Google Tag Manager

Search Library Soup

Loading

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

World's Best Libraries, The Hindu

Discover the world


BOND WITH BOOKS: The main reading room of the Library of Congress, Washington D.C. Photographs: In the Carol M. Highsmith Archive, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division
BOND WITH BOOKS: The main reading room of the Library of Congress, Washington D.C. Photographs: In the Carol M. Highsmith Archive, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division

A library is a wonderful place, where you can lose yourself in a breathtaking world of science, travel, fiction and more. Here is a walk through some of the best libraries in the world.
It was Harold Edward Holt, Prime Minister of Australia, who said, in 1966, during a stone laying ceremony of a library that, “We cannot understand the present or plan for the future without the knowledge of the past.” How true! This brings us to looking at some of the great libraries of the world.
Scattered across the great continents, they are where some of the world's greatest collections of documents, books and manuscripts lie, to be read, seen and researched. What they have include print, audio, and visual materials, as maps, prints, documents, microform, CDs, cassettes, videotapes, DVDs, video games, e-books, audio-books and other electronic resources.
Yale University Library:
The first in the list is theYale University Library, at New Haven, Connecticut, is a part of the Yale University. It is said to be the second-largest academic library in North America (after Harvard) and has about 13 million volumes. This also makes it “the fifth largest library collection in the U.S.”.
Some of its specialised collections include: the ‘Babylonian Collection,' which has the largest collection of cuneiform inscriptions in the U.S., clay tablets in all sizes and shapes, stamp and cylinder seals, the complete library in the fields of Assyriology (the study of ancient Mesopotamia) and Hittitology, and early manuscripts and rare books in literature, theology, history, and the natural sciences. Another section, called the ‘Divinity Library Special Collections,' has records of Christian missionary activities. Further, there are: the ‘Government Documents and Information Center' (documents from the U.S., Canadian governments, United Nations and the European Union.), the ‘Lewis Walpole Library' (18th Century English books, manuscripts, prints, drawings, watercolours and paintings); the ‘Lillian Goldman Law Library' (rare books on Anglo-American common law materials; the ‘Manuscripts and Archives,' which looks after material on the U.S., Latin America, South Africa, East Asia, the former Soviet Union and the Middle East.); a ‘ Holocaust Testimonies' section; a ‘ world map' collection (from the 15th Century); a ‘Medical Historical Library' (on the history of medicine); a ‘Music Library Special Collection' (early publications of opera scores, chamber music, and works for keyboard and plucked-string instruments); ‘ Historical Sound Recordings,' the very famous ‘Peabody Museum of Natural History'; the ‘Yale Center for British Art'; the ‘Yale University Art Gallery' and the ‘Yale Collection of Musical Instruments.' That is truly a very impressive stock in a library.
The New York Public Library:
Historian David McCullough described the New York Public Library as “one of the five most important libraries in the United States” — others being the Library of Congress, the Boston Public Library, and the university libraries of Harvard and Yale. With over 16 million volumes, it is said to be the third largest public library in the U.S., behind the Library of Congress and the Boston Public Library. It originated in the 19th Century and has a very interesting history. It advertises itself with a one-liner: “In fact, the Library has but one criterion for admission: curiosity.”
It calls itself “one of the great knowledge institutions of the world, with its myriad collections ranking with those of the British Library, the Library of Congress, and the Bibliothèque nationale de France.” The library's 90 locations include four research centres that look at the humanities and social sciences; the performing arts; black history and culture; and business and industry. It stores about 65 million items, which even the visually handicapped can access, and holds exhibitions and programmes. The library's collection of old newspapers includes the New York Atlas. It also has historic children's materials, including the original stuffed animals that inspired the “Winnie-the-Pooh” children's classics.
Russian State Library:
The national library of Russia, located in Moscow,is the largest in the country. It is said to store more than 43 million items including over 17 million books, 13 million journals, 350 thousand music scores and sound records, 150,000 maps, and other items in 247 global languages.
Harvard University Library:
The Harvard University Library system covers more than 70 libraries, with nearly 17 million volumes. It is said to be the oldest library system in the U.S., and the largest academic as well as the largest private library system in the world. Some of its collections form an important part of “Google Books Library Project.”
British Library, London:
It asks readers, visitors and researchers to explore its 14 million books, 9,20,000 journal and newspaper titles, 58 million patents, three million sound recordings, and much more in hundreds of subject areas. It gets a copy of every publication produced in the U.K. and Ireland. Its collection includes over 150 million items, in most known languages, with three million new items added every year, Its sound archive has recordings from 19th-century cylinders, to CD, DVD and MD recordings. It has eight million stamps and other philatelic items. All this is kept on 625 km of shelves! It says that if a visitor reads five items each day, it would take him over 80,000 years to see its entire collection. It also operates the world's largest document delivery service. Its treasures include the Magna Carta, Leonardo da Vinci's notebook and first edition of The Times, from March 18, 1788. In addition it has material over 3,000 years old, that include Chinese oracle bones.
Deutsche Bibliothek:
The German National Library or the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek or just DNB) is the national bibliographic centre for the Federal Republic of Germany. Its task is to collect and document all German and German-language publications from 1913, foreign publications about Germany, translations of German works, and the works of German-speaking emigrants published abroad between 1933 and 1945. It has a major role in the development of international library standards. It also looks at music-related archiving (both printed and recorded materials). Its “Anne-Frank-Shoah-Bibliothek” is its most recent special collection that records the literature published worldwide on the persecution and extermination of the Jews of Europe.
National Library, Canada:
In 2004, the National Archives of Canada and the National Library of Canada were clubbed together to form the Library and Archives Canada.
Here are the facts about it: 20 million books, periodicals, newspapers, microfilms, literary texts and government publications, three million architectural drawings, maps and plans, 24 million photographs, 350,000 hours of film, 4,25,000 pieces of art (paintings, drawings, watercolours, posters, prints, medals and caricatures), 5,47,000 musical items and more than a billion megabytes of digital content. Some of its rich subject areas include genealogy and family history, portrait collection, aboriginal peoples, exploration and settlement, literature, military and peacekeeping, philately and postal history and sports. It has periodicals, microfilms, manuscripts and theses. Added to these are portraits of over one million Canadians since 1689, and a vast collection of medals, seals, posters and coats of arms. In addition, there are over 71,000 hours of short and full-length films, documentaries, silent films and “talkies” (black and white, colour) dating back as far as 1897, and over 2.5 million architectural drawings, plans and maps, some of which date back to the beginning of the 16th century.
National Library of China:
The National Library of China is said to be largest library in Asia, and one of the largest in the world with a collection of over 23 million volumes. It has some of the largest and richest global collections of Chinese literature and historical documents. Its collections are a treasure trove — inscribed tortoise shells and bones, ancient manuscripts, and block-printed volumes, rare documents and records from past dynasties in Chinese history and foreign language material in over 115 languages. It also has copies of Buddhist documents, the most complete surviving documents from the Ming Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty. Most of these libraries have social media links as well. This includes YouTube channels.
The National Diet
Library, Tokyo, Japan:
Its primary role is to collect and preserve Japanese publications. It has two main facilities in Tokyo and Kyoto, and other branch libraries across Japan. Its major sets include historical documents helping to trace the development of Japanese modern politics in and after the latter half of the 19th century; materials on the post-war occupation of Japan, science and technology documents (includes nuclear power reports); parliamentary documents, maps (topographic, geological and hydrographic), sound recordings of phonographic records produced in Japan and foreign books about Japan and Asian language books. There are also the “Ito Bunko” and “The Shirai Bunko” — two collections of manuscripts and wood block-printed books on medicinal herbs, and the “The Shinjo Bunko” (collections of old writings on astronomy and calendars.)
Library of Congress, Washington D.C.:
It wouldn't be wrong to call it the Emperor of Libraries, “the largest library in the world.” The Library of Congress was established by an Act of Congress in 1800 with the seat of power moving from Philadelphia to Washington. The need for a library found mention in this, where it stated it should contain “such books as may be necessary for the use of Congress -- and for putting up a suitable apartment for containing them therein…” In 1814, invading British troops set fire to the Capitol Building, burning the contents of the small library. But President Thomas Jefferson stepped in, offering his personal library as a replacement. As he had spent years accumulating books, “putting by everything which related to America, and indeed whatever was rare and valuable in every science,” his collection was said to be “one of the finest in the U.S.” Congress accepted his generous offer and the library set roots. The Library of Congress building welcomed the world on November 1, 1897, and it was hailed “as a glorious national monument and the largest, the costliest, and the safest library building in the world.” It now has more than 144 million items that include more than 33 million catalogued books and other print materials in 460 languages; more than 63 million manuscripts; the largest rare book collection in North America; and the world's largest collection of legal materials, films, maps, sheet music and sound recordings. It is not without reason that it is called a world resource. It has 21 reading rooms and calls itself “more than a library.” It also focuses on children and teachers. Its annual ‘ National Book Festival' brings together famous authors, storytellers and book-lovers. A Poet Laureate is appointed each year to promote the art of poetry. Teams from the library visit schools across the country to show how its collections can be used in classrooms and enrich teaching and learning. It also says that it has commissioned hundreds of original musical works

