Archive for December, 2008

Lists and Rankings: Lake Superior State University 2009 List of Banished Words

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

From the Web Site:

“It’s that time of year again!”

Lake Superior State University “maverick” word-watchers, fresh from the holiday “staycation” but without an economic “bailout” even after a “desperate search,” have issued their 34th annual List of Words to Be Banished from the Queen’s English for Mis-use, Over-use and General Uselessness. This year’s list may be more “green” than any of the previous lists and includes words and phrases that people from “Wall Street to Main Street” say they love “not so much” and wish to have erased from their “carbon footprint.”

Source: Lake Superior State

Two New Beta Releases to Know About

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

+ WizeHive

Manage your activities, collaborate with others, and organize your life (or business) all in one integrated platform.

Note: At the moment, you need to register for this Beta release. Free!

+ iTrackmine.com – Aggregating Your Collection Online

In a nutshell, iTrackmine stands as a web-based collection manager that lets you import your collection online and easily manage it and share it with whomever you want.

Source: KillerStartUps.com and MoMB

News Briefs

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

News Briefs

+ Faulty Instructions Prompt Recall of Electrical Wiring How-to-Books by The Taunton Press; Shock Hazard to Consumers (Consumer Product Safety Commission)

+ Bush Library: Make Way for the Terabytes (Dallas Morning News)

+ Martin drops porn filtering from FCC free wireless broadband plan (Ars Technica)

+ Survey: Amazon, Netflix tops at satisfying online holiday shoppers (Computerworld)

+ Consumers Don’t See Mobile Banking As Secure (InformationWeek)

+ With Flickr Layoffs, Whither ‘The Commons’? (Wired/Epicenter)

FL Legislator — Storms isn’t done ‘fixing’ your library

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

Storms isn’t done ‘fixing’ your library

Look out.

Ronda Storms, former Hillsborough County commissioner and current state senator (R-Fire and Brimstone) has her eye on your library. Again.

What now? A plan to rid us of books unwholesome, or at least containing the word “evolution”?

Another attack on library displays about gay pride, the first of which led to a ban on anyone in county government pretty much even thinking the words “gay pride”?

No, this time Sen. Storms has set her sights on something more insidious lurking in the stacks of our state.

You guessed it. The Dewey Decimal System.

Storms calls the Dewey Decimal System frustrating, outdated and ridiculous. She would like something more akin to what they use at bookstores.

But librarians will tell you they don’t see streams of patrons unable to negotiate the system leaving empty-armed in tearful frustration. The hordes of kids who packed my local branch over winter break seemed to be finding books (and magazines and computers) just fine.

“It’s a particularly useful system for public and school libraries because it’s fairly easy to work with,” says Barbara Pickell, director of the Clearwater library system. She gives Dewey good marks for “browseability” and says it’s more accurate than the system bookstores use.

Even a particularly numerically challenged person (okay, me) managed to find the shelf spot for Ecology of a Cracker Childhood in minutes and without librarian aid. I just looked it up and, you know, followed the numbers. Fiction, by the way, is generally organized alphabetically by author.

Source: St. Petersburg Times (Sue Carlton)

See also: Libraries Offer Plenty For Storms To Stew Over

Array of New State Laws Take Effect Jan. 1

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

Array of New State Laws Take Effect Jan. 1

State legislatures across the country enacted 31,000 laws in 2008, some of which become effective Jan. 1, 2009. The issues range from health care reform to criminal justice to labor practices. Forty-six states met in regular session and three came back for special sessions in 2008.

In Illinois, Alaska and South Carolina, new laws mandate ignition locking devices for those convicted of drunken driving. Californians who text message while driving face a fine and prospective pet owners in Colorado who want to adopt a pet from a shelter must have it sterilized.

Also, convicted sex offenders in Alaska must register their e-mail address in the state sex offender registry database. And 12 states will have a new minimum wage in 2009.

Some legislation may have been enacted in 2007, but becomes effective Jan. 1, 2009, even if the state was not in session in 2008. This is not an exhaustive list, but just a sampling of some new state laws effective Jan. 1, 2009.

