Library Corner: 3-11-2015

Library corner imageOverDrive Fixes Technical Issue with Kindle Library eBooks (The Ebook Reader)

Findaway World Launches a Kids Tablet Designed for Libraries, Classrooms (Ink, Bits & Pixels)

New Online: College Art Association (CAA) Publishes “Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for the Visual Arts” (Infodocket)

Welcome to the Future—at Your Library (American Libraries Magazine)

The Growth of Ebooks in Cuba (Havana Times)

In Haiti, a library with no books transforms the way kids learn (Christian Science Monitor)

Digital Collections:

Reference: IRS Launches Searchable Directory of Federal Tax Return Preparers (Infodocket)

Charlie Hebdo Attack Web Archive From Archive-It & Bibliotheque Nationale de France (Archive-it)

The British Library’s Endangered Archives Program Releases Another 500,000+ Images Online (Infodocket)

New York Philharmonic Digital Archives (New York Philharmonic)

NATO Archives Discloses Documents Related To The Events In Poland 1987-1991, View Online or Download Complete Set  (Infodocket)

Denmark’s Largest Digital Archive *site and archives are in Danish* (arkivdk)

Ohio: State Treasurer Partners with State Library of Ohio to Publish Centuries of Online Annual Financial Reports (Infodocket)

Once a week, I post links to digital-related library news articles and information about new digital collections available online.

Library Corner: 2-24-2015

Library corner imageLibrary News:

 Digital Books Are Up in the Air (American Libraries)

Where Libraries Are Sited Is As Important As What They Do? (Brave New World)

National Libraries Day cites decline in UK libraries (Teleread)

OverDrive’s Big Library Read and Global eBook Club (The Ebook Reader)

National Library of Medicine Launches New Twitter Stream For K-12 Science Educators (Infodocket)

Coming soon for U.S. and Canadian libraries: Disney streaming video! (Overdrive)

Listen Here: Edmonton Public Library Will Begin Offering Free Downloads of Music by Local Musicians in April (Infodocket)

Someone Is Trying to Save You From Awful Books at the Boston Public Library (Boston.com)

Pilot Project: Three Chicago Public Library Branches Will Begin Lending Internet Routers and Tablets Next Month (Infodocket)

Digital Collections:

Canada: Scholars Portal from Ontario Council of University Libraries now locally hosting 40 million articles (Infodocket.com)

New Resource: ProQuest, University of Michigan Library and Bodleian Libraries Provide 25,000 Early Modern Books as Open Access Text (Infodocket)

Resources: Badilisha Poetry X-Change, The Largest Online Archive of African Poetry in the World (Infodocket)

Newly Launched Posen Digital Library From Yale University Press Makes Available Jewish Literature, Art, Artifacts and More (Infodocket)

Cornell Hip Hop Collection to Go Digital (Cornell Sun)

 

Once a week, I post links to digital-related library news articles and information about new digital collections available online.

Can you use your Kindle for library books?

Library BooksThere was an interesting thread this morning on Amazon’s Kindle forums concerning library use and e-ink Kindles. According to the opening post, “Many libraries are switching to 3M Cloud and using Axis 360 ditching Overdrive.”

The poster’s complaint is relevant because the 3M Cloud is not compatible with e-ink Kindles, only the Kindle Fire.  At at the bottom of 3m’s list of compatible devices, it says:

The 3M Cloud Library is not currently supported by Amazon. If you would like compatibility with your Kindle device not indicated above, please contact kindle-feedback@amazon.com.

However, the forum posts go on to point out that the problem with 3M is not Amazon’s. It goes on to note that 3M was created as a partnership between Penguin. the New York Public Library and 3M with the intention of creating a system that didn’t support the Kindle.  (Nate from the Digital Reader wrote an article about this back in 2012.)

Both Axis 360 and 3M are said to be cheaper for libraries than current Overdrive prices. It seems that some libraries use Overdrive along with one of the other systems, while other libraries are choosing with one over the other. For libraries who switch to 3M or Axis 360, patrons with an e-ink Kindle are left out in the cold.

