Assignment Blog
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
unit 7
unit 9
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Final exam
The Future of Print: The Book
This was not an easy title to find! First, I had to determine what Feliciter was. A bit of searching told me that it’s a publication put out by the Canadian Library Association. I was able to locate the journal by searching the database on the CLA.CA website. Full text versions of all of the issues of this journal are available online. The link to this particular journal is here: http://www.cla.ca/Content/NavigationMenu/Resources/Feliciter/PastIssues/2011/Feliciter5Vol57_w.pdfAuthority- Distad is a librarian at the University of Alberta. He is also the author of a few books. This would make him a good authority on the topic of the future of books.
Sources- Distad draws on some interesting sources for his article. Most are historical references to past perceptions that books would be replaced by some newer technology.
Purpose- Distad is arguing that e-books and readers will not replace the printed book, but will exist along side it.
Coverage- Distad covers the topic, but in a superficial way. He doesn't go into real statistics to back up his claims that books are in no danger.
Timeliness- This article is less than 1 year old, so still very relevant to the topic.
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Are books dead, and can authors survive?
I typed the full title of the article into a Google search. The first result was for the full text Guardian article.
Authority- The article was written by Ewan Morrison, a well-known Scottish author. I believe that would make him an authority on books and the future of books. However this fact can also make his opinions biased.
Sources- Morrison quotes many sources and statistics in this article. He is sure to note where the information that he is using comes from. Some of his sources include Barnes and Noble, Amazon, and Wired Magazine, all of whom are reputable sources.
Purpose- Morrison’s purpose with this article is to share statistics about what happens when a particular medium goes digital and to predict the future of the printed book based on those statistics. Evenness- the overall tone of the article seems to be even.
Coverage- Morrison was very thorough in the coverage of the topic. He even went so far as to touch on the porn industry and the effect the Internet has had on it’s sales over the years.
Timeliness- The article is less than a year old, it is very timely.
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The Future of Print: The Book
In this article, the author, Merrill Distad, discusses why he feels that the printed book is in no danger of becoming a relic of the past. He draws upon several historical sources to show times when men have feared that the book would be replaced by some new technology. He argues that because this had not come to pass any of those times, it surely will not come to pass now.
He feels that people have such a strong emotional connection to books that they would never be able to let them go. I think he wrong on this point. I think as we become more connected and dependent on technology in the future, we will move away from single use items like books. Why would a person choose to carry boxes and boxes of books, when they can have all of their books with them at once in a device that weighs about a half pound.
He also argues that college students would not want e-books because they could not sell them back at the end of the semester. I would really like to see statistics for this assertion. I disagree with him on this point very strongly. As a college student, I would purchase all of my text books as e-books if that option were available to me and the price was fair. I believe that e-books should cost less than half that of print books because the cost of production and distribution is almost nothing.
Distad does make a very good point about children and literacy however. I would agree that it is vital for development for children to have books at a very young age. But does this exclude e-readers? I can see this going either way. Children today begin using computers as early as 3, an e-reader could be adapted to be usable by a small child. I don't know that there is anything about a book that could not be gained through an e-book.
I think that Distad is correct in that tree books will not be replaced e-books. Not all of them any way. There will always be print books, but e-books will most likely become the way of the future. Portability and convergent technology is the way of the future.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Unit 8
1. Search tools - Gigablast.
Gigablast has a new feature called Event Guru, the largest event search engine in the U.S. It claims to be 90% wind powered. It is a human powered search engine, so all of the content is added by users. This is similar to wikipedia, but instead of being a dictionary, it's a search engine. The advanced search feature will allow you to refine your search as follows,
| Search for... | ||
|---|---|---|
| all of these words | ||
| this exact phrase | ||
| and this exact phrase | ||
| any of these words | ||
| none of these words | ||
| In this language: | ||
| Restrict to this URL | ||
| Pages that link to this URL | ||
| Site Clustering | yes no | |
| Number of summary excerpts | 0 1 2 3 4 5 | |
| Results per Page | 10 20 30 40 50 100 | |
| Restrict to these Sites | ||
2. Metasearch tools - Meta Crawler. MetaCrawler seems to search several search engines at once for specific items. It compiles all of the top hits from all of the major search engines. It also allows users to refine their searches to videos, images, shopping etc. Dogpile and infoseek are other examples of meta crawlers.
