Friday Fun Link – Sports Cliches

Looking forward to the big Riders game this weekend (though I’ve managed to double-book myself for Sunday afternoon so am thinking “PVR game and try to make it home from event without hearing/seeing/webbing the score” will have to be my strategy.  Not ideal since my most direct route home goes right past the stadium where the game will be played.)

Anyhow, saw this link to a page that collects sports cliches for all types of situations and thought I’d pass it along.

Bonus Reddit link:  Are there any sports clips that, to this day, give you chills?

Poppy Politics

A few years ago, I went on record as saying that I rarely to never wore a poppy on Remembrance Day (a personal belief I admitted was the scariest thing I’d ever talked about on my blog because the poppy is so sacrosanct in our culture.)

I observed that I tend to avoid the poppy for a few different reasons – my belief that there are too many causes deserving support and if you support one, you should support them all,  my personal feelings towards war (and its glorification in any form – anyone else notice that the day has shifted from “Never Again” to “Hey, them boys in Afghanistan are defending our  FREEDUM!”) and lastly, my resistance to anything that smacks of mass conformity of any kind. (Er, Go Riders Go this weekend!)

I may have been ahead of the curve.   This year I’ve noticed a real trend in the number of articles about people resisting the politics of the poppy for all manner of reasons – both the ones I mentioned above and more.

Even something that appears so clear cut is rarely black and white.  I’ll leave with the status update a friend posted on Facebook on Remembrance Day:

“Mixed feelings about Remembrance Day. The Japanese side of my family was put in an internment camp during WWII. My Grandfather on the white side served in the military. I feel so lucky to be Canadian and to have all the freedoms that I do. I also have complicated feelings about Canadian peacekeeping, and peacemaking. It’s not black and white.”

The Library’s Role in Supporting Wikipedia

Wikipedia is having its annual fundraising drive and that got me thinking about a recent conversation I had with a fellow librarian.

The discussion started as one of those “is reference dead?” chats (I don’t think it is by the way – though it’s definitely taken a pretty big hit with the rise of the Internet – especially for those “quick hit” answers.)  This person was someone who believes that reference, if not dead, is on life support and sites like Google and Wikipedia are the main reasons why.

But instead of thumbing our noses at these sites, this person was of the opinion that libraries should be at the forefront of supporting Wikipedia. “Think about it.  Less than a decade ago, the library would spend, what?  $1500 per set for a bunch of copies of Britannica.  So somewhere north of $10 000 per year.  When was the last time the library bought that many encyclopedias?  Actually, I don’t even know if we’re still buying them?  So yes, that’s a big cost saving and those funds can go into other materials.  But aren’t we at the point now where Wikipedia has *become* part of our collection and since we don’t “buy” it, maybe we should put a portion of that money towards supporting it?  Imagine how much money Wikipedia could raise if every library – public or academic – that used to buy print encylopedias – sent Wikipedia $500 or $1000!”

It’s no secret how much of a supporter I am of Wikipedia (in a recent post, I think I said that it and YouTube – not Google, not Facebook – were the two sites I didn’t think I could live without) so even as I plan to send it a small individual donation, maybe we need to start talking to our friends in collections about putting some money towards an electronic resource that is one of the most useful in existence, for both our staff and our patrons.  Plus is there any popular web site online that so closely matches the mandate of libraries as Wikipedia – with its mandate of sharing the world’s knowledge, being open and accessible to everyone, by not charging any fees and (doing libraries one better in a lot of cases) not even having any advertisements or corporate sponsorship.

It’s a free site but that’s with an asterix of course.  With server costs, staffing costs and all the related expenses of running the Internet’s fifth most popular site, the reality is that it needs money to survive.   Libraries could help that to happen.  No, strike that.  Libraries *should* make that happen.

Facebook: “The Wild West of the Internet Tamed to Fit Suburban Fantasies of the Suburban Soul”

Good article about how Facebook has come to replace previous ways that we tried to both conform and compete with our social peers.

Music Monday – “I guess he’s an X-Box/And i’m more Atari/But the way you play your game ain’t fair.”

Sure, the original Cee Lo Brown song is mega-catchy and will have kids getting detention after being caught singing it on the playground for months to come.

But really, didn’t the song just call out for a ukelele cover by a young woman sitting in what appears to be a closet?

Yumm: A Recipe Bookmark Site

I had a longish post in mind but with perfect timing, I was at work all day on Friday feeling fine then got home, immediately started shivering and fell into bed for a couple hours.  The rest of the weekend was a rotating spin of bed, bathroom and my good friend (Pepto) Bismal.

