Archive for the 'SLA 2009' Category

Next Year, New Orleans

ITI Bloggers June 22nd, 2009

byebyeTime to say goodbye to Washington and look forward to next year’s SLA conference in New Orleans. But the Information Today blogging team is trying something new this year. For the first time, we’ll also be blogging at the American Library Association annual conference in Chicago. So tune in here starting July 11th for our ALA coverage.

And see you next year in New Orleans for SLA 2010!

Marydee Ojala, Editor, ONLINE: Exploring Technology & Resources for Information Professionals


Let The Good Times Roll

ITI Bloggers June 22nd, 2009

With SLA in DC setting records for attendance, let’s hope that New Orleans can nextyear2nextyear11show us equally good numbers. Is it too early to think about #SLA2010 for the Twitter tag? Or to speculate about whether Twitter will still be the social networking tool of choice for SLAers? Certainly the party in Washington DC following the business meeting demonstrated the New Orleans spirit, with Mardi Gras characters and food on offer. Let the good times roll!

Marydee Ojala, Editor, ONLINE: Exploring Technology & Resources for Information Professionals


What’s In a Name?

ITI Bloggers June 20th, 2009

As Gloria Zamora reminded me, the association now votes electronically, so SLA members won’t need to be in New Orleans to vote on any potential name change. Which is not a good reason to decide against attending next year’s conference, I should add!

But what might our new name be? I joined the Special Libraries Association years ago and lived through the time when SLA was equated to the Symbionese Liberation Army. Information professional seems to have supplanted librarian in our vocabulary. Yet many members cling to the notion of being a librarian. Maybe incorporate both concepts in a new association name? IPLA for Information Professional Library Association seems a bit redundant.  IAIP for International Association of Information Professionals might work.

What are your ideas for a new name? Inquiring minds want to know. Comment here and send to Leadership {at} sla(.)org.

Marydee Ojala, Editor, ONLINE: Exploring Technology & Resources for Information Professionals


More Scenes From Around the Exhibit Hall

ITI Bloggers June 18th, 2009

The last morning before the exhibit hall closed, I had fun just cruising the aisles to catch some of the exhibitors I’d missed. In the process, I snapped some photos to capture a bit of the diversity.

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The Hoover’s robot was busy chatting up anyone who wandered by. He was quite an engaging fellow. He also entertained during the opening reception.

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There was more to the exhibit hall than digital products. There was fun apparel and accessories.  Stop Falling Productions (www.stopfalling.com) was selling shirts, t-shirts, jackets, socks, pins, earrings, and more. I liked the “talk books to me” shirt and also “Librariantini.” Clever and eye-catching!

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New product news is great, but the chance to have a tarot card reading-now that’s unique! A long line formed to take advantage-and then got to hear about a new directory while waiting. The Leadership Directories, Inc. (www.leadershipdirectories.com) publishes fourteen Yellow Books, each a specialized directory, available in print and as an integrated database known as The Leadership Library. At SLA, the company was introducing its newest online product called Leadership Companies. The business development tool includes contact data for over 100,000 executives and board members at 3,000 of the largest U.S. and global public corporations (plus the largest U.S.-based private companies and high-growth corporations). It will be available on June 22.

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Catchy Name! KnowItAll

ITI Bloggers June 18th, 2009

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I kept seeing folks walk by with a green ribbon on their name tags-KnowItAll. A bit presumptuous I thought, but still kinda cool. So, I asked and then found the booth for Bio-Rad Laboratories, Informatics Division (www.knowitall.com). It seems the company has a unique resource for chemists called KnowItAll U that provides access to spectral data and downloadable software. Since I’m not a chemist, this was mostly lost on me, but I was quite impressed with the software tools and user interface. Plus, I now have a green ribbon myself.