3. Subject directories - Subject directories are online collections that
organize resources by subject. Most seem to be linked to specific libraries. There are some that are for searching the Library of Congress and others that will let you search the deep web for things that are not readily accessible by using a regular search Engine like Google. CompletePlanet is a deep web search engine. It will search over 70,000 databases and specialty search engines. The topics it will search are
Sunday, May 20, 2012
unit 6
election and reform and "Electoral College" and "popular vote"
Does television advertising by the pharmaceutical industry have an impact on prescription drug abuse?
"television advertising" and pharmaceutical and (industry or compan*) and "prescription drug abuse"
Does anti-smoking advertising by the tobacco industry lead to increased smoking among youth?
"anti-smoking advertising" and (tobacco or cigarette) and (industry or compan*) and (increas* or ris*) and smoking and (youth or kids or children)
Target often forces musicians to alter lyrics in order to have their CDs sold in Target stores. Is this censorship?
Target and musicians and censorship
What are the similarities between the Great Depression of the 1930s and the current economic problems?
similarities and "Great Depression" and "current economic problems"
part 2
How do social media sites use your personal information?
"social media" and "personal information"
Monday, May 14, 2012
unit 5
Search term used: Social Media Privacy
Citation information: Author: Costigan, Sean S.
Title: Cyberspaces and Global Affairs [electronic resources]
Publisher: Ashgate Publishing Ltd, 2012
Subject headings: Information Technology, Internet-political aspects, Internet and international relations, Mass media and international relations, political science.
This is an e-book
Is the book credible? Yes, it appears to be credible. It's a collection of scholarly essays by experts in their fields.
Summit Search
Search term used: social media privacy
Citation information:
Author: Christian Fuchs; et al
Title: Internet and Surveillance : the challenges of Web 2.0 and social media
Publisher: New York : Routledge, 2012.
Format: Book
Subject headings: Information Technology, Internet - social aspects, electronic surveillance, social media, privacy, right of, data protection, internet, world wide web
Is the book credible? Yes, it appears to be credible. It's primary source research done by a scholar.
IT Pro - Well the IT PRO collection has turned out to be one of the coolest things ever. There are so many titles listed that are relevant and interesting to me. SO MANY. I wouldn't even know where to start. I wish that there was a way to add them to my Kindle as that is how I do most of my reading now. It's nice that I can organize the books into a folder so that I can add books that I'd like to read down the road. I like that it's set up in a way that lets you search by publisher as well as subject. I really enjoy the O'reily books and it was cool to be able to look through them and see the titles Ive wanted to read for some time now.
Google Books- Search Term used: Social, media, privacy
Citation information for the book: (author, title, city of publication, publisher, publication date)
The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet
Solove, D.J. http://books.google.com/books?id=F6liiKZwX_oC
2007 Yale University Press
What clues does Google Books provide that lead you to believe this book is trustworthy? The fact that this book is published by Yale University Press leads me to believe that it is trustworthy.
Summary - I learned a lot in this assignment. I've used college libraries and Summit Search before, so that portion was not new to me. But the portions on IT PRO and Google books was very useful. I had never explored either of them, but have a feeling that I will be using both over and over.
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Unit 4
A scholarly journal would be the most useful because the research is in-depth and the authors are experts in their field.
2) Target often forces musicians to alter lyrics in order to have their CDs sold in Target stores. Is this censorship?
Popular magazines would be the most useful because the information would be recent and well researched, especially if it's a magazine about music news such as Rolling Stone.
3) How much more can a college graduate expect to earn over someone with a high school diploma?
The Department of Education website would be the most useful to find this because it would have data listed in the website. And because it is a DoE website, it can be trusted.
4) Should educators use commercial services to combat plagiarism?
A scholarly journal would be the most useful because it would be written by professionals in the field and well researched and possibly peer reviewed.
5) Is the current lack of sunspot activity affecting global warming?
A popular magazine such as Science would be the most useful because it would have the most current research and information.
1. How do social media sites use your personal information?
Popular magazines would be the most useful because this topic is so new that books and journals may not be as up to date with current information.
2. How can things you post on social media sites come back to haunt you?
Websites would be the most useful because the may contain personal anecdotes from people who have had experience with their social media information being used in a bad way.
3. Is the government watching you online?
Academic journals would be the most useful because the authors are scholars and have done all the primary research on the topic.