Archive for December, 2008

Facebook Generation Learning Social, Technical Skills Online

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

From a news release:

Worried about the amount of time today’s kids spend texting, chatting, blogging, gaming and Facebook-ing? Don’t.

Rather than fear the time young people devote to technological pursuits, there are many reasons for adults to embrace and even facilitate youth engagement with digital media, according to Florida State University’s Lisa Tripp, who was a member of a team of researchers who recently completed the most extensive qualitative study ever done on youth media use in the United States.

“While many adults worry that children are wasting time online, texting or playing video games, our study found that these activities have captured teens’ attention because they provide avenues for extending social worlds, self-directed learning and independence,” she said.

Tripp, an assistant professor in the College of Information, supervised research and data collection at several Los Angeles middle schools that serve primarily low-income Latino youth to find out how the students were using digital media technology both at home and at school. Her research became a part of the Digital Youth Project, a joint effort of the University of Southern California and the University of California, Berkeley.

The three-year study was part of a $50 million project on digital and media learning funded by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Altogether, researchers involved in the project interviewed more than 800 children and young adults and conducted more than 5,000 hours of online observations. Tripp also is one of the co-authors of the final report on the project, which will be published by MIT Press as a book called “Hanging Out, Messing Around, Geeking Out: Living and Learning with New Media.”

Source: Newswise

Enterprise Search: An Interview with the CEO of Autonomy

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

An interview with CEO, Jason Stamper.

Source: CBR

Building The Next Generation Of Text Messaging

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

From the article:

CTIA has laid the groundwork for Enhanced Messaging, which is similar to SMS but enables users to include sound, animation, and presence in messages.

Source: Information Week

Google Briefs

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

+ Is Anyone Using Google Apps? (via PC World)

+ Will Google and Microsoft Own the Web? (via PC World)

+ Google Ads Lead to Phony Apps (via Washington Post)

+ New Google Docs Gadget a good offline step, falls short (via Ars Technica)

Top 10 Best and Worst Performing Real Estate Markets Identified…and other full-text reports on DocuTicker

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Posted 22 December 2008 on DocuTicker:
+ Top 10 Best and Worst Performing Real Estate Markets Identified (First American CoreLogic)
+ U.S. Chamber Releases Recommendations for U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Reform (U.S. Chamber of Commerce)
+ Most 401(k) Savers Are Staying the Course (Investment Company Institute)

Dow Jones Launches New iPhone Mobile Application for Sales Professionals (It’s Free!)

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the InfoToday News Break:
Dow Jones & Co. (www.dowjones.com) announced its new mobile application, Dow Jones Sales Triggers for iPhone and iPod Touch, available on the Apple App Store. Dow Jones Sales Triggers gives mobile professionals access to up-to-the-minute intelligence about business changes such as management moves, mergers, and new investments. This is particularly advantageous for sales professionals who need to stay on top of prospects and customers in their territories

Source: ITI

Europe: Culture vultures go beyond, way beyond Google

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the report:

European researchers have developed an optimised search system that can access an enormous quantity of cultural heritage resources that reside online. Current technology like Google takes a scattergun approach, dishing up dozens of links of sometimes variable quality.

“Right now, if you do a search online, you get lots of irrelevant overload,” explains Pasquale Savino, coordinator of the MultiMatch project, which set out to create state-of-the-art search technology for cultural heritage information.

The MultiMatch system targets searches using a variety of smart search methods. Better yet, the concept can be applied to other fields, like sport, politics, economics and technology.

“Consider that many portals already offer a specialised catalogue, but in many cases the selection and classification of data is done manually, while the MultiMatch platform can perform this work automatically,” Savino reveals.

Direct to MultiMatch Project

Source: Phys.org

NY Times apologizes for publishing hoax letter purportedly from mayor of Paris

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the article:

The New York Times admits it published a hoax letter purportedly from the mayor of Paris.

In the fake letter, Mayor Bertrand Delanoe criticizes Caroline Kennedy’s bid for a U.S. Senate seat as “appalling” and “not very democratic.”

