Drawing from John Blyberg’s ILS Customer’s Bill of Rights and
The Social Customer Manifesto, Jenny Levine offers this Online Library User Manifesto:
I want to have a say, so you need to provide mechanisms for this to happen online.
I want to know when something is wrong, and what you’re going to do to fix it.
I [...]
Posted January 25, 2006 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: collaboration, commons, community, conversation, future library, future of libraries, interactivity, jenny levine, libraries, library, manifesto, millennials, online library user manifesto, social software. 2 Comments.
You don’t like the “2.0” moniker? So what. John Blyberg reminds us that “if we’re arguing over semantics, we’ve been derailed.” And Stephen Abram is said to have cautioned us: “when librarians study something to death, we forget that death was not the original goal.”
John Blyberg, Jenny Levine, Stephen Abram, lib20, library 2.0, library20, library, [...]
Posted December 15, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: evolve, future of library, go get evolving, jenny levine, John Blyberg, lib20, libraries, library, library 2.0, library20, Stephen Abram. 2 Comments.
Message from Jenny Levine: opportunity knocks. Some people hear it, others claim it’s just squirrels on the roof.
tags: jenny levine, opportunity, opportunity knocks, squirrels
Posted November 30, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Photoblog, Politics & Controversy. Tags: jenny levine, opportunity, opportunity knocks, squirrels. 3 Comments.
Jenny Levine alerted me to the Pew Internet & American Life Project report on teens as both content creators and consumers.
It turns out that teens, and teen girls especially, are highly active online IMing, sharing photos, blogging, reading and commenting on other’s blogs, and gaming. An especially strong trend in this group is the use [...]
Posted November 8, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: 4cs, collaboration, commons, community, conversation, interactivity, internet, jenny levine, pew internet, pew internet & american life project, pew internet project, social internet, social software, social web, teenagers, teens, youth. 4 Comments.
Jenny Levine, over at The Shifted Librarian, is telling the latest chapter in her long-running struggle with DRM.
Now, I’ve installed a lot of Windows software in my day, so I feel pretty confident in my ability to double-click on an installation file. However, when I try to install [Yahoo Music Engine], I get three screens [...]
Posted July 19, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Blink, Copyrights & Intellectual Property, Technology. Tags: ancient technology, drm, entertainment industry, error message, jenny levine, music engine, problems, windows software, yahoo music. 2 Comments.
Jenny Levine is talking about an example of The Perfect Library Blog over at The Shifted Librarian.
The posts are written in the first person and in a conversational tone, with the author’s first name to help stress the people in the library. The staff isn’t afraid to note problems with the new catalog, the web [...]
Posted July 17, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Blink, Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: blog, blogging, communication, corporate blogging, institutional blogging, jenny levine, librarian, library, library blog, organizational blogging, suggestion, the shifted librarian, transparency, trust building. 2 Comments.
I’ve been talking about it a lot lately, most recently in a comment at LibDev.
In the old world, information companies could create value by limiting access to their content. Most of us have so internalized this scarcity = value theory that we do little more than grumble about the New York Times’ authwall or similar [...]
Posted July 15, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: accessibility, accessible resources, authoritative, electric forest, google, google economy, information, jenny levine, new york times, oclc, scarcity, search engines, the shifted librarian, value, value equation, value theory. 5 Comments.
I think I’ve been avoiding commenting on this issue for weeks because it hits so close to home. First I read it in BiblioAcid, then Jenny Levine picked it up, then Richard Ackerman picked it up at the Science Library Pad: library catalogs are broken, and there’s no amount of adding pictures or fiddling with [...]
Posted May 24, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: conference, iug, jenny levine, library, library catalog, library journal, opac, presentation, richard ackerman, roy tennant, science library, search box, server applications. 2 Comments.