Tom the Librarian

25 April 2008

Why not online civic monuments?

A national online library? If its Google’s, it isn’t even a comprise of corporate America anymore, is it? Can we say proprietary? This AP article, “Scanning world’s every book means turning many, many pages” includes the phrase “books to be included in Google Inc.’s Book Search, a portal …to all the estimated 50 million to 100 million books in the world.” That doesn’t sound theoretical to me; it’s the marriage of capitalism – that “Inc.” and the hubris are inescapable – with the world’s published history and the more I reflect on it and ideas I heard at a talk a year ago, the more I think it’s a civic shame of monumental proportions.

It’s not Google’s’ fault and it’s not libraries’ fault; it’s a failure of national civic leadership and imagination on every level in preserving for SOCIETY and presenting to the world our very heritage said Dr. Siva Vaidhyanathan of New York University on February 22, 2007 in a talk entitled Libraries and Copyright: Hands Off, That’s Mine! Who Owns What, and for How Long?, part of the Boston Athenaeum’s bicentennial lecture series. Civic values got the Boston Public Library built – and filled – and then mimicked throughout America, including a splendid Italianate version in Providence, Rhode Island where I spent many hours during high school. And so what if the BPL’s location served the upper class more ideally than the working classes scattered elsewhere in the city. It was something for all of us to aspire to collectively. Corporate America’s robber barons idealized and then built CIVIC America.

That’s what we really need now in the online world. Civic, not corporate monuments. And it could be done on the cheap, too. Google’s exercise thumbs its nose at the thoroughgoing impoverishment of American society: see what a billion or two could have accomplished if only WE – all of us together – had had the vision. Reminds me of a line I’ve seen in the trailer for Charlie Wilson’s War that could be said of American society: “And you ain’t no Thomas Jefferson, so let’s call it even.” It’s been a long slide into the corporate ether.

19 March 2008

Biodiversity Geek’s Haven – model for the BLC and others?

Folks from the Biodiversity Heritage Library gave a presentation to Boston Library Consortium (BLC) members today about how they are using books and serials scanned from their collections into the Internet Archive (as charter participants in the Open Content Alliance) to create a scholarly portal (geek’s haven) for accessing their content in a variety of interesting ways. The natural science collections they are scanning, some of the oldest yet still currently used scientific literature, lends itself to searching by species and other like names. The most intriguing tool they have developed is to cross-index all the content of the books and journals they have scanned (and are continuing to scan) against the NameBank taxonomic classification system (currently at 10,775,553 records) created by the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, whose library, the MBLHWHOI Library, is also a member of the BLC. As they explained it, names of plants, animals, insects, etc. in scientific literature very much depend upon history and precedence – where does this fit in with what has been observed and classified before? – which sounds to me a lot like the ISI principle of citation history – who cites whom – tracking the growth and development of a scholarly body of literature.

There’s no reason these same principles could not be applied to other scholarly schemes. Someone mentioned, for example, tracking every instance of the words “Tom Sawyer” in fiction not written by Samuel Clemens utilizing a human “namebank” would yield some fascinating results. A multi-type library academic consortium such as the BLC could provide fascinating “windows” into its scanned collection(s) this way. It also strikes me that there are a lot of institutional repository-like lessons to be learned here as well as a striking example of creating a sophisticated web interface using a dazzling variety (“purposeful emerging technology”) of off-the-shelf web tools / software / applications, etc.

Hit more for my detailed notes on today’s meeting-
(more…)

20 July 2007

Hello world!

Filed under: Uncategorized — tomthelibrarian @ 8:08 pm

Time to start blogging -

Today I sent a post to staff pointing out the continued decline in academic library Reference Desk statistics over the past ten years coterminus with the rise of online access and pointing to http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/07/if_libraries_ha.html

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