A Bit of Downtime

We've got a bit of a break before the evening events at SLA so me and a couple of my co-workers came back to our suite to relax. 

It's been a great day – seeing lots of people I know from my former life (SPG has a booth here staffed by a former colleague from the Sask Book Awards as does a publisher called the Canadian Plains Research Centre),  people I know from my current/very recent life (a couple FIMS friends are here) and meeting lots of new people (all kinds of librarians from all kinds of sectors.) 

Went to sessions on The Public Library as Social Hub, The Use of Google in Academic Settings and one on Web 2.0 and the library.  All filled with lots of good information and thought-provoking ideas. 

What else?  I guess that's about it for now.  It's always nice when hotel rooms have complimentary WiFi rather than gouging you for $10/day or whatever like some others do. 

Off to Saskatoon…

…for the Saskatchewan Library Association conference so posts may be few and far between until Saturday evening.  Have a good weekend! 

The Revolution Will Not Be Dugg Down

This is one of the craziest things I've ever seen online. 

Digg,
the community web site where users can upload stories and then
other users vote them up or down with the most popular stories forming
the highly trafficked home page, had a major revolt yesterday.


It
began when an article that contained the encryption key for the DRM
protection scheme of the new HD-DVD technology.  The article was
removed from the site with an explanation from a site official that
they were complying with a cease and desist order and that this post
violated Digg's Terms of Service.  The community was offended by this
(perceived?) censorship and began voting up a number of articles
containing the code (a 16 digit hex value) until
the entire Digg front page consisted of nothing but
stories about and/or containing the encryption code.  (Another wrinkle
that got people angry was that HD-DVD is a sponsor of the popular
Diggnation video podcast.)

Digg
initially reacted by banning the accounts of people posting these links
and removing the stories.  But the response was so overwhelming that
they reversed their position within a day. 


“But now, after seeing
hundreds of stories and reading thousands of comments, you’ve made it
clear. You’d rather see Digg go down fighting than bow down to a bigger
company. We hear you, and effective immediately we won’t delete stories
or comments containing the code and will deal with whatever the
consequences might be.”




(much of this write-up is based on the Wikipedia summary of the incident as well as a few other blog posts and Digg threads)



A lot of the Web
2.0 talk these days is about how the secret of online success is to
allow your users to create your content to make a valuable web site. 
People upload pictures to Flickr, bookmarks to Delicious, information
about themselves to Facebook.  But this incident shows the flip-side of
this equation and how quickly things can turn if you offend your users
for any reason (and how a mob mentality can develop as easily online as
off.) 

People have long memories so it will be interesting to see what happens
to Digg in the weeks and months to come?  Will users come back?  Or has
it been permanently tainted by this breech of its users' trust?

(Oh, did I ever mention that Reddit is my favourite community news site and has been for a long time? )

Eye-Opening!

(Ottawa, April 24, 2007) – The Canadian Library Association (CLA) is
pleased to announce Melissa Poremba as winner of the Canadian Library
Association’s 24th Student Article Contest for “Resources You can Count
on @ Your Library”.




Melissa is a distance education student in
the Library and Information Technician Program at Mohawk College. The
idea for Melissa's entry was based on a paper she wrote in 2006 while
studying for her additional qualification in school librarianship at
the Faculty of Education, University of Western Ontario. Melissa has a
BA in both Arts and Mathematics from the University of Waterloo, and a
B. Ed. from the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at
University of Toronto. She has specialist qualifications to teach
Economics and Mathematics at the Intermediate/Senior divisions in
Ontario schools. Melissa has an interest in numeracy education, and her
submission discusses how library resources can be used for numeracy
education.




The Advisory Committee thought that her entry was
original, engaging, well-written, imaginative, readable and had broad
appeal in addition to being a timely topic. One committee member wrote
that “. . . it should inspire all librarians to rethink the potential
of their collections.”




Melissa will be awarded a cash prize as
well as free registration, accommodation and transportation to the
CLA/APLA/NLLA 2007 National Conference and Tradeshow in St. John’s,
Newfoundland, May 23-26, 2007.




The first runner-up is Jason
Hammond for “You Must Have a Lot of Young Readers in Your Family: The
Experiences of Lone Male Patrons in Children's Libraries”. Jason
graduated in December 2006 from the MLIS program at University of
Western Ontario. The Committee members liked that this entry was
personal and experienced-based as well as being interesting, timely and
original. A number of the committee members mentioned that the topic
was eye-opening. Jason will receive a cash prize courtesy of the Wosk
Family and a choice of CLA publications.