In a note posted Monday on its website, the Times admits the letter was a fake.

+ Direct to NY Times Response About the Fake Letter to the Editor

+ Read the Fake Letter

Source: AP

Louisiana: St. Tammany Parish library staff must turn away holiday treats

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the NOLA.com article:

After asking the state Board of Ethics last month whether library staff can accept inexpensive and homemade Christmas gifts from grateful patrons, St. Tammany Parish library officials last week received the board’s response: Bah, humbug.

Even small gifts, such as “cakes, pies, houseplants, etc., from patrons of the library for their performance of the library employees’ duties” are off-limits, according to an advisory opinion issued by the ethics board.

Any employee of a Louisiana public library who receives such a gift from a library patron needs to “return the cookies to the person and say that, ‘I cannot accept these cookies under the ethics law,’ ” said Aneatra Boykin, staff attorney for the ethics board.

Source: New Orleans Times-Picayune

New Edition Released: Opera’s state of the Mobile Web report

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the report:

Fast facts

- In its final State of the Mobile Web report in 2008, Opera reviews the top sites and top phones for Opera Mini in both Europe and North America. Russia and Ukraine lead Europe, followed closely by the United Kingdom. The full report is available from http://www.opera.com/smw/.

- Released by AT&T in early November, the BlackBerry Bold made an immediate impact and is high on the list of top handsets preferred by Opera Mini users in the US.

- Facebook and MySpace are locked in a battle for mobile social networking supremacy in the United States. For the first time this year, Facebook has surpassed MySpace on the top 10 list in the U.S.

- Facebook is also successful in Europe, where other social networks such as Nasza Klasa in Poland and vKontakte in Russia and Ukraine, are consistently the top sites in their respective countries.

- Opera Mini users viewed more than 5.7 billion pages in November. Since October, page views have gone up 12.1%. Since November 2007, this number is up 303%.

- Data transfers also increased in line with page views. In November, Opera Mini users generated more than 82.9 million MB of data for operators worldwide. Since October, the data consumed went up by 12.5%. Data in Opera Mini is compressed 90% on average. If this data were uncompressed, Opera Mini users would have viewed over 829 million MB of data in November. Since November 2007, data traffic is up 463%.

Direct to Full Text Report

Source: Opera Software

Mozilla CEO: Ties with Google ‘complicated’ since Chrome

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the article:
Mozilla has a “reasonable” relationship with long-time partner Google Inc., but it’s gotten complicated since Google launched its own browser, according to Mozilla’s chief executive.

“We have a fine and reasonable relationship,” John Lilly, Mozilla’s CEO, said in an interview last week. “But I’d be lying if I said that things weren’t more complicated than they used to be.”

Source: Computerworld

New York State: Libraries brace for proposed state cuts

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the news story:

With New York state looking to cuts costs wherever it can, many state agencies and organizations are scrambling to make-up the difference. Libraries are part of that cut.

Libraries face an 18 percent cut in next year’s budget which is $18 million. Next year’s proposed cut is on top of the three percent cut libraries dealt with this year. The drop brings state aid to levels not seen since 1993.

Source: WYSR

Library and Archives Canada Connects Canadians to Their Irish Roots: New Genealogical Records Available Online

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the news release:

Library and Archives Canada is pleased to announce that its partner, the National Archives of Ireland, has launched the next important phase of an online census research tool for the Irish counties of Antrim, Kerry, and Down for 1911. The census records for all counties for 1911 and for 1901 will be made available online throughout 2009.

Library and Archives Canada signed an agreement with the National Archives of Ireland in December 2005 and the two institutions have been working to make the censuses of Ireland for 1901 and 1911 accessible online, free of charge. Library and Archives Canada’s contribution included digitizing microfilm reels, linking images to the database and making the records searchable by name.