Understandably, avid library users who own e-these unsupported devices aren’t happy.

Obviously, 3M and Axis 360 have been available for quite some time now. This thread made me wonder if library patrons are starting to see their libraries shift to other e-book providers.

Does anyone have any experience with this? What is your library using to lend ebooks? Have they changed systems? Please share in the comments. 🙂

Library Corner: 1-20-2015

Library corner imageLibrary News:

OverDrive: Ebook Checkouts Up 33 Percent (Library Journal)

Libraries as Innovation Hubs (Digital Reader)

The K-12 and Economic Cases for a National Digital Library Endowment (Library City)

Toronto Public Library sadly embraces ‘culture of free’ (Toronto Star)

Odilo Launches New Library eBook Service in the U.S. (eBook Reader)

New Digital Collections:

Pond5 Launches Searchable Collection of 80,000 Public Domain Videos, Images, and 3D Models (Infodocket)

FDR Library and Museum Doubles Online Digital Collection, 400,000+ More Digitized Items Added to FRANKLIN Database (Infodocket)

Swiss National Library Uploads 1000 Images of Paintings to Wikimedia Commons (Infodocket)

Just Released: 23,000 New Documents Uploaded to NATO Archives Online (Infodocket)

Once a week, I post links to digital-related library news articles and information about new digital collections available online.

 

Library Corner: 12/29/2014

Library corner imageThe week in library news:

Alan Dundes papers open for access at UC Berkeley Bancroft Library (Teleread)

OverDrive: Streaming Video From MGM Now Available For Library Lending in U.S. and Canadian Public and School Markets (Infodocket)

Simon & Schuster Expands Library eBook Loans to the UK (Digital Reader)

Is Your City Miserly Toward Library Books? Go for a Surtax or a Special Book Funds (Library City)

Ten library systems pass one million digital checkouts in OverDrive in 2014 (Teleread)

Library Corner: 12/14/2014

Library corner imageThe week in library news:

First, several articles from the ALA Winter Spotlight via Publishers Weekly:

Kiosk offers convenient link to library’s ebooks (This Week News)

MIT asks students: What do you want in a library? (MIT Library News)

40 Dr. Seuss Titles now available for public and school libraries in US and Canada from Overdrive (Infodocket)

Center for Digital Research and Scholarship launches new Digital Dante research resource (Columbia University Libraries)

 At Harvard, Technology Resurrects Long-Silent Voices Of Poets (Wbur.org, Boston NPR)

Picture via Morguefile

 

 

News of the Day: E-books aren’t books for UK Taxes

From the Goodereader: E-books aren’t books for tax purposes 

From NPR The Two-Way: BookNews – Jesus’ copyright and literature on paper cups 

From MakeUseOf: Five fantastic short stories to read FREE online

From Vacuosminx: A reader manifesto

From Teleread: Indie titles are coming to OverDrive via Smashwords

 

News of the Day: Arabic e-books and Is Everyone a Publisher

For Wednesday, May 7, 2014:

From Publishing Perspectives: A peek at the world of Arabic e-books

From Digital Book World: Is everyone a publisher?  and The Navy commissions e-reader and gives e-books to sailors 

From The Digital Reader: Touch Screen that enables the blind to see with their hands 

From Overdrive.com: Overdrive now works with Kindle Free Time to offer children’s e-books for libraries

The future of the library and the great content divide

As someone who tweets a great deal about public libraries, this article from TheDigitalShift, Ebook Strategy and Public Libraries: Slow Just Won’t Work Anymore,  speaks volumes.