The second runner-up is
Kendra Bender for “Library Services for Newcomers to Canada: Embracing
Cultural Diversity”. Kendra is a student in the MLIS program at the
School of Library and Information Studies at the University of Alberta.
Comments on this entry were that it incorporates both personal
experience and a professional research approach, it was well-written,
timely and focuses on Canada. Kendra will also receive a cash prize
courtesy of the Wosk Family and a choice of CLA publications.




“This
year, there were many excellent and unique entries for the Student
Article Contest which made the judging enjoyable, but also very
difficult”, shared Mary-Lu Brennan, Convenor of the Member
Communications Advisory Committee. As one committee member responded –
“Wow! This was a tough exercise – all were well-written, the topics
were interesting and in some cases quite thought-provoking.”




The
prizes are awarded courtesy of CLA, Micromedia ProQuest, Coutts
Information Services and the Wosk Family Bursary. Entries are judges by
CLA’s
Member Communication Advisory Committee which is comprised of librarians and information professionals.

(via Cabot Y.'s Facebook page)

An early draft of the paper I submitted is on my blog
It was revised a bit for submission to the contest – mostly tightening
it up and re-wording some parts.  But the gist of the thing is still in
the original I uploaded if you're interested.  Also, a very public
thanks to John M, Bruce F and Michael T
as well as a few anonymous male classmates who gave me the great
feedback which helped make my paper into something much better than I
could've written without their help. 

It's funny too that I start the blog post where I uploaded my essay by
talking about Cantilever which was an idea David, Sabina, Linda and I
had to start an open-source student writing journal/repository.  The
idea never came to fruition which is too bad – I often felt like I
learned as much reading my classmates' work as reading the source
articles from the pros! 

Other publishing-type news – just got official word last night that after a lengthy revision process, my essay on Alberta user fees (now bearing the much more academic title:  “Cash Cow: User Fees in Alberta Libraries”) has been accepted for publication by Partnership: The Online  Journal That Has A Really Long Name I Can Never Remember

After I got my first suggested revisions back from them, I did a blog
post suggesting that everybody should go through a peer-review process
like this at least once.   I'd stand by that suggestion.  Professors are often short for time and
although many give good feedback and suggestions, few have the time to
deeply analyse your paper the way the journal's anonymous reviewers
do. 

It's super-easy to submit – pick one of your best/favourite essay and
follow the submissions instructions online.  Make sure you do have some
time to do revisions though  because you likely will be asked to do so
(I went through three major revisions of my paper before it was
accepted.) 

But it's now a completely different and much much better paper than the original version that's also posted on my web site (I'm running out of “favourite” paper to do stuff with – I might have to start writing some more on my own! )

I'll post a link to the paper when it's published on the Partnership
web site so you can compare the original X-titled version with the new
PG-titled version. 

"Stare out at that prairie sky, There was nothing else to do" – Fred Eaglesmith

Book Recommendation Thread

A classmate wrote recently and mentioned in passing that I should read The Golden Spruce: A True Story of Myth, Madness and Greed.  This made me realise it might be interesting to do an open post asking my readers (most of whom are librarians, writers or book industry types) what books they're reading and/or would recommend.

I've just finished “The God Delusion” by Richard Dawkins and it was excellent.  Possibly the best book I've read so far this year even.  I'm hoping to do a more fully formed post on it in the future sometime with some more in-depth thoughts on the topic. 

Right now, I'm working on “The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid: A Memoir” by Bill Bryson which I should polish off fairly quickly.  Not Bryson's funniest (“Neither Here Nor There” or “Notes on A Small Island”) or best (A Short History of Nearly Everything) but still a quick, funny read.

I also picked up “Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything” as a hold from RPL the other day and have just started it.  Decent although I'm finding it a bit heavy on the management buzzwords so far. 

Shelf Monkey
is finally out and an autographed copy arrived in my mailbox last week so I'm looking forward to cracking it soon as well. 

Finally, I grabbed “A Book In Every Hand: The Story of Public Libraries in Saskatchewan” when we were home this weekend.  I read it when it first came out (PDF) but want to re-read it now that the people and places mentioned will make a bit more sense.

How about you?  What books are you reading right now?  Which books have you read recently that you would recommend?

Eating Regina

I posted an anecdote about Kurt Vonnegut from author Dave Margoshes a couple entries back. In the course of writing to ask permission to do this, I also took the opportunity to ask Dave, who also acts as the food critic with the local Prairie Dog weekly newspaper, if he’d be willing to give me a list of his favourite Regina restaurants.  This is what he sent me:

* Thai Garden, on Albert St., my default comfort food place.
* Four Seas on Rose Street downtown – this Taiwanese place has the best
ginger beef I’ve ever had.
* Angkor, on Quance Street in the east side jungle. My favourite
all-around Oriental restaurant… except for…


* Nit’s in Moose Jaw, best Thai food, bar none.