Direct to Web Site

See Also: Canadian Genealogy Centre

See Also: Irish Census Online and the virtual exhibition on life in Ireland in 1911 (via National Archives Ireland)

Source: Library and Archives Canada

Project Gutenberg Release Mobile Edition eBooks

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the blog post:

PG Mobile is going to be a new addition to gutenberg.org, which will allow mobile/cell phone users to download and read eBooks. The files will be available on the normal download page of any PG eBook.

Source: Project Gutenberg News (via Library Stuff)

Mobile social networking use grows 182% over 2007

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the news report:

The volume of U.S. wireless subscribers who accessed social networks via mobile device increased 182 percent between September 2007 and October 2008 according to a new consumer study conducted by research firms The Kelsey Group and ConStat. In all, 9.6 percent of U.S. subscribers ages 18 and over connected with a social network via mobile handset in October 2008, compared to just 3.4 percent in September 2007.

Source: Fierce Mobile Content

International Internet Preservation Consortium Announces 2008 Member Profile Survey Results

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the news release:

The International Internet Preservation Consortium (IIPC) announces its first comprehensive survey of members and their web preservation activities.

In 2008, a survey was developed to gather information about the members of the International Internet Preservation Consortium: their web preservation program’s scope, staff, tools, and policies that affect their activities. The IIPC Member Profile Survey opened to members on March 7, 2008, with preliminary results presented at an April 2008 General Assembly meeting in Canberra, Australia.

A summary of survey results has been published for a wider web archiving and digital library community presents answers to portions of the original survey, and is available on the IIPC website. The survey results cover topics such as what type of institutions belong to the IIPC and the maturity of their web archiving programs, the types of staff who are working on web archiving in their institutions. The survey asked questions about the scope of IIPC members’ web archives, whether they publish selection guidelines, and what metrics they use to report on the archiving activities. The survey results also reports on what crawlers and curator tools are being used by IIPC members, whether they provide access and description for research use, and legal issues and policies related to copyright.

Direct to Full Summary (14 pages; PDF)

Source: The International Internet Preservation Consortium

BitTorrent seeks to make popularity equal profit

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the article:

BitTorrent, a once high-flying Internet startup, is now struggling for survival after giving back millions of dollars in venture financing, laying off most of its staff — including its CEO — and adopting a new business model.

Source: SF Business Journal

U.S. Census Offers Up Fast Facts About the 2008 Holiday Season

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

From the report:

The holiday season is a time for gathering and celebrating with friends and family, gift-giving, reflection and thanks. To commemorate this time of year, the U.S. Census Bureau presents the following holiday-related fact and figures from its data collection.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

News Briefs

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

News Briefs

+ NEH Awards $15.7 Million for 248 Humanities Projects (National Endowment for the Humanities)

+ New ACRL publication: Academic Library Research: Perspectives and Current Trends (ALA)

+ Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Announces Pilot Grant Program to Improve Internet Connections in Public Libraries (MarketWatch)

+ Library program brings Iraqi refugees together (Louisville Courier-Journal)

+ New York proposes taxing iTunes, other downloads (Computerworld)

Online Rebel Publishes Millions of Dollars in U.S. Court Records for Free

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

Online Rebel Publishes Millions of Dollars in U.S. Court Records for Free

If you want to search federal court documents, it’s not a problem. Just apply online for an account, and the government will issue you a user name and password.

Through the postal service.

And once you log in, the government’s courthouse search engine known as Public Access to Court Electronic Records or PACER, will charge you 8 cents a page to read documents that are in the public domain — a fee that earned the federal judiciary $50 million in profits in 2006.

With its high cost and limited functionality, critics call the system an absurdity in the era of Google, blogs and Wikipedia, where information is free and bandwidth, disk space and processing power are nearly so.

“The PACER system is the most broken part of our federal legal mechanism,” says Carl Malamud, who runs the nonprofit open-government group Public.Resource.Org .”They have a mainframe mentality.”

Now Malamud is doing something about it. He’s asking lawyers to donate their PACER documents one by one, which he then classifies and bundles into ZIP files published for free at his organization’s website. The one-year-old effort has garnered him 20 percent of all the files on PACER, including all decisions from federal appeals courts over the last 50 years.

Source: Wired