Paula J. Hane

News Bureau Chief, ITI


Nature—Journal of the Century

ITI Bloggers June 18th, 2009

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Nature (www.nature.com), the flagship journal of the Nature Publishing Group (NPG) was named ‘journal of the century’ by the SLA BioMedical & Life Sciences Division (DBIO). The award was presented at the annual DBIO business luncheon. The award was voted for by DBIO’s 686 members. Runners-up included the New England Journal of Medicine, Science, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), and The Lancet.

I stopped by the booth to offer my congratulations and happened to catch Jean Crampon of the USC Libraries who had presented the award (on right in photo) and Becky Fishman, senior marketing manager with NPG. Exciting news!

In conjunction with SLA’s Centennial, DBIO conducted a poll of its members to identify the 100 most influential journals of Biology & Medicine over the last 100 years.  The top 100 journals were announced in March 2009 and are available on the SLA website: http://units.sla.org/division/dbio/publications/resources/dbio100.html.

Paula J. Hane

News Bureau Chief, ITI


Closing Panel Looks to the Future

ITI Bloggers June 18th, 2009

The closing keynote panel was moderated by Public Broadcasting’s Judy Woodruff. The panelists were Robyn Meredith (Forbes in Hong Kong), Neil DeGrasse Tyson (astronomer and director of the Hayden Planetarium), and John Patrick (ex-IBM, blogger, internet visionary).

Judy Woodruff kicked off the discussion by asking, “What’s the state of information gathering today?” Journalism is changing drastically (Meredith), data and information aren’t the same; unbiased journalism isn’t ; need to judge what was interpreted for you; there’s data everywhere but not so much information; which data are not relevant (Tyson), we’re at the beginning; search doesn’t just equal Google; internet empowers us as individuals; optimistic; data will be shared openly through data.gov (Patrick). Librarians job isn’t just research, it’s alerting people to new data (Meredith). We need to have ways to watch the government (Patrick). Government is far less competent than we ever imagined and it doesn’t keep secrets well (Tyson). Guidance by librarians is critical (Tyson). More worried about the private sector than government in terms of private information (Meredith). Under 30s are not concerned about privacy and the dynamics will change as they become management (Tyson). Internet is about power to the people (Patrick). You can be as private as you want to be (Patrick).

 What will be different in years to come? Globalization (Meredith). Science has historically been international and collaborative and the internet makes scientists more productive, but fundamentals haven’t changed (Tyson). Everything has changed (Patrick). If you want a scientifically literate population, you need deeply seductive science projects sponsored by the government; you’re self-driven, it doesn’t matter if you’ve got great science teachers (Tyson). You need passion, a grand vision (Tyson). I’ll give you the fear. China and India are now connected to us at the click of a mouse and has huge pool of educated kids (Meredith). Vision and hard work must go into education, but need culture of sharing, putting coursework on internet (Patrick). Now we have to compete as a country (Meredith).

 Question from Stephen Abram, past-president of SLA, about the dangers inherent in our becoming dependent on one company dominating the internet (Google for search; Facebook for social networking, Twitter for current awareness): The internet levels the playing field. Now you can lease the software, not buy it (Patrick). What ideas remain uninvented that a company could invent and dominate (Tyson).

 Question from Bob Michaelson, Northwestern University, about government disinformation leading to war in Iraq and media’s unquestioning acceptance of information later proven to be false. Judy Woodruf responded that not every journalist missed it, but did say that  mainstream media missed the financial meltdown. She also noted that blogs can be just as opinionated as mainstream media. But there’s the intent of fair reporting in mainstream media (Meredith). The part that’s missing in the blogosphere is reputation. Referential integrity will give us increased confidence (Patrick). Mathematical illiteracy is at the basis of financial meltdown (Tyson).

 In the wrapup of the panelists, Tyson stresssed that conferences give you the opportunity to think about something you’ve never thought of before. Cross pollination brings new thoughts new ideas, particularly internationally.