The article addresses many of the important issues at the heart of the library ebook problem such as Overdrive’s monopoly and publisher’s refusals to sell ebooks because of fears of the library model. But it is the following paragraph which presents a truly terrifying scenario:

The perfect storm formula of a monopolistic environment and the actions (or more accurately, the deliberate inaction) of publishers have resulted in the creation of a significant shift in public policy in this country. After more than 100 years of public libraries circulating materials to users, we are no longer able to provide access to critical content that now exists in digital form. As a result, two very distinct scenarios are emerging in the communities we serve. Affluent users in prosperous neighborhoods have universal broadband access, numerous ebook hosting devices, and a credit card with the disposable income to acquire whatever content they want. Low-income residents in poorer neighborhoods do not have this sequence of resources and run the risk of not being able to access digital content that will allow them to fairly participate, compete and contribute to the digital economy/world. This content divide goes against the very principles that attracted so many of us to this profession –supporting democracy by providing access to information in the broadest possible context.

The issues so succinctly raised in this article are ones that all of us, as a society, should be very, very concerned about.There is much more in the full article, including suggestions about how to work towards a solution. If you care about public libraries, this is a must read article!

What’s in your ebook bill of rights?

One of the big issues over this last week has been Harper Collins’ announcement that they were placing limits on how many times a library book may be circulated. The last-minute announcement broadsided librarians and readers alike. (There are roundups of the blog entries and media coverage available and  you can follow the discussion on Twitter under the hashtag #HCOD.) EDIT: Sorry, but that hashtag no longer has the same meaning and that information is no longer available.

Ironically, the new limits went into effect on March 7, 2011, right at the beginning of Read an Ebook Week.

Those discussions have yielded a lot of interesting ideas about accessibility, DRM (Digital Rights Management) and the future of ebooks. One of these ideas is the aggressive promotion of an eBook User’s Bill of Rights, most frequently the one offered by Sarah Houghton-Jan on her blog, Librarian in Black.

Sarah’s bill of rights focuses on:

  • the right to use eBooks under guidelines that favor access over proprietary limitations
  • the right to access eBooks on any technological platform, including the hardware and software the user chooses
  • the right to annotate, quote passages, print, and share eBook content within the spirit of fair use and copyright
  • the right of the first-sale doctrine extended to digital content, allowing the eBook owner the right to retain, archive, share, and re-sell purchased eBooks

Well known tech blogger Mike Cane tackled this subject as well on his own blog last August in his article the Ebook Buyer’s Bill of Rights.   His bill of rights focuses mainly on issues involving appearance and functionality: covers, table of content, bookmarks. Formatting issues are also important in his version:

3) You have the right to proper formatting by default.
a) Formatting should mirror a proper printed book.
b) Paragraphs should have indents without spaces between paragraphs.
c) Only after such proper default formatting should a reader be able to mix things up via a device’s software settings (typesize, spacing, margins — in other words, reflow overrides).

A site called the Reader’s Bill of Rights promotes rights for readers of digital books. Created by librarian Alycia Sellie and technologist Matthew Goins, the site advocates critical looks at the downsides of ereader technology and has an anti-DRM stance. The powerful graphic for Libraians against DRM shown above comes from their site. (Note that this site was registered in April 2010, well before the Harper Collins OverDrive announcement.) Its bill of rights focuses more on DRM and accessibility.

The Readers’ Bill of Rights for Digital Books:
1. Ability to retain, archive and transfer purchased materials
2. Ability to create a paper copy of the item in its entirety
3. Digital Books should be in an open format (e.g. you could read on a computer, not just a device)
4. Choice of hardware to access books (e.g. in 3 years when your device has broken, you can still read your book on other hardware)
5. Reader information will remain private (what, when and how we read will not be stored, sold or marketed)

The site also has an interesting blog entry about the ALA president speaking out about this issue on Facebook. The entry links to one of the best arguments I have ever seen for NOT joining the social networking giant.

Each of these rights statements makes it extremely clear that they are meant to be starting points for the conversation about rights. It is also quite obvious that each author has different priorities that are important to them, whether it is the first sale doctrine or DRM.

What I personally find extremely surprising, given all the discussion about eBook prices, is that none of these rights statements even mentions the concept of the price of digital books as an important factor.

How about you?  Is there something that you think should be included in an ebook bill of rights?  Is a fair price something you would like to see as part of the discussion?