By:  MURALI N. KRISHNASWAMY 
.

Monday, April 9, 2012

'मजरूह की स्मृति में बनेगा पुस्तकालय'


'मजरूह की स्मृति में बनेगा पुस्तकालय'
सुल्तानपुर, विधायक अनूप संडा व रामचंद्र चौधरी ने मजरूह सुल्तानपुरी की याद में पुस्तकालय बनवाने में हर संभव मदद का आश्वासन दिया है। विधायकद्वय ने कहा कि मजरूह की शायरी में आम लोगों का दर्द झलकता है। मौजूदा सरकार भी आम लोगों की है।
विधायकद्वय मजरूह सुल्तानपुरी एकेडमी के संयोजन में आयोजित सम्मान समारोह में बोल रहे थे। दोनों जनप्रतिनिधियों ने मौजूद लोगों से भेदरहित विकास कराने का वायदा किया। जिला पंचायत सभागार में अब्दुल कदीर जाहिल सुल्तानपुरी की अध्यक्ष में आयोजित कार्यक्रम में बतौर मुख्य वक्ता साहित्यकार कमलनयन पांडेय ने मजरूह उद्यान के बदहाली पर चिंता जताई और उनकी स्मृति में पुस्तकालय स्थापना का प्रस्ताव रखा। जिसे पूरा कराने का आश्वासन विधायकों ने दिया। कवि डॉ.डीएम मिश्र ने 'बजर बजता है तो उसको सुनाई कुछ नहीं देता उसे फिर लालबत्ती में दिखाई कुछ नहीं देता' अंदाज में अपनी बात रखी। सचिव हाशिम अब्दुल्ला, अधिवक्ता रविशंकर, संयोजक डॉ.मन्नान सुल्तानपुरी, हबीब अजमली, इकबाल भारती, आनंद प्रकाश कुंवर जी, डॉ.राधेश्याम सिंह, इंजीनियर मो.अहमद, ऊषा श्रीवास्तव ने भी अपनी साहित्यिक विधाओं के जरिए विचार व्यक्त किए।
Source: Dainik Jagran, Sun, 08 Apr 2012 09:48 PM (IST)