Marydee Ojala, Editor, ONLINE: Exploring Technology & Resources for Information Professionals


The Business of SLA

ITI Bloggers June 18th, 2009

People attend the SLA conference to learn from speakers at sessions, network with their peers and visit the exhibit booths in the INFO-EXPO. But there’s another side to any association meeting: Running the association as a business. For those unfamiliar with SLA governance, here it is in a nutshell. As a member you can join one chapter (a geographic designation) and one division (a topic designation). For a small additional fee, you can join additional chapters and divisions. I belong to the Indiana chapter and the Europe chapter, for example.

Each chapter and division has a president and president-elect, who attend the conference not just for the learning opportunities but also to fulfil some of their leadership responsibilities. There was a leadership training session on Sunday morning, Chapter Cabinet and Division Cabinet meetings on Tuesday, and the final business meeting of the entire association on Wednesday. I have belonged to SLA for many years and some years are more contentious than others when it comes to association business. This year was delightfully non-contentious, but it’s looking like fireworks are possible next year.

Let’s start with the easy stuff. At the chapter level, SLA has 56 chapters. A Task Force on Chapter Structure survey indicated that several in the US are considering merging, so the number of chapters may decrease. Chapters would like more telecommunications, web conferencing and virtual meetings, sponsored by SLA. At the division level, SLA added a new division last year, the Academic Division, and has a petition to start a new division, one for metadata and taxonomy, this year. Association-wide, SLA now offers Drupal as a content management tool for chapters and divisions that use the SLA server as their hosting site. We have a new membership director (again!), Paula Diaz, who reported that SLA has 10,588 members with a retention rate of 70%, lower than other associations, so some work needs to be done there. The news that SLA’s Communities of Practice were being discontinued met with applause from the leadership.

Now, about the fireworks. Research conducted for the Alignment Project clearly shows, according to SLA President Gloria Zamora, that the name Special Libraries does not align with the outside worlds’ perception of the value information professionals bring to their organizations. Thus, when SLA convenes in 2010 in New Orleans, there will probably be a vote on a name change. The last vote on a name change was, at times, acrimonious. It also failed. This time around, the grounds for the name change will be firmly established by the Alignment Project and its research.

After the business meeting, I asked Gloria what names were on the table. She indicated that potential candidate names couldn’t yet be disclosed. My guess is that, whatever names are selected, the word “information” will be in there. I’m also convinced that any name chosen will not be unaminously accepted by SLA’s 10,588 members.

Marydee Ojala, Editor, ONLINE: Exploring Technology & Resources for Information Professionals


Library Demand Up for Digital Products, Says Ingram Representative

ITI Bloggers June 18th, 2009

Click to Hear Why Library Demand Is Up for Digital Content

Patrick Moore demonstrates newly released myilibrary audio books on an ipod

Patrick Moore demonstrates newly released MyiLibrary audio books on an iPod

Ingram Digital used the occasion of the SLA /09 conference to introduce audio books to its MyiLibrary e-content service.

The audio books can be downloaded by library patrons onto their windows media player devices and iPods.  A DRM system is used to automatically expire titles at the end of their loan period.

Ingram representative Pat Moore said that demand from libraries for ditial products is up this year, due to a need to serve more users who, in difficult times, are visiting libraries instead of going to bookstores.  Hear how he described it in this 45-second audio clip.

Dick Kaser, VP, Content, Information Today, Inc.


Registration Numbers Way Up!

ITI Bloggers June 17th, 2009

In a really, really tough year, with companies cutting back travel, jobs, and libraries, the news from the SLA conference is truly amazing. Total registration stands at 5,856, from 30 countries, as of today. That’s up by 16% from last year and the highest count in six years. Of those, 1,130 are first time attendees and 1,826 are exhibitors. Over in the exhibition area, SLA’s INFO-EXPO, there are 462 booth representing 299 companies, 48 of them new exhibitors. A fantastic conference for SLA!

 

Marydee Ojala, Editor, ONLINE: Exploring Technology & Resources for Information Professionals


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