* Smokin’ Oakies, a few doors down from Angkor – terrific barbeque


* Gaslight Saloon on Broad, for burgers and Mexican


* Italian Star Deli – great sandwiches

*
Nicky’s Cafe – terrific ribs, burgers, turkey, breakfasts…probably
the restaurant I’ve been to to most often.



I was thinking about doing a list of my own favourite restaurants having been away for a year and seeing the landscape of Regina’s culinary culture grow by leaps and bounds in that time.  So for comparison sake, here’s my own list.

1. Bushwakkers
– in the city with the highest per capita ratio of brew pubs to population in Canada (if not North America), Bushwakkers is head and shoulders above the rest.  That’s not just me – it was cited as one of Canada’s best brew pubs by the Globe & Mail a few years back.  On my old home page, I used to have links to sites to illustrate what I considered my “Home”, “Former Location” and “Current Location”.  The “Home” link led to the Bushwakkers web site! 

2.  Lang’s
– if Thai Garden is Dave’s default comfort food place, Lang’s Vietnamese is mine.  As with brew pubs, Regina has an abnormally high number of Vietnamese places but Lang’s is my personal favourite with Viet-Thai on Albert St. as a close second and Ankor which Dave mentions as an even closer third.  (Urban legend has it that all the Vietnamese places in Regina with “Garden” in their name  are owned by the same family.  Not sure if it’s true.)

3. Copper Kettle
– the only restaurant pizza I’ve had in my life that competes (and if I’m honest, exceeds the Copper Kettle was at the Hop ‘N’ Brew in Calgary).  But the Copper Kettle is renowned for their unique, delicious pizzas including their speciality – spinach and feta (which I like to add garlic and chicken to.)  They have a newspaper clipping up (or they did – haven’t looked recently) relating the story of someone who ordered pizzas when he was in Regina on business which he took as a carry-on when flying back to his home in another province! 

4.  Cathedral Village Free House
– my cousin came to visit from New York so I took her and her boyfriend here.  She said “This place would fit perfectly in Greenwich Village” which I took as a pretty high compliment.  (Here’s a more detailed review on another site.)

5.  Smokin’ Oakies
– I’m with Dave on this one.  Regina’s first barbeque place sets the bar pretty high. 

6.  Mongolie Grille
– I was extremely sad (probably inordinately so when I look back on it) knowing I would no longer have a Mongolian Grille in my city when we moved back to Regina from Calgary.  Then, not soon after we got back, a franchise of the Calgary outfit opened here.  I know Dave’s review said the food tends to all end up tasting the same no matter what combination of meat, vegetables and sauces you use (and I agree).  But it’s still a damn fine tasting mess, no matter what!

7. Wasabi
– There are a few sushi restaurants in Regina (especially compared to ten years ago) but this one is a personal favourite – very affordable yet tasty sushi.  The Korean rolls are delicious!

8. Alfredo’s
There used to be an Italian place called Presutti’s that was by far, my favourite place for that type of cuisine (especially their lunch buffet which gave you a taste of everything – pasta, pizza, salad, bread and more!)  It’s gone out of business (sadly) but there is another place that’s almost as good – the longtime Regina institution known as Alfredo’s.

9. 100 Kings
– a Korean restaurant where you barbecue your own food right at your table.  Sometimes I’m lazy and wish we had a Korean place that would cook it in the back and bring it out to you but otherwise, I love Korean food and this fits the bill!

10.  Prairie Pita
– another absence I was concerned about when we moved back from Calgary in 2004 was the lack of any restaurant selling schwarmas. Regina didn’t get a place right after we got back like with the Mongolie Grille.  But when we got back from London, a couple years later, I was happy to find that this had changed.  Not the best I’ve had in my life (another Calgary spot – the Falafel King downtown takes it) but at least it’s possible to get a decent chicken schwarma here now!

Bonus: Five Long-Gone Regina Restaurants I Miss (Inspired By #8 Above)
1. Presutti’s
2. Blarney Stone Irish Pub
3. California Subs
4. Orleans Lousiana Cuisine
5. PJ Mellon’s Pub (it still exists – it just got moved from  outside the University to the east side of Regina and was rechristened The Creekside Pub.  It’s the same but different and gave me a weird deja vu of my undergrad days when I went in there after it re-opened.  I haven’t been back – too disconcerting.)

There are probably a dozen other great restaurants I could mention but these are some of my favourites.  I should also note that there are a lot of new restaurants I still haven’t gotten around to trying.  For instance, Regina has at least three
East Indian restaurants now when it only used to have one (India House) which always seemed in danger of going under due to lack of support (not sure if this was true or not, just the impression I got for some reason.) 


