Tuesday, 30 July 2013

An Unexpected Price War Is Making Amazon Book Prices Lower Than Ever


Amazon appears to have slashed the prices of its books, thanks to an Overstock.com promo in which it priced all of its books at least 10 percent below Amazon.
The aggressive pricing strategy has been enough to see Bezos & Co. cut the prices of hardcover book by between 50 percent and 65 percent compared to the usual cover price. Those kinds of discounts have never been seen on Amazon before; typically, it knocks around 40 to 50 percent off as a maximum.

Today’s Computer Commons is Tomorrow’s Card Catalog

Anyone who worked in an academic research library in the 1970s-1980s remembers the vast amount of library real estate devoted to the physical card catalog. For those newer-to-the-profession colleagues who are unable to picture this – and those who prefer to forget it – here’s a reminder:

Thursday, 25 July 2013

Say Goodbye to the Tech Sounds You’ll Never Hear Again


The forward march of technology has a drum beat. These days, it's custom text-message alerts, or your friend saying "OK, Glass" every five minutes like a tech-drunk parrot. And meanwhile, some of the most beloved sounds are falling out of the marching band.
The boops and beeps of bygone technology can be used to chart its evolution. From the zzzzzzap of the Tesla coil to the tap-tap-tap of Morse code being sent via telegraph, what were once the most important nerd sounds in the world are now just historical signposts. But progress marches forward, and for every irritatingly smug Angry Pigs grunt we have to listen to, we move further away from the sound of the Defender ship exploding.
Let's celebrate the dying cries of technology's past. The follow sounds are either gone forever, or definitely on their way out. Bow your heads in silence and bid them a fond farewell.

How Google Rediscovered the 19th Century

Around 2008, I began to notice an interesting fact: Google Books was reshaping the way I did research. I was on sabbatical and had more time than usual to pursue various projects. Like most historians, I went to libraries and archives in search of paper evidence, but I also delighted in digital discoveries, happily downloading my best finds. At the end of that year, I left my sabbatical office carrying a computer filled with the virtual books that are rapidly becoming the bread and butter of teaching and scholarship.

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

A library is not just about books: it's also a place for the vulnerable


The Library Campaign has accused the government of hiding the exact impact of cuts that could cause the closure of a further 400 UK libraries by 2016. As a long-term supporter of the campaign to keep libraries open, I've signed petitions and shared articles promoting the virtues of free access to books. I believe in the power of words to transform lives – everyone should be able to enjoy the education, knowledge and escapism books offer. Yet until recently, I didn't understand libraries' true value, and just how great their loss would be for society.
I have fond memories of my first library. Housed in a wooden cabin raised on bricks, it was the only source of books in the north Hertfordshire village I grew up in. I'd run up the ramp, the drumming of my feet on it heralding my reunion with stories. I read from one end of the library to the other. It smelled of dust jackets and hot chipboard. Libraries were a place of magic. My gran, who lived in a small town, had a mobile library that visited every fortnight. I'd offer to carry her Mills & Boon volumes, knowing I'd get to select an extra book for myself.

Are Bookless Libraries A Good Thing?