Source: National Conference of State Legislatures

Postal Service Previews 2009 Commemorative Stamp Program

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

Postal Service Previews 2009 Commemorative Stamp Program

What do Lassie, The Tonight Show, Abe Lincoln, Gary Cooper, Gulf Coast Lighthouses, Civil Rights Pioneers and Wedding Cakes have in common? They’re all 2009 stamp subjects the U.S. Postal Service is providing a sneak peek at today. All stamp issuance dates and dedication locations are subject to change. The public is welcome to attend unless otherwise noted.

Source: U.S. Postal Service

Now Available via GPO Access: 2006 United States Code

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

Direct to 2006 U.S. Code

The 2006 edition includes the gerneral & permanent laws in effect as of 1/3/07.

Source: GPO Access

Library of Congress Adds 25 Films to National Film Registry

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

From the Announcement

Librarian of Congress James H. Billington today named 25 important motion pictures–classics and genres from every era of American filmmaking–to the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress, including “The Asphalt Jungle,” “Deliverance,” “A Face in the Crowd,” “The Invisible Man,” “Sergeant York” and “The Terminator.”

Source: LC

New Report About “Official Secrecy” From UK House of Commons Library

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

Direct to Full Text Report (20 pages; PDF)

This Note sets out the historical background to the current laws on official secrecy. It also provides a brief summary of notable cases which have involved official information legislation.

Source: UKHOCL (via DocuTicker.com)

Some Google News Briefs and a Couple of New Twitter Apps

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

+ Google introduces auto translate to Google Maps (via StartUp Meme)

+ Google makes video search results neater (via StartUp Meme)

+ Google Solicits User Input On Product Priorities (via Search Engine Land)

+ New for Twitter: Twitchboard

TwitchBoard listens to your twitter account, and forwards messages on to other internet services based on what it hears. Our first service will automatically save any links you tweet to the del.icio.us bookmarking service. We’re working on connections to many other services — stay tuned!

Source: FeedMyApp

+ New for Twitter: 2tweet

Tweet photos and videos by email

Source: FeedMyApp

Tennessee: State Supreme Court to shut its public law libraries

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

From the Article:

The Tennessee Supreme Court will close its public law libraries Jan. 1 across the state to
reduce the costs of storage and updating books.

Source: AP (via The Tennessean)

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook (2008 Edition)

Monday, December 29th, 2008

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook (2008 Edition)
From Introduction and Highlights (PDF; 37 KB):

The past several decades have been marked by notable changes in women’s labor force activities. Since the 1970s, women’s labor force participation has risen substantially, particularly among women with children, and a larger share of women work full time and year round than ever before. In addition, women have increasingly attained higher levels of education: among women ages 25 to 64 who are in the labor force, the proportion with a college degree more than tripled from 1970 to 2007. Women’s earnings as a proportion of men’s also have grown over time. In 1979, women working full time earned 62 percent of what men did; in 2007, women’s earnings were 80 percent of men’s.

This report presents historical and current labor force and earnings data for women and men from the Current Population Survey (CPS). The CPS is a national monthly survey of approximately 60,000 households conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau for the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Unless otherwise noted, data are annual averages from the CPS. Users should note that the comparisons of earnings in this report are on a broad level and do not control for many factors that can be significant in explaining earnings differences. For a detailed description of the source of the data and an explanation of concepts and definitions used, see the Technical Note at the end of this report.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

Philadelphia: Protestors Try To Block Library Closings In Court, Heckle Mayor

Monday, December 29th, 2008

From the Article:

As library advocates went to court to stop Philadelphia from shutting down branches, the mayor delivered some good news to several communities…Susan Feenan, one of the parents suing over the library cuts, told Fox 29 News, “It’s an amazing resource, and it’s so hard to say that it’s going to be taken away. If we never had it, we wouldn’t miss it, but we love it. We use it. It’s vibrant. I can’t imagine our neighborhood not having it.”

Source: My Fox Philadelphia

Report: Information Overload Costs U.S. $900B

Monday, December 29th, 2008

From the Internet.com Story:

The problem is getting worse.

Every year, research firm Basex calculates the cost of information overload and the numbers keep going up by a staggering amount. For 2008, Basex estimates information overload cost the U.S. economy $900 billion in lost productivity. For 2006, that figure was $588 billion.