मदिरालय नहीं, पुस्तकालय की जरूरत : रघुवंश प्रसाद

महनार : आज बिहार में मदिरालय नहीं, पुस्तकालय की जरूरत है. राज्य में आपराधिक घटनाओं का प्रतिशत बढ़ा है. फर्क सिर्फ इतना है कि आपराधिक घटनाओं की खबर अखबार के तीसरे-चौथे पृष्ठ पर रहती है. वह भी पूरी खबर नहीं.
पहले यह खबर अखबार के प्रथम पृष्ठ पर दिखाई देती थी. अब तो प्रथम पृष्ठ पर सरकार की तारीफ-ही-तारीफ दिखती है. ये बातें पूर्व केंद्रीय ग्रामीण विकास मंत्री रघुवंश प्रसाद सिंह ने कहीं. उन्होंने कहा कि बिहार की असली तसवीर यह है कि जदयू के कोषाध्यक्ष के घर साढ़े 14 करोड़ रुपये मिलते हैं.
श्री सिंह अपने पैतृक गांव शाहपुर में राम जानकी के गृह प्रवेश में शामिल होने के बाद पत्रकारों को संबोधित कर रहे थे. उन्होंने कहा झारखंड में राजद और कांग्रेस की दोस्ती का असर बिहार में भी पड़ेगा.
बिहार में सांप्रदायिक ताकतों को ध्वस्त करने के लिए बिहार में नये सिरे से राजनीतिक समीकरण बनाना होगा. इस अवसर पर श्री सिंह ने पुस्तकालय का भी उद्घाटन किया.
उन्होंने कहा बिहार सरकार ने जगह-जगह शराब की दुकानें खुलवा दी. इस अवसर पर कांग्रेस नेता रघुपति सिंह, खन्ना सिंह, मुखिया संगीता सिंह ,संजय पटेल आदि उपस्थित थे
source: Prabhat Khabar, Vaishali, 03.04.2012

NIT Goa Administrative and Technical posts Apr-2012

NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF TECHONOLOGY GOA
(Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India)
Farmagudi, Ponda
403 401, Goa
VACANCIES IN ADMINISTRATION AND TECHNICAL CADRE
Advt. No. NITGOA/NT/01/2012
The Institute is looking for suitable Indian Nationals for appointment on
regular/deputation/contract basis for 5 years (likely to be confirmed, subject to noteworthy
performance) for the following posts: Registrar, Asst. Registrar, Assistant Librarian,
Executive Engineer, Sports Officer, Superintendent /Accountant, Technical Assistant, Nurse,
Technical Assistant(Systems), Stenographer/PA, Junior Assistant and Technicians.
Reservations shall be as per GOI. Application form can be downloaded from the institute
website:
02.09.2010 have to submit their applications afresh. Last date to receive the filled in
prescribed applications is
www.nitgoa.ac.in. Applicants applied vide Advt.No. NITGoa/Estt./2010/1 dated14th May,2012.

Librarian and Asstt. Librarian at IIT Hyderabad

Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Hyderabad
Ordnance Factory Estate, Yeddumailaram 502205
Advt No. IITH/2012/Rec/NF/2
Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Hyderabad invites applications on the prescribed form from the Indian Nationals for the undermentioned posts on regular basis:
  • Librarian: 01 Post
  • Assistant Librarian: 01 Post
  • Medical Officer: 01 Post
  • Technical Superintendent: 08 Posts
  • Senior Physical Training Instructor: 02 Posts
  • Physical Training Instructor: 02 Posts
  • Junior Technician: 22 Posts
  • Assistant Registrar (Administration): 01 Post
  • Assistant Registrar (Purchase): 01 Post
  • Executive Assistant: 15 Posts
  • Stenographer: 02 Posts
  • Junior Accountant: 02 Posts
  • Junior Laboratory Assistant: 03 Posts
  • Junior Attendant: 05 Posts
Last date for receipt of applications: Application completed in all respect must reach the Institute on or before April 27, 2012.
Vacancy Source link is available below:
Website : http://www.iith.ac.in