Later this year an all-digital library will open in Bexar County, Texas. It will have 100 e-readers available for lending and an e-book collection of over 10,000 titles. Staff will also teach basic computer skills. This library (dubbed BiblioTech, in a play on biblioteca, the Spanish for library) is intended to be the prototype for a county-wide system of all-digital branches.
It's a well-intentioned effort to provide library services to over a million people who live outside San Antonion city limits, and thus can't use the city's public library system. The digital focus is also intended to save space: e-books don't require shelves.
"Think of an Apple store," says Judge Nelson Wolff, who spearheaded the initiative.
"Think of an Apple store." It's a tired phrase journalists and spokespersons use repeatedly to gush over any library facility without physical books, such as Cleveland Public Library's TechCentral. It's a way of making a library sound cool and up-to-date. And it's a reflection of how poor a job libraries do promoting themselves that everyone thinks it's easier to leech off Apple's popularity than actually explain what libraries do and are. In any case, I'm finding the comparison a bit ironic now that Apple has been found guilty of involvement in an e-book price-fixing scheme.
As for the idea of an all-digital public library? It's rash, at best. The current relationship between libraries and e-book publishers resembles negotiations for an arranged marriage for the children of two medieval royal families who hate each other. It might bring them together, it might only delay a protracted war. Consider the recent relationship of library systems with three large publishers: Random House, HarperCollins, and Simon &Schuster.
At first, many publishers refused to sell e-books to libraries at all. It took months of negotiations to reach the present state at which Random House will sell e-books to libraries, but only at two to three times the price it charges individuals. HarperCollins sells e-books to libraries, but they disappear after 26 checkouts, which the publisher argues is the number of checkouts that damage a physical book badly enough that a library would need to buy a replacement copy. Longtime holdout Simon & Schuster has finally agreed to a "one-year pilot program" of selling e-books to libraries--but only to the New York Public, Brooklyn and Queens library systems. Many of the libraries that are currently providing e-books to their communities have to purchase them on a subscription basis--one bad fiscal year and their collection is gone.
In other words, there's no agreed-upon model for providing e-books to libraries. What arrangements that exist are tentative at best. It's also telling that Sarah Houghton, director of the San Rafael Public Library and a well-known promoter of digital media, told NPR any current plans for an all-digital library are "premature."
Aside from such practicalities, even many so-called "digital natives" may not welcome the future embodied by BiblioTech. A recent Pew survey of Americans under age 30 found that they are still as likely as older Americans to read paper books and that they're more likely than older Americans to spend time in the library, as opposed to going just to get books and DVDs and leave. Younger Americans identified the library as a place to read, to study and spend time with friends. Think about it: does anyone really hang out in their local Apple store?
Full disclosure: despite accusations of being a Luddite, Kevin O'Kelly currently has 18 ebooks on his iPad.

Tuesday, 23 July 2013

The key to cleaning up the internet is tackling the darknets, not letting censorship in by the back door


The latest proposals to lock down the UK internet in the name of preventing child pornography are at best a misunderstanding of how the dark side of the internet works, and at worst a basis for a censorship infrastructure that could make the Great Firewall of China look like a leaky sieve.
In an interview with the BBC, prime minister David Cameron proposed that search engines should block certain terms, warning users of the consequences of searching for those terms.
While that's all very well, it's an approach that's not going to stop the real trade in illegal images — which never touches the big search engines, and hides behind encryption and custom-built networks that Peter Biddle and three other Microsoft engineers christened "darknets" in their 2002 paper. That flaw makes the proposals both misguided and dangerous, as the Open Rights Group notes in its considered response.

Why librarians are needed more than ever in the 21st century


Over the last decade, which is less than a blink of an eye in the history of the human race, it’s all changed. And we’ve gone from a world in which there is too little information, in which information is scarce, to a world in which there is too much information, and most of it is untrue or irrelevant. You know, the world of the Internet is the world of information that is not actually so. It’s a world of information that just isn’t actually true, or if it is true, it’s not what you needed, or it doesn’t actually apply like that, or whatever. And you suddenly move into a world in which librarians fulfill this completely different function.
We’ve gone from looking at a desert, in which a librarian had to walk into the desert for you and come back with a lump of gold, to a forest, to this huge jungle in which what you want is one apple. And at that point, the librarian can walk into the jungle and come back with the apple. So I think from that point of view, the time of librarians, and the time of libraries—they definitely haven’t gone anywhere.

Monday, 22 July 2013

Is Listening to Audio Books Really the Same as Reading?


