer a hardcover option in a few different shapes (portrait, landscape, square little books) with a nice dust jacket and glossy pages as if it were a “real” book. Pricing depends on quantity, size, and sometimes colors used, depending on the site. Also depending on the publisher, you can make books with as many as 400 pages.
The micropublisher I’ve chosen to try out is Blurb, partially due to their nicely designed website :) According to the now-hard-to-get-to NYTimes article, it also supposedly had the best interface for book creation; it feels google-like in its implementation, which to me means semi-intuitive and slightly bubbly. It does have some confusing but supposedly easy buttons - I’ve had experience where I change a layout and my content disappears, never to be found again, but that may be to my version being an older beta copy. After you’ve completed your book, you can “publish” it publicly to the Blurb bookstore, where you can direct friends to check it out or discover random strangers who really like your topic. They’re still working on getting an ISBN service set up though, for those of you who plan to seriously market your creation. Like cafepress, though, you can’t set a price above the typical Blurb book cost. Thus you can have the warm fuzzy glow of being while embracing the hip/edgy starving artist persona.
From the sites, the book styles and layouts remind me of the Williams-Sonoma line of thin cookbooks with themes like “Beef” or “Pasta”. They have some page and book templates that are thematic, such as “Blog Book”, “Cookbook”, “Picture book”, which gives you a starting point with the variety of layouts. I chose to make a cookbook of my favorite recipes from friends, family, and random self-experiments.
I found it neat to be able to edit the cover, the inside author picture/bio on the dust jacket, the front pages, and section headers and indices in addition to the expected “average” reading page. I also learned about how time-consuming putting together even a 30-page book, between wanting to prepare the meals to take pictures of technique and final product. I’m trying to enlist a friend who likes to take photos of food, but it hasn’t worked out yet.
Given that Blurb only has hardcover options, and the proprietary software, which, last I experimented, didn’t allow text document import, I don’t see this as being a great venue for those who want to publish their next great novel. It’s also obviously not designed for electronic distribution of the content, either. I do see it as a neat way to publish a travelogue, a office yearbook, or a going-away present that would really be able to leverage the full-color capabilities of Blurb. When my cookbook’s done, I’ll try to post the link here just for grins.

Accepting proposals

Bonnie Tijerina October 29th, 2006

The Program Planning group made their comments on about half the proposals that have come in so far. Part of that group met in person to accept our first round of proposals and I am thrilled at the variety this year!

Last year the focus was heavily on e-serials since that is what most people were dealing with. Many of still are, but there’s so much more happening and you can tell by the types of proposals coming in. There is a great breadth of topics related to electronic resources and digital services (areas covered within our mission).

Here’s just a taste of some of the topics we’re seeing:

  • Use & Usability
  • Web Tools & Technologies
  • ERMS - workflow, set-up, etc.
  • Library-Vendor Relations
  • Collaborative E-Resources Management
  • Open Access & Institutional Repositories
  • Collection Development of E-resources
  • Search capabilities

As presenters agree to participate in ER&L 2007 we are adding information about their session.

Planners Retreat

Bonnie Tijerina October 29th, 2006

At the end of July ‘06 I hosted a one-day retreat for any ER&L planners at GA Tech Library. I was surprised that so many showed up from all over the U.S. My planners are a great group of people.

Here’s a few things we discussed at the retreat:
What ER&L Conference 2006 did well

  • ER&L fills a focused need on electronic/digital resources, particularly in providing a unified look at all parts of the e-resources cycle (HR, resources, tools, workflow, usability, etc.)
  • Lots of value – due to coherent scope, inexpensive price (enabled those with smaller travel budgets to participate), high-tech venue, good location for travel logistics.
  • Gives the whole spectrum of E-Resources – the big picture and how it fits together.
  • Provided a place for new and evolving departments and trends to get input/exposure as well as linking them and other e-resources issues to admin.-level people.

What can we improve

  • Scheduling and duration of themes was very intense – some burnout, especially concerning the ERMs block
  • Special librarians and public librarians had conference conflicts
  • For some sessions, interactivity was hard with large # of people – are smaller or more concurrent sessions the solution?

What should we do for ER&L Conference 2007

  • Maintain program diversity
  • Market to a broader audience
  • Arrange sessions to create a less intense and more interactive/intimate feel

Mission
ER&L provides a forum for information professionals to explore ideas, trends, and technologies related to electronic resources and digital services.

Registration opens October 30th

Bonnie Tijerina October 28th, 2006

Registration opens Monday!

Our proposals look promising and cover a wide range of topics related to e-resources:

  • Use & Usability
  • Web Tools & Technologies
  • ERMS
  • Library-Vendor Relations
  • Collaborative E-Resources Management
  • Open Access & Institutional Repositories
  • Collection Development of E-resources
  • Search capabilities

Check out some of the accepted proposals. More will be added through mid-November.

There is still 2 days to submit a proposal!

Early-bird rates are in effect through January 10, 2007.

Why wiki? Tutorial from UW-Milwaukee libraries

Charlene Barina October 26th, 2006

I saw this link on slashdot and thought that some people here might enjoy the tour, or the implementation of how such a tour was made (it’s in flash, but the homepage is html/static type).
Link: Why Wiki?

Slashdot source:
“…
A librarian’s guided tour of Wikipedia
. tiltowait writes, ‘With the potential rise of Citizendium and the continued media circus surrounding Wikipedia’s foibles, it’s a good time to review the current state of Wikimania and consider what these disruptive technologies mean for the future of ‘authoritative’ information sources. If you’ve ever wanted for a general overview of Wikipedia or needed something to point to when asked, ‘Wikipedia? Isn’t that just a bunch of lies?’ then the 1-hour screencast titled ‘Why Wiki?’ is for you. The online video is my perspective on the pros and cons of Wikipedia and how it stacks up to traditional publication formats.’…”