UGC nod to 80 non-teaching posts for Allahabad University


ALLAHABAD: The University Grants Commission (UGC) has approved as many as 80 non-teaching (technical) posts for Allahabad University under OBC grant. Approval of these posts follows the request of AU authorities where it had submitted a proposal to the UGC asking for large number of non-teaching posts needed in view of additional workload following the implementation of OBC reservation after which AU had increased 54 % of student intake.
Of these 80 posts, 76 are new posts while four others have been approved against vacant positions. It is pertinent to mention that UGC, in June 2008, had approved a total amount of Rs 232 crore for AU, of which an amount of Rs 52 crore was allocated for financial year 200-09. For implementing the OBC reservation, AU was asked to enhance the number of students intake by 54%, which was to be implemented in three phases. UGC, apart from sanctioning an amount of Rs 232 crore, had also sanctioned 270 teaching positions, advertisement for the same has recently been issued by the varsity authorities.
BY- Rajiv Mani
Source: Times of India, Apr 6, 2012, 09.53PM IST

Tribute to great librarian- Dr Havanur


Exactly two years ago, to be precise on April 5, one of the well-known scholars of the region Dr Srinivas Havanur passed away.


Dr Srinivas Havanur. A true researcher in Kannada language, Dr Havanur was born in 1928.He rendered his service in various capacities including as a librarian, lecturer, researcher and guide in different places like Mumbai, Mangalore, Pune and Bangalore. His contribution to the Kannada language can not be weighed in words. 

A vivid book lover, Dr Havanur researched on various subjects like the foreign writings, the beginning of Dasa Sahitya, the initial newspaper publications, history works etc. Having written over 65 books, he has deservingly been conferred with various awards including Rajyotsava, Alva’s Nudisiri, Muliya Thimmappaiah award, Sandesha Prathishtana award and the like. 

Dr Havanur developed a strong love towards books mainly because of serving as a librarian. He used to believe that the skill of documenting, interest for research, publication, preserving, and guidance are the basic qualities of a librarian. 

“The job of a librarian is not limited to preserving the books, but he has to offer the necessary information that a reader asks for. The books communicate with us, they talk to the readers. 

One should not consider any book as useless as every book has its own weightage. Every book has to be preserved and the libraries in the organisations, schools and colleges should cater to the needs of the readers”- were the words of Dr Havanur.

He was a very good guide and he used to make sure that any reader who meets him does not return with doubts. He had maintained cordial relationships with the librarians like Dr Bandi from Mangalore University, Dr Rodrigues from St Aloysius College, Venkatesh from RRC, Prof Paul Janekins from Basel library in Switzerland and others. 

Dr Havanur has included information related to British Museum, Dharmasthala library, Mithik Society and other centers in his books. His greatness lies in donating his collection of books to various organisations, colleges and libraries.
By-Benet G Ammanna
Source: Deccan Herald, Apr 7, 2012 :

Library to aid research at Pondicherry Varsity, PUDUCHERRY


As part of the programme for exclusive libraries for each department, Pondicherry University vice-chancellor Prof JAK Tareen inaugurated a new library at School of Humanities and School of Social Sciences and International Studies on Thursday.
Three such school libraries have already been established in the last six months, the first being the one at School of Management followed by that at Subramania Bharathiayar School of Tamil Literature and UNESCO Madanjeet Singh Institute of South Asian Regional Cooperation.
In addition, the Central Library named after Ananda Rangapillai, would continue to cater to all routine processes and digital library services.
Instead of every department having a library which is common at most of the universities, the concept of school libraries is unique because each reference library would be located at the school building itself.� Books housed there are for immediate reference and in a serene air-conditioned ambience managed by qualified library and information professionals.
The university also has established libraries at the Karaikal Centre and at Port Blair which are offshore campuses of the university.� The remote login facility created by the Ananda Rangapillai Library enables its members to access all its e-resources subscribed from anywhere in the world.� This is again an unique digital library service to facilitate information access to researchers by the university library.
source: IBNLive, Tamil Nadu, Apr 06, 2012 at 10:31am IST

Vivekananda Library to have online facility, Bhopal

BHOPAL: An e-library is to come up at Swami Vivekananda Library in the city on Sunday.
With online access to more than 70,000 e-books on subject areas like management, computers, science, arts and others, 14,000 e-journals, 7,000 full text e-journals, 80 English language modules on reading, writing, listening, grammar, vocabulary development and communication skills and 10 self-development learning modules, the library would inaugurate the online facility on Sunday.
SOURCE: Times of India Apr 8, 2012, 06.37 AM IST

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

LIS Prof. & Asst. Prof and Asst. Librarian at University of Mumbai

Source: Times of India, Ascent dated 4th April 2012, Page No. 30

University Librarian at Jamia Hamdard, New Delhi


QUALIFICATIONS
University Librarian              - One Post
  1.  Master’s degree in Library Science/Information Science/Documentation with      at least 55% of the marks or its equivalent grade of B in the UGC seven point scale and consistently good academic record.
  2.   At least thirteen years as a Deputy Librarian in a University Library.
  3.  Evidence of innovative library service and organization or published work.
  4. Fully computer savvy with evidence of operating of Library Software of standard quality.
   Desirable: Ph. D. degree in Library Science/ Information Science/ Documentation/ archives and manuscript keeping.

