Slashdot Mirror


User: librarybob

librarybob's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
18
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 18

  1. Wrong Direction on The Cost Of Broadband In Every Rural Home · · Score: 1

    I don' think the issue should be one of "building down" to the local user. Rather, it should be creating incentives and policies for "building up" from the local (potential) broadband user. Rural folks are often handy at building what they need ... so 40-50 foot towers aren't a real problem as long as there's 1) an affordable kit they can use for a receiver and 2) policies that allow people to build said towers and link them into a net.

  2. Printing Is NOT Publishing on The End of Paper Books · · Score: 1

    There's a general problem that's usually overlooked in discussions of "the end of paper books" -- the role of publishers. They are not printers (though they may provide printing if they can do so more cheaply than farming it out) ... they are filters. They are supposed to "recognize the good" (often, but not always, as a simple matter of profitability) and "create the good" when an author is unfocused, ill-organized, or unskilled. They supply important expertise in the form of editors and publicists. E-books promise to disintermediate both the publishers *and* the distributors, including current giants such as Amazon. All an author needs is a server, and not even that really if he/she is willing to let an aggregator get a small cut. In doing so, the non-printing functions of the publishers are either minimized or ignored. This, in turn, likely means that some set of opinion-leaders will have to determine what is to be viewed as "the good" in some context or another. It may also mean that someone will want to acquire rights in order to "own" as oppose to merely "license" -- and these may well be the existing libraries, acting for the "public good." It seems likely, in at least the short run, that they'll print copies for security's sake in case the author/aggregator's server goes down (or is simply forgotten). Whether they'll continue to do so past the next 50 years or so is a very open question, in my view. The issue will likely be one of preservation under the worst possible electronic disruption (i.e., a "Carrington Event").

  3. Hollywood on Tennessee Bans Posting 'Offensive' Images Online · · Score: 1

    Well, I guess it's time to invest in G rated movies.

  4. Magic on Do Gadgets Degrade Our Common Sense? · · Score: 1

    "Any sufficiently advanced technology cannot be distinguished from magic." Unfortunately, it doesn't take much.

  5. Cost isn't a huge issue on Lasers To Replace Sparkplugs In Engines? · · Score: 1

    If it geeks a Lexus, what's $100 per plug? The buyers won't care.

  6. So ... who read the article? on Why Has Blu-ray Failed To Catch Hold? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The article states that Blu-ray player shipments are about to outstrip plain DVD. It's not like Blu-ray has failed. It *has* taken a while to capture the people who are still moving to HD. It *may* have a problem in competition with streaming (if you live in an area where there's sufficient bandwidth). I suppose the biggest issue is: will people continue to want to "own" content in physical form? The case is still out on that one (and even a minority position might be a very large market). Personally I think Blu-ray is still the only way to go if you've got/built a home theater.

  7. Compare texting on The Facebook Obsession · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And yet phone text is used far more often. I don't have the sources at hand, but a 2010 Facebook stat showed 60 million status updates per day. A 2009 stat on texting showed 5 billion sent per day. Admittedly, a lot of FB use would be messaging or chat rather than status updates. Still, news coverage tends to go to the new and hot (not to mention speculation on FB's market value). The fact that a *lot* of "social networking" happens via text seems to lie completely under the radar.

  8. Re:Actually, it's all about the benjamins on Tech's Dark Secret, It's All About Age · · Score: 1

    It's in the "up front" defined-by-the-HR-department benjamins. They don't have to care about actual product costs, where long memories and experience count. They just have to worry about the average worker cost compared to a mythical industry standard.

  9. It's not so easy on Leaving a Comment? That'll Be 99 Cents, and Your Name · · Score: 1

    One issue that I've seldom seen mentioned is that those who often know the most about public issues (the directors of various public institutions) can seldom use their real names because they necessarily report to political or quasi-political bodies. It would be professional suicide.

  10. Whose music? on 1/3 of People Can't Tell 48Kbps Audio From 160Kbps · · Score: 1

    There's a huge difference between the "expectations for todays' pop music" and the "expectations for serious music (could be classical, could be jazz, could be many things as long as it cares for quality)." Back in the day, we dropped AM radio in favor of FM ... but AM was good enough as background noise and FM was where you bought serious equipment. People accept what they're used to until exposed to something much better.

  11. Red States? on US Life Expectancy May Have Peaked · · Score: 1

    It's interesting that the areas with the worst health problems -- outside of some urban areas -- are also full of people who are terrified of health care reform. That may not be quite right. They're afraid of an America which is willing to take "individual rights" seriously, including a right to decent health care. 1865 redux.

  12. Always a Downside on Is Sat-Nav Destroying Local Knowledge? · · Score: 1

    I'm reminded of the old New Yorker cartoon ... a map of the US drawn from a New Yorker's perspective. There's Manhattan, the Hudson River, New Jersey, then nothing but blank space until L.A. and San Francisco. Everything else is ignored. "Flyover country" seems to be the common term. SatNav means being able to go some place by car w/o having experienced what's in between. That may not always be a good thing and the question arises as to whether or not ignorance is indeed bliss.

  13. Thanks for this on The Twitter Book · · Score: 1

    Another reason why we librarian types should be reading /.

  14. Re:If you want to go by the list on Your Favorite Tech / Eng. / CS Books? · · Score: 1

    Heh. That's why I'm interested in what the experts (you all) have to say. It's trivial to find a list of best computer books, hard to find the ones people believe in.

  15. Re:Where is your library and what type is it? on Your Favorite Tech / Eng. / CS Books? · · Score: 1

    It is a mid-sized public library northwest of Chicago (www.lvdl.org). We serve about 35,000 people ... and circulated over 1,000,000 items last year. But we can do better. :-)

  16. Best books? on Your Favorite Tech / Eng. / CS Books? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As I'm a librarian I'm extremely interested in what people will suggest. The opinion of practitioners is a lot more relevent than that of book reviewers.

  17. McDonald's apparatus on McDonalds Files To Patent Making a Sandwich · · Score: 1

    One might note that an "apparatus" is described. *That* can be patented. How it is used comprises the method. Nothing odd here as far as I can tell.

  18. Stop beating yourself up on Improving Operations in a Small Helpdesk System? · · Score: 1

    Unless you have to, of course. Don't make logging calls your responsibility *after the fact." Make it one of their prime responsibilities, AKA "a critical personal metric." Have them rotate the daily responsibility so they have a reason to help each other.