Not exact matches
Incorporate Social data Gather information
about tweets, pins, likes,
comments and other social activity related to the content
library.
Carlacci's
comments weren't comforting to any of the approximately 15 people in the
library basement who are concerned
about the health impacts of the Peace Bridge plaza expansion and constructing a duty free store closer to their homes on the Episcopal Church home property on Busti Avenue.
Mark's
comment about writers should be donating books to our local
libraries struck a chord because the Riverside Regional
Library that had a mobile unit in the summer time made a reader out of me when they came through my part of the country that was miles from a
library.
OverDrive, by far the largest distributor of ebooks to public
libraries, declined to
comment, but a number of librarians told LJ that the company holds closely information
about its own markups.
Libraries The
library board in Jessamine County, Kentucky, heard public
comment last night
about acquisition and borrowing policies and the recent firings of two employees who kept a copy...
Holds are growing in several
libraries for Scott Anderson's Lawrence in Arabia, (RH / Doubleday; Blackstone Audio), which receives a mixed review in this week's NYT Sunday Book Review, with the dismissive
comment that books keep being written
about T.E. Lawrence because, «After all, somebody keeps buying the stuff.»
I think we were all surprised by
comments from some people in the publishing world
about how they thought
libraries worked.
In 2010, an off - hand
comment by a
library page to LGPL Town Librarian Henry Bankhead
about Smashwords led Bankhead to learn more
about the new world of e-books and self - publishing.
Comments — Ann Miner's link to Seattle Channel interview by Nancy Pearl with Paul Collins that wandered into a Kindle discussion at about 22 minutes (iTunes podcast link); Craig Scarberry's recommendation of the excellent Books on the Nightstand podcast; Jean Remple on OCTO covers (more on covers here and here); Ann Miner with a good idea for Amazon; Marcy MacKenzie on a meetup with Bob Cope; an Amazon PR spokesman confirms the Facebook post stating that «a better way to organize your Kindle libraries» is coming; Jim Jones links to the Cushing Academy of Canada - Sony Reader style; Tom Lichty links to a charming coming - of - Kindle - age column by Margie Boulé in The Oregonian; Kevin Warner, a new Kindle owner from Down Under; Len Charnoff's tutorial video on Inkmesh; audio comments from Pastor Mark Pierce of Church Requel and
Comments — Ann Miner's link to Seattle Channel interview by Nancy Pearl with Paul Collins that wandered into a Kindle discussion at
about 22 minutes (iTunes podcast link); Craig Scarberry's recommendation of the excellent Books on the Nightstand podcast; Jean Remple on OCTO covers (more on covers here and here); Ann Miner with a good idea for Amazon; Marcy MacKenzie on a meetup with Bob Cope; an Amazon PR spokesman confirms the Facebook post stating that «a better way to organize your Kindle
libraries» is coming; Jim Jones links to the Cushing Academy of Canada - Sony Reader style; Tom Lichty links to a charming coming - of - Kindle - age column by Margie Boulé in The Oregonian; Kevin Warner, a new Kindle owner from Down Under; Len Charnoff's tutorial video on Inkmesh; audio
comments from Pastor Mark Pierce of Church Requel and
comments from Pastor Mark Pierce of Church Requel and Bob Lee.
Full versions of this report are available for purchase, focused on public, academic, or school
libraries and complete with detailed data broken down by size of
library and budget, comparison of 2011 and 2010 data, and hundreds of
comments from librarians
about their experiences with ebooks:
In addition to conducting a representative phone survey, we also solicited thousands of
comments online from
library staff members and
library patrons
about their experiences in the relatively new world of e-books and e-book borrowing.
-- From a
comment by Barbara Fister who «coordinate (s) the Folke Bernadotte Memorial
Library's instruction program and participate (s) in collection development, reference, and collegial management of the
library's resources,» posted in reference to an article
about online piracy of university press publications.
She speaks
about the pleasures of reading at
library conferences, to literacy organizations and community groups throughout the world and
comments on books regularly on NPR's Morning Edition.
Comments from the reading public in Edinburgh
libraries were
about practical help in getting their devices to work, and wondering why they could only borrow certain titles.
Stumbled across an interesting
comment in regards to the recent events
about TorProject and a public
library in Lebanon, New Hampshire, U. S. of A.: http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r30291606-So-let -...
Hmmmm As regards Simon's
comments about online access to news — perfectly true of course and I look at a wide range of newspapers online regularly, but its not the same as spreading out a real paper — and our students are like Neil's in this regard in that the newspaper stand, just inside the door, is rapidly becoming the most popular part of the
library.
This blawg includes information
about and links to Oregon legal research resources, in addition to
comments about cases, statutes, and interesting events in the world of legal research and law
libraries.
Since many law firms have no librarian, the
comment in the podcast (paraphrased)
about placing
library content decisions in the purchasing department, if no - one is adding value to the content, is actually probably a fair statement of what's actually happening in most law firms.
In a response to
comments in my last blog post
about IBM Watson I mentioned a presentation that Kyla Moran gave at the last American Association of Law
Libraries (AALL) conference.
The
comments above by Simon C.
about Prof. Ziegel's conference papers is well taken; given the ease of electronic publishing, these should be put online; we often received requests for past conference papers where the print version had gone missing or was not added to the
library's collection.