Pay Bands:
University Librarian       -           Rs. 37400-67000+ AGP Rs. 10000/-

GENERAL INFORMATION

1.      The university reserves the right not to fill-up the vacancy if the circumstances so warrant and to call only short-listed candidates for test/ interview.
2.      The university reserves the right to consider the name(s) of suitable candidates who may not have applied and also to relax the qualification and experience for deserving candidates, as approved by the Selection Committee.
3.      Candidates called for interview will have to come to the place of interview at their own expenses and bring with them their original research papers, degrees and certificate etc. for verification.
4.      Applications complete in all respects should reach to the Office of the Registrar, Establishment Section, Jamia Hamdard, Hamdard Nagar, New Delhi – 110 062 latest by April 21, 2012 (Saturday) alongwith the following:
·        Bio-data (highlighting personal details, academic records, teaching and research experience).
·        Attested copies of certificates & testimonials in support of qualification and experience.
·        Demand Draft of Rs. 500/- for the posts of Professor and University Librarian, Rs. 300/- for the post of Associate Professor and Rs. 200/- for the post of Assistant Professor in favour of Registrar, Jamia Hamdard payable at New Delhi.
·        Duly typed Annexure- A available with the application form.
·        Duly filled in Academic Performance Indicator (API) based Performance Based Appraisal System (PBAS) proforma as set out in UGC Regulation 2010 Appendix III for the post of Professor and Associate Professor.
5.      Persons already in job must apply through proper channel.
6.      Incomplete applications and those received after the closing date will not be entertained.
7.      Reservation for persons with disabilities as per Government of India Rules is available.  Such candidates need not to enclose the application fee.
8.      To download application form, Annexure- A and Appendix IIIclick here


(FIRDOUS A. WANI)
REGISTRAR
Ph.: (011) 26059688- Extn. 5328
Source: Times of India, Ascent dated 4th April 2012, Page No. 26

Internet Public Library-ipl2: Information You can Trust
















ipl2 is a public service organization and a learning/teaching environment. To date, thousands of students and volunteer library and information science professionals have been involved in answering reference questions for our Ask an ipl2 Librarian service and in designing, building, creating and maintaining the ipl2's collections. It is through the efforts of these students and volunteers that the ipl2 continues to thrive to this day.

In January 2010, the website "ipl2: information you can trust" was launched, merging the collections of resources from the Internet Public Library (IPL) and the Librarians' Internet Index (LII) websites. The site is hosted by Drexel University's College of Information Science & Technology, and a consortium of colleges and universities with programs in information science are involved in developing and maintaining the ipl2.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Future Libraries and 17 Forms of Information Replacing Books

Future Library 784
Question: As physical books go away, and computers and smart devices take their place, at what point does a library stop being a library, and start becoming something else?
Somewhere in the middle of this question lies the nagging fear and anxiety that we see brimming to the top among library insiders.
People who think libraries are going away simply because books are going digital are missing the true tectonic shifts taking place in the world of information.
Libraries are not about books. In fact, they were never about books.
Libraries exist to give us access to information. Until recently, books were one of the more efficient forms of transferring information from one person to another. Today there are 17 basic forms of information that are taking the place of books, and in the future there will be many more…