Opinions among book lovers differ as to what it means to read “Ulysses” through ear buds on the drive to work. On the book Web site Goodreads, literature buffs both gush (“I love audio books for the times when I have brain power available but can’t hold a book”) and disparage the practice (“I can’t really listen to audio books. I don’t think I retain as much that way, plus I get distracted with other things.”) The ever-efficient readers of the Marginal Revolution blog plugged audio books’ utility as an accompaniment to exercise — but find them less effective for longer, more involved tomes.
So on an intellectual level, is listening to a book really just as good as reading it?

Amazon vs. your public library


 Amazon's dominance in digital books is under perpetual attack by Google (GOOG) and Apple (AAPL). Now you can add another threat to the list: the public library. That's what an analyst from Barclays suggested in a recent research report. Consumers will likely avoid buying e-books if they can borrow them from the library for free.
"As e-reader users become more familiar with the library system's free alternative, and as libraries reduce the friction associated with borrowing e-books, we believe digital content revenue growth at Amazon may soften," said Anthony DiClemente, a Barclays analyst.


New future ahead for e-book costs


I've often wondered why electronic book prices are so high.

Maybe I'm oversimplifying, but for e-books, you need to pay the author, the publishing house, and the e-book distributor.

I feel like I better understand the cost of printed books. There is a cost to physically printing something – paper costs, bindings, shipping – all these things add up. Plus, there's still the author, the publishing house and the distributor, too. When I factor in all those pieces, $14 for a paperback makes a little more sense.

But $14 for an e-book? I don't understand that at all.

Read more:

Sunday, 21 July 2013

Retirement age, pay scale fixed by UGC not binding on state


The Supreme  has held that retirement age and pay scale fixed by University Grants Commission(UGC) for professors are not binding for universities run by the states. 

A bench headed by Chief Justice Altamas Kabir(since retired) held that there would be no automatic application of UGC recommendations for state universities and it is for a state government to take a decision. 

Friday, 19 July 2013

WHAT DOES THE APPLE E-BOOK RULING REALLY MEAN?


Apple’s defeat in last week’s anti-trust suit proves there’s something rotten at the tech-giant’s core, but the implications extend throughout the industry.  

Apple’s fight with Amazon over e-books reveals its manipulation of prices and its unwillingness to surrender profit.  Last week a US federal judge found that Apple had violated antitrust laws by conspiring with publishers to raise e-book prices. The case, which was brought by the US Department of Justice, has been followed by the publishing industry with a fanaticism not seen since Fifty Shades of Grey.

While five – Macmillan, Penguin, Hachette, HarperCollins, and Simon & Schuster – of the Big Six publishers accused of colluding with Apple settled before the trial, Apple gallantly decided to go it alone, insisting they’d done nothing wrong.

THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE BOOK COVER

Getting to design your own book cover is the sort of ultimately maddening power that probably shouldn’t be entrusted to vain mortals. It’s a little like getting to choose your own face. What kind of face would best express your inner self? Maybe more important, what kind of face will make other people like or respect or want to sleep with you? Do these two hypothetical faces bear any resemblance to each other? Can you imagine a face that would combine their best features?

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

More Vendors Help Libraries Stream Video


Since the beginning of 2013, four major library vendors have announced the launch of new or expanded streaming services that will enable patrons to view movies and television shows at their library or at home using computers, tablets,smart TVs, or any device equipped with a web browser.
Most recently, Library Ideas debuted its new Freegal Movies and Television service at the 2013 American Library Association (ALA) Annual conference in Chicago. Formal announcements regarding whose content Freegal will stream are still pending, but three major studios are involved. The service will go live this month with access to 1,100 feature films and 2,500 television episodes, according to Library Ideas co-founder Brian Downing.

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

How Scholastic Sells Literacy To Generations Of New Readers

Chances are you have had contact with Scholastic Publishing at some point in your life: You might have read their magazines in school, or bought a book at one of their book fairs, or perhaps you've read Harry Potter or The Hunger Games? From its humble beginning as publisher of a magazine for high schoolers, Scholastic has become a $2 billion business and one of the biggest children's book publishers in the world.

