We had 2 Census workshops here a few weeks ago and the presenters handed out some interesting Census reports on different subjects. One that's been sitting on my desk is Computer and Internet Use in the U.S.: 2003. It's quite detailed about usage--by age group, type of task, location of the computer, demographics, socioeconomic data, etc.
One interesting statistic: in 1993, 32% of children had access to a computer at home. In 2003, the figure was 76%. An interesting trend reversal, is that more women than men now use the computer at home. Interesting to speculate why that's changed...
You can find read the report at: http://www.census.gov/prod/2005pubs/p23-208.pdf
Friday, December 15, 2006
Thursday, December 7, 2006
Whither print journalism?
Have you seen the video Epic 2015? It's a prediction about the future of communications and it's entertaining and scary at the same time. You can find it at www.robinsloan.com/ just click on Epic 2015 to see it. It's under 10 minutes long.
One thing the video talks about is the demise of print as a source for news. Along these lines, both The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal have announced that they will switch to a smaller format--essentially dropping the width of one column. The WSJ will start January 2, 2007; The Times in 2008. Here's a link to the AP story:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061203/ap_on_bi_ge/wall_street_journal_redesign
One thing the video talks about is the demise of print as a source for news. Along these lines, both The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal have announced that they will switch to a smaller format--essentially dropping the width of one column. The WSJ will start January 2, 2007; The Times in 2008. Here's a link to the AP story:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061203/ap_on_bi_ge/wall_street_journal_redesign
Tuesday, December 5, 2006
The law of unintended consequences...
I received an email the other week asking if I would remove the link on our Help Pages to the Martin Luther King website that is the work of a hate group. We have this website posted along with other examples of bogus, spoof, or malicious websites for people to use as examples. The writer felt that linking to this website for any reason was a mistake. His reasoning was, that the more often a website is accessed, the greater its perceived popularity by search engines, and the more likely it will be to come up on the first page of results. Thus, we are inadvertently promoting this website. While I'm not sure that's strictly true, I did delete the site.
There was a link to the blog of the person who sent me this email. The blog posting about this problem was headed "Why do librarians hate Martin Luther King?" As you can imagine, I was very offended, especially since the posting did not explain the heading, but used it essentially as an attention-getter. My first thought was to fire off a comment, but I didn't--I'm not sure I want to communicate with this person. The offending post is at http://tuttlesvc.org What do you think?
There was a link to the blog of the person who sent me this email. The blog posting about this problem was headed "Why do librarians hate Martin Luther King?" As you can imagine, I was very offended, especially since the posting did not explain the heading, but used it essentially as an attention-getter. My first thought was to fire off a comment, but I didn't--I'm not sure I want to communicate with this person. The offending post is at http://tuttlesvc.org What do you think?
Wednesday, November 22, 2006
There's a great bibliography on blogging with links to articles on blogs in libraries--if you need information on how various libraries have used blogs, this is one place to find it. The author is Susan Herzog, and it's at: http://blog-bib.blogspot.com
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Useful blogs for information literacy
I'd like to expand the Links area with sites that are relevant to information literacy. If you have any suggestions for sites that you've found useful, use the Comments feature to send them to me and I'll add them.
Welcome to the InfoLit Committee's blog!

Since this committee is concerned with how we access and use information, a blog is a great way for us to communicate.
I'll post any information that comes my way that seems relevant or useful--sites of interest, articles read, information from programs or conferences etc. Feel free to use the "comment" feature to share your thoughts.
If you'd like to share your ideas or information, you can email me and I'll post it, or, maybe, you'd like to help out and be a writer on this blog. Email me and let me know--roz@cjrlc.org
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