Gas Station Map
Gas Station Maps
As a young child, I was enamored with the free maps I could pick up at gas stations. Over time I had collected maps for nearly every state and some of the Canadian Provinces.
Along with the early days of the automobile and a generally confusing road system came the need for maps. Oil companies quickly realized that people who knew where they were going often traveled more, and consequently bought more gasoline.
Over time, anyone driving a car soon came to expect free maps whenever they stopped for gas, and companies like Rand McNally, H.M. Gousha, and General Drafting turned out millions to meet demand.
In the early 1970s, when I was first learning the freedom of owning a car, I couldn’t imagine a time when these maps would not be an integral part of my life.
Today, as GPS and smartphones give us turn-by-turn instructions on where to go, printed road maps exist as little more than collectibles for people wishing to preserve their memories of a fading era.
Are printed books likely to go through a similar dwindling of popularity?
relationship with data 755
Our Relationship with Information is Changing
As the form and delivery system for accessing information changes, our relationship with information also begins to morph.
If we treat this like other types relationships, we can begin to see where we’ve come from and where we’re going.
Gone are the days when we were simply “flirting” with our data, occasionally glancing at it, hoping it would pay attention to us as well.
In school we had more of a “dating” relationship, lugging books around, hoping they would impart their knowledge even though the parts that got read were few and far between. Much like dating a popular person, we became known by the books under our arms.
Once we started working, we became “married” to a relatively small universe of information that surrounded our job, company, and industry. People who became immersed in their particular universe became recognized as experts and quickly rose to the top.
Today we are beginning to have “affairs” with other exotic forms of information such as social networks and video chatting. All of these new forms of information seem much more alive and vibrant than the book world we had been married to for the past century.
Alone, on some dusty shelf, lie the books we had once been married to. On some level, many of us feel like we were cheating by abandoning our past, never getting closure for a divorce that left us with mixed loyalties haunting us on both a conscious and subconscious level.
If you think this is a crazy analogy, many will argue that its not. If anything, information is the heart and soul of our emotional self. Even though we may not feel it touching us like a finger pressing on our arm, a great piece of literature has a way of caressing our mind, adding fire to our inner rage, sending chills down the length of our spine, and giving us a euphoric high as we join our hero to reach a climactic conclusion.
Books of the past remain the physical manifestation of this kind of experience, and without their presence, a part of us feels lost.
Kindle e-book.The slimline Kindle?s electronic ink screen is de
Replacing Books
The transition to other forms of information has been happening for decades. Once we are able to get past the emotion connection we have to physical books, we begin to see how the information world is splintering off into dozens of different categories.
Here is a list of 17 primary categories of information that people turn to on a daily basis. While they are not direct replacements for physical books, they all have a way of eroding our reliance on them. There may be more that I’ve missed, but as you think through the following media channels, you’ll begin to understand how libraries of the future will need to function:
  1. Games – 135 million Americans play video games an hour or more each month. In the U.S. 190 million households will use a next-generation video game console in 2012, of which 148 million will be connected to the Internet. The average gamer is 35 years old and they have been playing games on average for 13 years.
  2. Digital Books – In January, USA Today reported a post-holiday e-book “surge,” with 32 of the top 50 titles on its most recent list selling more copies in digital format than in print. Self-published e-books now represent 20-27% of digital book sales.
  3. Audio Books - Audiobooks are the fastest growing sector of the publishing industry. There is currently a shortage of audiobooks worldwide as publishers race to meet demand. Only 0.75% (not even 1%!) of Amazon’s book catalog has so far been converted to audio. Last year more than $1 billion worth of audiobooks were sold in the U.S. alone. Over 5,000 public libraries now offer free downloadable audio books.
  4. Newspapers – Online readership of newspapers continues to grow, attracting more than 113 million readers in January 2012. Industry advertising revenues, however, continue to drop and are now at the same level as they were in 1950, when adjusted for inflation.
  5. Magazines – The U.S. magazine industry is comprised of 5,146 businesses publishing a total of 38,000 titles. Time spent reading newspapers or magazines combined is roughly 3.9 hours per week. Nearly half of all magazine consumption takes place with the TV on. The magazine industry is declined 3.5% last year.
  6. Music – According to Billboard’s “2011 Music Industry Report,” consumers bought 1.27 billion digital tracks last year, which accounted for 50.3% of all music sales. Digital track sales increased 8.5% in 2011. Meanwhile, physical sales declined 5%. According to Apple, there are an estimated 38 million songs in the known music universe.
  7. Photos – Over 250 million photos are uploaded to Facebook every day
  8. Videos – Cisco estimates that over 90% of all Internet content will be video by 2015. Over 100,000 ‘years’ of Youtube video are viewed on Facebook every year. Over 350 million Youtube videos are shared on Twitter every year. Netflix streams 2 billion videos per quarter.
  9. Television – According to the A.C. Nielsen Co., the average American watches more than 4 hours of TV each day, and owns 2.2 televisions. An estimated 41% of our information currently comes from television.
  10. Movies – There are currently over 39,500 movie screens in the U.S. with over 4,500 of them converted to 3D screens. The average American goes to 6 movies per year. However, almost one-third of U.S. broadband Households use the Internet to watch movies on their TV sets, according to Park Associates. That number is growing, with 4% of U.S. households buying a video media receiver, such as Apple TV and Roku, over the 2011 holiday season
  11. Radio – Satellite radio subscribers, currently at 20 million, is projected to reach 35 million by 2020. At the same time, Internet radio is projected to reach 196 million listeners by 2020. These combined equal the same number as terrestrial radio listeners.
  12. Blogs – There are currently over 70 million WordPress blogs and 39 million Tumblr blogs worldwide.
  13. Podcasts – According to Edison Research, an estimated 70 million Americans have listened to a podcast. The podcast audience has migrated from being predominantly “early adopters” to more closely resembling mainstream media consumers.
  14. Apps – There are now over 1.2 million smartphone apps with over 35 billion downloads. Sometime this year the number of apps will exceed the number of books in print – 3.2 million.
  15. Presentations – Leading the charge in this area, SlideShare is the world’s largest community for sharing presentations. With 60 million monthly visitors and 130 million pageviews, it is amongst the most visited 200 websites in the world.
  16. Courseware – The OpenCourseware movement has been catching fire with Apple leading the charge. iTunesU currently has over 1,000 Universities participating from 26 countries. Their selection of classes, now exceeding the 500,000 mark, have had over 700 million downloads. They recently announced they were expanding into the K-12 market.
  17. Personal Networks – Whether its LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, Google+ or Pinterest, people are becoming increasingly reliant on their personal network for information. There are now over 2.8 billion social media profiles, representing around half of all Internet users worldwide. LinkedIn now has over 147 million members. Facebook has over 1.1 billion members and accounts for 20% of all pageviews on the Internet. Google+ currently has over 90 million users.
Each of these forms of information has a place in future libraries. Whether or not physical books decline or even disappear has little relevance in the overall scheme of future library operations.
Steve Jobs introducing iCloud 673
Steve Jobs introducing iCloud
The Coming Era of the Library Cloud
In June 2011, Steve Jobs made his final public appearance at a software developer’s conference to unveil iCloud; a service that many believe will become his greatest legacy.
As Jobs envisioned it, the entire universe of songs, books, movies, and a variety of other information products would reside in iCloud and could be “pulled down” whenever someone needed to access it.
People would initially purchase the product through iTunes, and Apple would keep a copy of it in iCloud. So each subsequent purchase by other Apple users would be a quick download directly from iCloud.
Whether or not the information universe develops in the cloud like Jobs has envisioned, libraries will each need to develop their own cloud strategy for the future.
As an example, at a recent library event I was speaking at, one librarian mentioned she had just ordered 50 Kindles and 50 Nooks for their library. At the time, she was dealing with the restrictions from publishers that only allowed them to load each digital book on 10 devices. So which devices get the content in the end?
Over time, it’s easy to imagine a library with 350 Kindles, 400 iPads, 250 Nooks, 150 Xooms, and a variety of other devices. Keeping track of which content is loaded on each device will become a logistical nightmare. However, having each piece of digital content loaded in the cloud and restricting it to 10 simultaneous downloads will be far more manageable.
car-and-drugstore2
This snapshot in time could have been preserved by your local library.
The Value of the Community Archive
What was your community like in 1950, or for that matter in 1850 or even 1650? What role did your community play during the Civil War? How active was it during the Presidential elections of 1960? How did local people react to the bombing of Pearl Harbor?
We have access to plenty of history books that give us the “official story” of all the major events throughout history. But understanding the intersection of our city, our village, or our community with these earth-changing events has, for the most part, never been captured or preserved. In the future, this will become one of the most valuable functions provided by a community library.
Libraries have always had a mandate to archive the records of their service area, but it has rarely been pursued with more than passing enthusiasm. Archives of city council meetings and local history books made the cut, but few considered the library to be a good photo or video archive.
Over time, many of the newspapers, radio, and television stations will begin to disappear. As these businesses lose their viability, their storerooms of historical broadcast tapes and documents will need to be preserved. More specifically, every radio broadcast, newspaper, and television broadcast will need to be digitized and archived.
With the advent of iCloud and other similar services libraries will want to expand their hosting of original collections, and installing the equipment to digitize the information. The sale of this information to the outside world through an iTunes-like service could become a valuable income stream for libraries in the future.
Final Thoughts
Libraries, much like any living breathing organism, will have to adapt to the complex nature of the ever-changing world of information. As information becomes more sophisticated and complex, so will libraries.
Libraries are here to stay because they have a survival instinct. They have created a mutually dependent relationship with the communities they serve, and most importantly, they know how to adapt to the changing world around them.
I am always impressed with the creative things being done in libraries. As Eleanor Roosevelt once said, “The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.” There are a lot of beautiful dreams taking place that will help form tomorrow’s libraries.