Now, after another long afternoon nap, I’m finally feeling a bit better – just in time to go back to work tomorrow!

So instead of a post with any depth to it, here’s a single link to a social recipe site called Yumm because I’m really looking forward to being able to eat again one of these days!

Saturday Snap – Spider-Pace in action on Halloween

Friday Fun Link – AskReddit…For All Your Music Needs

What song makes you feel badass when it comes on your MP3 player when you’re walking?

Suggestions for sad songs?

What’s your most listened to song of all-time according to iTunes or last.fm?

(And bonus question – Why Read?)

Geek Heaven: Augmented Reality Star Wars iPhone App

Le drool…

(via Daily Mail)

10 Things I Think About (Nearly) Every Day at Work

Outside of thinking about things like my current projects or what’s in the pipeline for the near future, e-mails that need to be sent or answered and generic everyday stuff like that, there are some things that occupy my thoughts for at least a brief amount of time pretty much every single day that I’m at work.

1. Our Organizational Culture (and How to Improve It)
– I am the Organization Development Specialist after all! 😉

2. How To Engage Our Entire Staff
– Related to that last point, inevitably, any organization will have employees that are not engaged in their work for whatever reason – they’re nearing retirement, they’re frustrated with supervisors or co-workers, the work they’re asked to doesn’t meet their expectations, of what they thought they’d be doing or would like to be doing, they’re dealing with issues outside of the workplace that impact their work. Most of what I read says it’s impossible to reach everyone but, being a bit of a glutton for punishment, I still find myself trying to figure out the magic key that will do this.

3. What Public Libraries Will Look Like in the Future
Not just next year but what will libraries look like in five years? In ten years? In twenty years? (As with trying to engage every single staff member, this may be a futile exercise. Would someone in 1990 have been able to predict the impact of the Internet on libraries? Mobile? The shift to community based service models? Coffee shops?)

4. The Changing Nature of Library Staff
Being in HR, this is something I see regularly – the people who tend to get hired, promoted or whatever aren’t necessarily the same people who would’ve fit these roles in the past. An anecdotal example – I recently heard someone comment about how libraries tend to attract introverted, bookish types in general. Another person replied, “Well, that’s changing – I would say a lot of the people coming out of library school now are a lot more outgoing and extroverted, tech and media savvy than ever before.” And you know? That person was probably right.

5. Management Theory and Differing Management Styles
I’ve often made the joke on my blog that the 25 year old me would probably punch the 37 year old me in the face if he saw how much he was reading on management theory, business books and related topics. (Actually, it was only four short years ago that I was handing in assignments in a Management class at FIMS where Dilbert was my sole citation. I still feel somewhat justified on that though – that prof was *truly* bad.) But now I find there is enormous value in reading a range of books, articles and web sites which either directly or indirectly relate back to management techniques.

6. My Pet Projects
I’ve got a few ideas for potential projects I could do in a wide variety of areas – some have been proposed and are awaiting approval/rejection, some have indication that they can go ahead but at some point in the future, some are in draft stage and need to be put forward and some are still sitting somewhere deep in my brain as little idealings.

7. The Massive Differences Being in A Larger Organization From Everywhere I’ve Worked Before
When I get around to writing about RPL in my ongoing “5 Things I Learned (At Every Place I’ve Ever Worked)” series, probably the first thing will be the massive adjustment I had to make (and still have to make on a regular basis) having previously worked for organizations that tended to have between 3-10 employees (Southeast Regional Library had over 100, 80 of whom I supervised. But given the geographical distances within the region and lack of regular direct contact, that really felt like I only had the 10 or so fellow employees that made up our staffing at the regional HQ.) Sometimes at RPL, with over 200 employees, it’s as simple as realizing I don’t have to take a photo if I need one – we have a Marketing Department to do that; I don’t have to update the web site as we have a web technician to do that; I don’t have to move chairs or transport boxes, we have Physical Plant staff to do that. Coming from a world of “you’re pretty much it so you do whatever needs to be done” has been a real shift for me which, as I said, is something I’m still working on.

8. How Much I Enjoy Interacting With My Co-Workers
I’m not sticking this point in as a kiss-up in case any RPL colleagues read this – I sincerely love that my job gives me the opportunity to have regular interactions and in-depth discussions with staff throughout the entire system and at all levels.

9. How Lucky I Am To Work in A Public Library
Truly, (most days) it doesn’t feel like a job at all – a big sign that you’ve found a good place for yourself!

10. If I End Up Spending My Entire Career at RPL…
…will I be proud of the actions I’ve taken, the projects I’ve completed and the achievements I’ve made?