update re: ILL/Mao/DHS

Two stories in Southcoast Today [also in print in the Standard Times] following up on the Homeland Security/ILL report from yesterday. ‘Little Red Book’ story gets wide publicity , an article reporting on the publicity and with several statements from additional folks involved, most notably Homeland Security officials calling the scenario described “unlikely”. Also UMass Dartmouth statement on “Little Red Book” denying that they passed on any confidential information to agents or anyone else. [thanks aaron]

hi – 20dec

Hi. Anyone who reads this site at its web address instead of via an RSS reader will notice that the default stylesheet has changed. I modified a freely available theme because I wanted something with different levels of navigation. Thanks to another freely available plug-in you can choose the way you would like this site to appear to you. Just check the list of options under the Themes heading in the sidebar. If you’re interested in the other modifications I’ve made and plug-ins I’m using, feel free to check out this page about WordPress on librarian.net. Feel free to pick the stylesheet you like the best, or if there isn’t one that does what you want, let me know.

In other fancy design news, you’ve already seen it but I thought I would show it off: Michael’s Tame the Web blog has broken out of its default stylesheet thanks to the help of the Movable Type Style Generator and some little extra haxies, including the last.fm listing on the righthand column of the ipod blog and the custom sidebars on a few other pages. We’re still bringing the old URLs into line with the new ones and a few other things, but overall I’m really pleased with how it turned out.

hi – 18dec

Hi. Posting has been a bit sporadic here because my old iBook had its fourth logic board fail. So, this is a short story about technology for you. My iBook had left me in the lurch three times thanks to its faulty logic board. This is a known flaw and has been repaired for free each time it has happened. This last time, when I started seeing signs of impending logic board death, I called Apple and said “I have put up with this long enough. Please send me a laptop that will not need replacement of vital parts every eight months” To my suprise, they agreed to send me a new G4, one G faster than my last laptop. I mailed back my old laptop, after wiping the drive. This meant that I had to backup my entire hard drive locally before getting a new laptop. Fortunately in this household that is not difficult. Since so much of my personal data is online, this was less onerous than it would have been maybe a year or two ago. Calendar, contacts, booklist, websites, bookmarks, are all backed up redundantly online in various places.

I got the new laptop about two weeks later, which is longer than I would have preferred, but I can’t see Apple being really gung-ho on sending me a new free laptop. Yesterday I began the long process of re-downloading and re-installing all the software on my old machine. It took about 4-6 hours, including system updates. If I had dial-up it would have taken weeks, literally weeks. Backing up my home directory meant that I saved my system preferences, my desktop images, my email configuration information and yes, my bookmarks. Being tech savvy meant that all this took me was time. The few times I stumbled in my file restoration [I accidentally removed the mechanism for keyboard entry and couldn’t type on the thing for a little bit, ha ha!] I had the know-how to straighten it all out. I know sometimes listening to my “But what about the information poor…?” harangues can be tiring, but a situation like this which was complicated but manageable for me might very well have been the end of someone’s online life in the community that I work in. For every senior that is happily clicking away at some AARP websites, there are others with computers and Internet subscriptions who have hit some sort of wall, usually just a know-how wall and don’t have a solid plan B. In my librarian utopia, libraries can help be that plan B.

a small foray into Google Books

You can use the date operator to browse public domain books in Google Books. I’m not entirely sure why the covers of some of these books remain under copyright. Any ideas? I’ve also noticed a few scanning errors and some pretty neat finds like this one which gives the name of every librarian in the US and Canada working in a library holding over 1,000 volumes. Google Books clearly uses keyword indexing to make these books searchable. How great would it be to have this one in a database? You can see a few images that I particularly liked over at Flickr.