Future Libraries: Nerve Center of the Community


Ever since the people of ancient Nineveh began storing and classifying their books nearly 3,000 years ago, libraries have been hallowed and largely unchanging bastions of learning. But in the information age, libraries have been caste with a new identity, and the future is evolving into a very different place.
 
Ten years ago, as the Internet began to take off, many in the tech elite were predicting the death of the public library. What the critics failed to predict, however, was libraries’ stirring ability to reinvent themselves. Much like plants that flourish with good soil, water and sunshine, libraries have actually begun to thrive in our information-rich environment.
 
Such is their resurgence that today, libraries are going through an age of rebirth. Intent on making them the crown jewels of the community, cities from Vancouver to Prague are investing heavily in public libraries, producing opulent, multi-story structures equipped with cutting-edge technology. From rather hidebound monuments to knowledge laboratories, libraries are now evolving into interactive research and leisure centers. Yet this change, impressive as it is, is only the beginning.
 
2029 SCENARIO
 
To see how, let’s step through the doorway of a city library in 2029. In the past, libraries housed seemingly endless miles of shelving stacked with finely printed books, but now only a few remain. In much the same way that living creatures adapt to their surrounding environments, libraries have grown into a bidirectional feeding tube connecting the life-giving digital data streams and the user populations that nourish them. People are no longer satisfied with information flowing one way. They want to participate in it, add their own contributions, and take ownership of it.
 
Traditional lending has been replaced with downloadable books, which are never out of stock, formatted for electronic tablets and readers. A bigger change, though, has come with the very concept of what a book is. Where once a customer would passively read and, hopefully, absorb a book, every volume now is more akin to an online forum, with authors, experts and other readers available to discuss and answer questions on almost every important book ever written.
 
In contrast to just a couple of decades before, almost the entire canon of book knowledge has been formatted for computers, making in-depth searches possible for even the most obscure tomes. But with many people now using this service in their homes, libraries have stayed ahead of the curve by installing high-tech spherical displays and holographic imaging that allow users to shift viewing angles and probe individual parts of complex data. Space imaging technologies have also made it possible to search the planets and stars, allowing the swarms of school kids who come here to embark on their own voyages into deep space.
 
With technology having improved so dramatically, a central feature of this library is the Search Command Center, where a team of experts, both real and virtual, assists with complex searches that now incorporate not just words, but sounds, textures and even smells. While many visitors come here to recapture a fond fragrance or a familiar noise, these searches have more practical applications too. Restaurateurs, for example, are frequent visitors here, using the search tools to rediscover certain smells and tastes without having to rake through endless ingredients and recipes.
 