Flipkart beefs up to take on Amazon

When  major  decided to hold a press conference last week to announce its biggest fund-raising, the event added an additional air of mystery around the company. Co-founders Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal were for the first time addressing the media ever since the online retailer, best known for selling discounted books, went live in 2007. What's the deal, people tracking the sector asked. Some even tried to guess if the announcement had any links with the entry of American online retailer  into India recently. After all, talk of Amazon buying into Flipkart has been doing the rounds for long, although the two Bansals have denied it many times before.

Monday, 15 July 2013

Column: Students realize long-term benefits from summer library program


As the building block for all learning, educators, researchers and parents agree that time spent reading during the summer pays significant dividends for children.
When children read, taxpayers also receive value because teachers can spend less time each fall helping students catch up, and more time moving ahead with new material and skills.

Tuesday, 9 July 2013

As Competition Wanes, Amazon Cuts Back Discounts

Jim Hollock’s first book, a true-crime tale set in Pennsylvania, got strong reviews and decent sales when it appeared in 2011. Now “Born to Lose” is losing momentum — yet Amazon, to the writer’s intense frustration, has increased the price by nearly a third.
“At this point, people need an inducement,” said Mr. Hollock, a retired corrections official. “But instead of lowering the price, Amazon is raising it.”

Monday, 8 July 2013

Redefining the boundaries of knowledge management


Knowledge management (KM) as a formal discipline has been widely adopted and practised by several organisations over the years. In the early days of KM being implemented in the organisations,
explicit knowledge or structured knowledge, that is, knowledge as practised through processes and documentation around them was given a lot of importance. As
organisations grew and their processes matured, more and more explicit knowledge got shared and improved upon from time to time for the common good of the organisation.

Thursday, 4 July 2013

10 Google Reader Alternatives That Will Ease Your RSS Pain

Google Reader is on its deathbed, slated to meet its end on July 1st. Its demise has been looming in the distance for a while, so this should come as no surprise. And while this is certainly a time of mourning, there's the unseemly business of finding a replacement. Here's a list of platform agnostic alternatives that should help make the transition as painless as possible. We're sorry for your loss.

Google's Library in the Sky Grows


According to Reuters, Google has beaten back the Author's Guild regarding the helter-skelter scanning of books by the search giant in conjunction with the big libraries. The article begins:
Google Inc. notched a legal victory in its bid to create the world's largest digital books library, winning the reversal of a court order that had allowed authors challenging the project to sue as a group. A panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York said Circuit Judge Denny Chin prematurely certified a class of authors without first deciding if the "fair use" defense under U.S. copyright law allowed Google to display snippets of books.


Rangayana plans drama books library

 has embarked on a novel project titled  wherein it will collect the  and other books related to theatre from houses and maintain them in the library.

Rangayana director Subhas Narendra on Tuesday said the Rangayana is aiming to set up a full-fledged library at its premises to give a boost for new experiments in the field of theatre.

Wednesday, 3 July 2013

UGC to incentivise teachers and researchers through special grant


The University Grants Commission has invited proposals from universities for incentivisation of teachers for various academic and research activities through a special grant. It has invited proposals for financial assistance to universities under the 12th Five Year Plan to encourage teachers and researchers.
As per the UGC circular, “UGC is providing financial assistance to the universities for incentivasation of teachers, subject/discipline based association of organisation of various academic and research activities during 12th plan.”
“....in order to encourage teachers and researchers to participate in conference / seminars / workshops and to present papers leading to publication wherever possible,” it says.
Out of 189 universities from whom proposals have been invited 54 are from four states of southern India. UGC has invited proposals from 19 universities from Andhra Pradesh followed by 15 from Tamil Nadu, 13 from Karnataka and seven from Kerala.
While there are 36 universities from four states of western India with proposals invited from as many as 16 universities from Maharashtra, 11 from Gujarat, eight from Rajasthan and one from Goa.
It has invited proposals from nine universities from Haryana, six from Punjab, five from Jammu and Kashmir, three from Himachal Pradesh, 14 from Uttar Pradesh and three and two from Chandigarh and Delhi, respectively thereby totalling 42 from northern India.
From central India it has invited 15 proposals, 11 from Madhya Pradesh and four from Chhattisgarh.  
From east and north eastern part of India it has invited proposals from 12 universities of West Bengal, 11 of Bihar, three from Assam and nine from Odisha.
All the universities have been asked to submit their proposals by the end of July 2013.
 