“We’re continuing to generate more content, and companies like Google introduce silly things like a feature in GMail that lets you set ‘Reply All’ as a default setting,” Basex CEO and chief analyst Jonathan Spira told InternetNews.com. “I don’t think there is enough awareness of the problem.”

Source: Internet.com

See Also: Direct to Basex Information Overload Calculator

Roundup: Four New Tools for Twitter Users

Monday, December 29th, 2008

MyTweetSpace.com

“Have you ever wanted to completely brand your Twitter Profile but didn’t either have the time or know how to do it in Photoshop or Gimp? Introducing… MyTweetSpace.com!

Direct to MyTweetSpace.com

Source: KillerStartups.com

++ twitority

It allow users to restrict their searches to Twitter users with a large number of followers.

Source: FeedMyApp.com

See Also: Twitority refines Twitter search–or kills it (via News.com)

See Also: On Twitter, Followers Aren’t Really Friends (via GigaOm)

+++ Tweetree

Tweetree puts your Twitter stream in a tree so you can see the posts people are replying to in context. It also pulls in lots of external content like twitpic photos, youtube videos and more, so that you can see them right in your stream without having to click through every link your friends post.

Source: FeedMyApp.com

++++ TweetManager.com: Six Tools for Twitterers

Tools include:
1) AutoFollow
2) Mass Message
3) AutoReply
4) Auto Post
5) Feed
6) Connect and Manage Two Accounts

Source: KillerStartups.com

Expert and Consumer Evaluation of Consumer Medication Information, 2008

Monday, December 29th, 2008

Expert and Consumer Evaluation of Consumer Medication Information, 2008
From press release:

A study released today by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration found that the printed consumer medication information (CMI) voluntarily provided with new prescriptions by retail pharmacies does not consistently provide easy-to-read, understandable information about the use and risks of medications.

The study, Expert and Consumer Evaluation of Consumer Medication Information, showed that while most consumers (94 percent) received CMI with new prescriptions, only about 75 percent of this information met the minimum criteria for usefulness as defined by a panel of stakeholders. In 1996, Congress called for 95 percent of all new prescriptions to be accompanied by useful CMI by 2006.

“The current voluntary system has failed to provide consumers with the quality information they need in order to use medicines effectively and safely,” said Janet Woodcock, M.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “Because the congressional goals have not been met, the FDA intends to seek public comment on initiatives that can be used to meet the goals.”

+ Executive Summary (PDF; 64 KB)
+ Full Report (PDF; 2.4 MB)

Source: U.S. Food and Drug Administration

Comparison of Legislative Resources on GPO Access and Selected Government and Non-Government Web Sites

Monday, December 29th, 2008

Comparison of Legislative Resources on GPO Access and Selected Government and Non-Government Web Sites (PDF; 84 KB)

The goal of this study is to compare legislative information available on GPO Access to that available on selected, relevant Government Web sites and non-Government sites. This analysis compares two separate source bases of Government information to what currently resides on GPO Access. The first includes legislative resources available on external, free Government sites that provide resources to the public at no cost. The second includes legislative resources available on non-Government, commercial, fee-based Web sites. Specifically, this report will examine the following:

  • The availability of legislative resources on all of the databases examined
  • The scope of the resources on each database
  • The source of those resources
  • Additional legislative resources and features exclusive to comparable Web sites.

Source: GPO

Hat tip: FGI blog

New Review Post: The Top 10 Health Search Engines of 2008

Monday, December 29th, 2008

A new post by Hope Leman.

Source: AltSearchEngines

Google Briefs

Monday, December 29th, 2008

+ Google ’set to launch Street View service in the UK in spring (via Daily Mail)

+ Malware threat to Iphones and Google handsets grows (via The Register)

California: More people using libraries in tough times

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

From the Article:

As the economy slides into a recession and families are cutting back on expenses big and small, libraries in the Bay Area and beyond are experiencing a big increase in membership and circulation.

But as demand rises, libraries are also seeing a squeeze in funding. Libraries rely on property taxes, and city coffers everywhere have been hit by the bad economy. Library officials from San Mateo to Marin County are beginning to look at ways to cut costs without reducing services.

Source: S.F. Chronicle

See Also: Washington D.C.: Libraries get tough: No luggage, no sleeping, no fighting