The other thing – I don’t get to Regina’s high end restaurants very often if at all so my list focuses on places that would mostly be considered casual dining.  But there are a number of high-end restaurants in Regina that can compete with the best in Canada’s much larger cities. 

Zest at the Science Centre is one that’s supposed to be excellent which I haven’t had occasion to try yet (waiting for a birthday or anniversary where parents or others are willing to treat!  )  I have been to the Willows on Wascana (and they catered an event we did in 2005.)  Both times, their food was unbelievable!  One of those places where your mouth goes “Wow.  What is this?  It’s not even food, it’s so good.  You’re eating art, aren’t you?”

Friday Fun Link – "The Hole in the Wall" – A Digital Divide Experiment in India

An Indian physicist puts a PC with a high speed internet connection in a wall in the slums and watches what happens.

What
he discovered was that the most avid users of the machine were ghetto
kids aged 6 to 12, most of whom have only the most rudimentary
education and little knowledge of English. Yet within days, the kids
had taught themselves to draw on the computer and to browse the Net.
Some of the other things they learned, Mitra says, astonished him.

Strong evidence in favour of the $100 laptop? I think so!

(via Reddit)

Save Internet Radio

I'm not a huge fan of Internet petitions for the most part but this one
makes sense
, not least of all because it is trying to mobilize Internet users to save something specific to the online world, namely Internet radio.  The Myths & Facts section of the SaveInternetRadio.org web site is enlightening as is this editorial by David Byrne of the Talking Heads (thanks to David J. via Librarian Activist for the link.)

Please take a couple minutes to sign the petition


On March 2, 2007 the Copyright Royalty Board (CRB), which oversees
sound recording royalties paid by Internet radio services, increased
Internet radio's royalty burden between 300 and 1200 percent and
thereby jeopardized the industry’s future.   

At the
request of the Recording Industry Association of America, the CRB
ignored the fact that Internet radio royalties were already double what
satellite radio pays, and multiplied the royalties even further.  The
2005 royalty rate was 7/100 of a penny per song streamed; the 2010 rate
will be 19/100 of a penny per song streamed.  And for small webcasters
that were able to calculate royalties as a percentage of revenue in
2005 – that option was quashed by the CRB, so small webcasters’
royalties will grow exponentially!

Before this ruling
was handed down, the vast majority of webcasters were barely making
ends meet as Internet radio advertising revenue is just beginning to
develop.  Without a doubt most Internet radio services will go bankrupt
and cease webcasting if this royalty rate is not reversed by the
Congress, and webcasters’ demise will mean a great loss of creative and
diverse radio.  Surviving webcasters will need sweetheart licenses that
major record labels will be only too happy to offer, so long as the
webcaster permits the major label to control the programming and
playlist.  Is that the Internet radio you care to hear?  

As
you know, the wonderful diversity of Internet radio is enjoyed by tens
of millions of Americans and provides promotional and royalty
opportunities to independent labels and artists that are not available
to them on broadcast radio.  What you may not know is that in just the
last year Internet radio listening jumped dramatically, from 45 million
listeners per month to 72 million listeners each month.  Internet radio
is already popular and it is already benefiting thousands of artists
who are finding new fans online every day.

Action must
be taken to stop this faulty ruling from destroying the future of
Internet radio that so many millions of listeners depend on each day. 
Instead of relying on lawyers filing appeals in the CRB and the courts,
the SaveNetRadio Coalition has been formed to represent every
webcaster, every Net Radio listener, and every artist who enjoys and
benefits from this medium.  Please join our fight for the preservation
of Internet radio.

Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan is Online

There are a number of astounding stats about The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan which came out during Saskatchewan's Centennial in 2005.  Most pages of any book ever published in Saskatchewan.  Most contributors.  Most illustrations.  Longest gestation time.  Heaviest.  

The print edition is an amazing book and now, the CPRC has put the whole thing online for anybody to access for free as well (at least for the next year and hopefully beyond.)  Check it out!

The largest educational publishing project in the
province’s history, the Encyclopedia
of Saskatchewan, is now online for the world to see. It currently features approximately 2,300 entries
about the province with more than 1,000 accompanying charts, graphs, maps,
tables and photographs.

People can visit the Encyclopedia
of Saskatchewan at www.esask.uregina.ca

Access to the site will be free, at least for the
first year, and visitors will be able to search for articles and images.
Libraries are encouraged to link to the site, so that their patrons can
maximize their usage of this valuable resource tool.

(via Sask Library Association mailing list)