Tag Archives: Future

A great big cloud catalog for the greater good of all?

photo-1432139523732-e9d8af332501Prepare yourself for very big picture thinking on this post. Not a fast read (10 pages), but a mind blowing one. I have re-read it twice and it continues to get my pulse racing!

Have you ever noticed that if the average reader searches Google for a popular book title, that in the first two pages of search results (the only ones they care about), no public library shows up. Think about it,  public libraries are the single largest supplier of books, bigger than  Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Walmart, Costco or local bookstores.  And think about it, libraries don’t show up as an option, much less the best option for getting books at the best price. Why?

A few facts to ponder as provided by Steve Coffman, Information Today….

  • Goodreads ranks 67th among most visited U.S. websites, with 21.4 million unique monthly U.S. visitors, and 47.6 million form the world as a whole
  • OCLC’s Worldcat, our current largest collective catalog and the closest thing we have to Goodreads, ranks 3,748 of all websites in the U.S. and attracted 487,884 visitors in April of 2015
  • According to the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), collectively, U.S. public libraries had 170,911,488 registered members in 2012 (most recent available data). This accounts for more than half the total U.S. population, and almost six times the number of Goodreads members. So, why don’t libraries show up in search results?
  • More than 9,000 public libraries are diligently paying for and maintaining  individual catalogs at considerable expense. And, these catalogs are embedded in library automation systems that are isolated from web search engines. Everyone is in their silo, thinking their users have unique needs that only they can serve. Is this true? Can public libraries continue to operate this way, forever scrambling to prove themselves in order to get funding to keep the doors open?
  • Coffman recently wrote an astonishing  piece stating the obvious solution to this problem. “Ditch those 9,000 old, outmoded library catalogs and funnel all of our readers through one great catalog built on the web.” Although I know this solution could be met with scorn and bloodcurdling screams of  outrage, it is worth thinking about. What if?
  • In short, if libraries banded together to form a “Cloud Catalog”, “it could be the one source readers would go to  first when they want to find a book, regardless of who has it, what its format is, or whether it is in-print, out-of-print, or not yet published.”
  • There are details in Coffman’s post, lots of details….kudos to him, I bow to his brilliance in taking this subject on! One of the many details is a claim that none of the records in the Cloud Catalog would be MARC records! More blasphemy you say?

Please put your resistance aside and read the full article. If I was still in grad school, I would crank up the popcorn popper, open my dorm door, lure everyone in, and have a good conversation about this idea. Even capturing a small number of high points here gets my pulse racing! This would be a big move on the part of libraries, a “blindside” move according to producer standards of Survivor Island. That’s just it, libraries are barely surviving, and simply cannot continue as they are. We need solutions to this problem of visibility. Read the full piece, invite other library staff to do the same. Let me know when and where you want to hash this out, I’ll bring the popcorn!

Image credit: https://unsplash.com/ (Alex Munsell), licensed under CC0 1.0

 

 

Future libraries report available for download

3a8bd6d2Fast Company recently brought our attention to a new report  done by Arup University, a well renowned research institution. As others have said, as we find ourselves in a time of great technological upheaval, libraries can survive, but they’re going to have to change, and fast! Can they change fast enough? are we headed in the right direction? and what kind of change is needed? Do words like collaborative, robotic, and participatory pique your interest?

The full report is free for download, is 44 pages in length, and contains many graphics and pictures. More than reading a sound bite, this report is worth a thoughtful read. If you want the Fast Company cliff notes version, click here.

Artificially intelligent software in education

Flipped classrooms? Massive open online courses? What’s the next thing in learning? Maybe classrooms run by software. Slate recently had an interesting article about a class where students are taught not but a “sage on stage” but by Artificial Intelligent (AI) software that guides them through the materials and assesses their progress. It might sound more science fiction then reality but could this be the future of education?

Read the whole article now!

The class in the Slate article was using software called ALEKS. To learn more about it, check out this video below:

 

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Library As Idea Incubator?

Valerie EverettThomas Frey, famous futurist,  presented recently for the American Library Association at an event at the  Library of Congress about the Future of Libraries. Nothing like a futurist to get the creative juices flowing, and I found his blog post about library as “liquid network”, a breeding ground for future ideas, to be fascinating. I don’t have the logistics figured out, but as all types of librarians grapple with the role of the library in the future, this idea is novel. I think many of us can agree that libraries will certainly not be about warehousing books (they already are not).

Did you know that the Library of Congress has been archiving Twitter since 2010 and has more than 600 billion tweets to date? That seems a bit extreme, but what if libraries provided a “stable storehouse” of space  to gather creative ideas? And as Frey says, “It’s far less about where ideas come from and far more about where they go as they enter into our emerging ‘liquid networks’ ecosystem.” And as Frey points out, as we allow others to see cool ideas, it could spark new epiphanies otherwise never imagined! This idea would squarely position the library as catalyst in these liquid networks. What do you think, could it work?

See Thomas Frey’s post…..The Future Library–A Liquid Network for Ideas to read in deeper detail.

Image: Some rights reserved by Valerie Everett

An Example of a Library of the Future

Some rights reserved by  psychicdevelopmentgroup
Some rights reserved by
psychicdevelopmentgroup

Will the library of the 21st century still have books? YES, there is no doubt in my mind. However, what else might it have?

Read about how the downtown Chattanooga Public Library cleared out 14,000 feet of storage space and created a space for sewing machines, laser cutters, 3D printers, and more. Interaction is the key ingredient, with a light touch on any sort of warehousing of books!

Read the following two posts to get more detail:

Exciting stuff….but, are librarians prepared to function and support end users in these kinds of spaces?