 
Nitin S Joshi
Librarian
MAEER’s MIT School of Management (MITSOM)
Kothrud, Pune 411038
M- 09922587907
Direct Line- 020-30273597

Focus on People, Not Tools | The User Experience

Librarianship has lost its focus—our professional concern for people has been eclipsed by a pre­occupation with collections and technology. This is understandable. Historically, libraries have been centered on bringing the world to our members through our collections. This problem of access was important to help solve, meeting a vital societal need. Likewise, our focus on information technologies and the web is natural, too. Throughout the years, these tools have presented some outstanding challenges, though generally they have aided tremendously in our mission to expand access to accumulated cultural knowledge and output. But our fixation on collections and technology is no longer serving us—nor our members.

Amazon Patents ‘DVD Extras’ for E-Books


As far as media delivery goes, e-books are pretty flat. You get the book and maybe some notes or background info from the publisher, and that’s pretty much it.
That’s not good enough for Amazon. The company was just awarded a patent, which it originally applied for on November 24, 2010, describing a way to enhance your electronic reading experience with more personalized content — not just from publishers, but from your friends as well.

Tuesday, 2 July 2013

MU to Get heritage tag and fat fund for being 150+ years old

New Delhi: Universities across the country that are more than 100 years old will receive special privileges and a fat financial grant from the human resource development ministry (HRD).

The University of Mumbai is among those being considered for the ‘heritage’ status. And this will be done under a new scheme approved by the ministry where universities will be given ‘special heritage status’, which will entitle them to exclusive benefits such as exemption from certain government rules and regulations in matters of governance, appointment of the head of the university, appointment of faculty, teachers and staff. 

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Lending library continues to grow


MONROE — 
When it opened in 2005, the Monroe Lending Library attracted only 75 members to its 1,300-volume collection housed in a trailer behind Monroe Elementary School.
But the library, which only opened a total of six hours a week, began to grow through the work of volunteers.
Today, the Monroe Lending Library houses more than 15,000 works for its 2,210 members. It also has a permanent location at 6 East Ave. and is now open 48 hours each week.

Rupee slide: Libraries may axe foreign publications


Sustained weakness in the  has posed a challenge to the country's academic institutions. With the rupee around 60 a dollar, the cost of foreign books and journals are feared to escalate. The recent fall in the  has prompted libraries of many premier institutes to either reconsider orders for foreign books and journals or look for a local alternative.

This, according to experts, has raised concerns about the quality of academic output from institutions.

Though most libraries in the country are associated with the University Grants Commission () for online journals, many of them still remain vulnerable to currency fluctuations due to their dependence on international periodicals and books.

Eldis


Eldis provides more than 26,000 full text documents in development, policy, practice and research.
It maintains an ever-growing collection of editorially selected and abstracted full-text, online documents from more than 7,500 different publishers. All documents are available free of charge

Monday, 1 July 2013

Building Career and College Readiness Skills:


EDUCATORS ARE HIGHLY FAMILIAR WITH THE ADVANTAGES AND CHALLENGES
ASSOCIATED WITH USING THE INTERNET AS A LEARNING TOOL

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On The Death Of Google Reader And The Future Of Reading

You can't say they didn't warn you. On Monday, Google Reader will no longer be available. The search behemoth is putting its RSS reader to rest, leaving millions of dedicated users scrambling to find other platforms for organization of their news feeds and content exploration.

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