And chefs are far from the only people doing business in the library. With the Internet having put increasingly powerful business tools into the hands of individuals, more people are working and operating businesses from home. To such people, the library offers not just a refuge from the isolation of their house, it also provides temporary office space complete with podcast recording studios, conference rooms and editing stations. At the same time, the library has developed into an entrepreneurial zone where business people from various backgrounds coalesce, work together and then disperse in much the same way that film production crews have always done.
 
Business colonies have become commonplace, forming around common business themes such as gamer colonies, video colonies, photonics colonies, and biotech colonies. In each situation the libraries evolve to meet the needs of the user populations, providing vital services for the colony as well as for the community at large.
 
Yet perhaps nowhere are libraries’ new found attitudes more manifest than in their surroundings. Long operating in a rather high-minded domain, where many of them viewed market demand as little short of vulgar, libraries today are often situated right in the heart of larger complexes with businesses that complement their services. Crèches offer somewhere to drop off the kids, stationary stores and restaurants tick over with student business, and patrons from fitness centers borrow magazines and audio books from the library to enliven their conditioning routines or stop in to do research on exercise and nutrition.
 
In our fast-changing world, progress is too often seen as a zero-sum game, where innovation inevitably comes at the expense of the old. Yet libraries are showing that innovation always brings opportunity, too. While retaining its traditional functions, the library of the future will be home to myriad informational experiences, where great ideas happen, and people have the tools and facilities to act on them.
 
Source: http://www.futuristspeaker.com/

No libraries, no memory..


Helping faded pages turn a fresh leaf


Restoring old and damaged books requires not just skill, but also expensive technology and insight, say experts

In December last year, the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, with the help of Roja Muthiah Research Library in the city brought out two sparkling hardback volumes of mathematician Ramanujam's notebooks — the original of which was laminated and preserved in the University of Madras.
“Nobody had seen the original for close to fifty years,” says G. Sundar, Director, Roja Muthiah Research Library. The journey of the mathematician's notebook reflects both the best and the worst things that could happen to a rare book.
The first edition was published by TIFR back in 1957. They reproduced the original notebooks by photocopying the pages in black and white.
“Since technology like contrast balance was not available then, the result, though the best that could have been achieved at that time, was not satisfactory. When we were approached by TIFR to publish the second edition of the notebooks, we worked with the original laminated manuscript for two weeks, and microfilmed and digitised it. We were able to reproduce Ramanujam's writings as they are found in the original,” he adds. However, not all rare works get a new lease of life. With no set standards for conservation of books, and no agency to hold anyone accountable for faulty conservation, degeneration is almost always staring at the face of an old book.

BEST PRACTICES

One first needs to understand the distinction between conservation and restoration says, Mr. Sundar. “While conservation implies that there is intervention and the original form is changed, restoration aims to bring the book back to its original form. Conservation requires human resource, skill and availability of raw material, and restoration requires expensive technology.”
Conservation being not just science, but also an art, Mr. Sundar and Dr. Perumal, Conservator and Librarian, Saraswati Mahal Library, say that the most important aspect is to be sensitive to the article that is being restored. While methods such as Japanese tissue mending and encapsulation are recommended, lamination, to them, is a bad word. “It is like striking the death knell because the process is not reversible,” says Sundar.
“At the Sanskrit Department of the University of Madras, Marina campus, nearly 22 books were conserved using commercial lamination, and the pages were stuck to each other. I have restored two books for them,” says Mr. Renganathan, Managing Director, Photolam Systems Pvt. Ltd, who has done conservation work for several libraries, publications and state archives.
The Tamil Nadu Archives which is one of the largest repositories of rare books and manuscripts in South Asia, in its website, mentions that lamination is one of the conservation methods it uses. Authorities at the archives were unavailable for comment. “When you use a faulty method, if reflects on the item, say ten years down the line,” says Mr. Sundar.
There are two basic ethics of conservation, says Dr. Perumal. “One is that the process should be reversible and secondly, it should not affect the character of the book. Years later, if a better process of conservation is invented, you must be able to undo the old method.”
The challenge they say also lies in retaining the character of the book. “There was a lot of debate when we were restoring the notebooks of Ramanujam. We got mathematicians to read the original text and they found mistakes in it. But we said that if that is what Ramanujam wrote, that is what should go in the book,” he says.
Another major concern is the storage of conserved books. “Storage of conserved books is crucial. You need to keep environmental factors (heat, light, humidity) in mind once the book is conserved. Since Ramanujam's notebooks were stored near a coastal area, the paper got damaged. We once received a manuscript that was held together by metal holders and pins and since paper is acidic, the metal caused significant damage to it,” says Mr. Sundar.
The monsoons, Dr. Perumal asserts is when books need maximum attention. “We need to be most careful during the monsoons as books absorb moisture and fungus starts to grow. The air around the book needs to be refreshed at least once a month and the pages need to be turned on a regular basis,” says Dr. Perumal.
“We have very few conservators, and not many people take it up as a career because the remuneration is not great. Less than two percent of libraries in the country take up conservation work,” says Mr. Sundar.
When conserved well, the life of books may extend by 50 to 100 hundred years depending on the condition of the book before restoration. When it comes to conservation, it is like following the rule of the road, says Sundar. “When you have to preserve something for posterity, you have a responsibility towards it.”

Source: The Hindu, CHENNAI, April 3, 2012

Librarian and Document Officer at MCRP University, Bhopal