Saturday, March 27, 2010

Netbooks as EBook Readers

The February 10, 2010 issue of LifeHacker features an item by Jason Fitzpatrick on"Turn your netbook into an e-book reader". He says “E-book readers are popular for reading digital books, but they’ve got their limitations. If you have a netbook, you already have a powerful and virtually unrestricted portable e-book reader on your hands. You just need to know how to set it up. Dedicated e-book readers do have certain things going for them, but you can’t tweak them, modify them, or use them as you see fit. Netbooks suffer from no such shortcomings.”...

Hummm, maybe I'll experiment with my netbook. In a related item, more than 65,000 19th-century works of fiction from the British Library’s collection are to be made available for free downloads by the public this spring. Owners of the Amazon Kindle will be able to view well-known works by writers such as Charles Dickens, Jane Austen, and Thomas Hardy. Users of the British Library service, funded by Microsoft, will be able to read from pages in the original books in the library’s collection....The Times (U.K.), Feb. 7 See British Library offers free Kindle downloads



FCC Survey: 93M Americans Disconnected From Broadband Opportunities

See FCC survey below. The survey of adults does not address K-12 digital literacy instruction of students or teachers. The issue is not just about access to broadband networks, it is also about digital literacy. Teacher librarians and computer teachers teach digital literacy, yet many school districts do not insist on digital literacy for its teachers and many schools are eliminating teacher librarians. Something is wrong with this picture.


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE NEWS MEDIA CONTACT:

February 23, 2010 Jen Howard, (202) 418-0506, Jen.Howard@FCC.gov


93 MILLION AMERICANS DISCONNECTED FROM BROADBAND OPPORTUNITIES

FCC Survey Finds Cost and Digital Literacy Main Barriers to Broadband Adoption

Washington, D.C. -- At the Brookings Institution today, the Federal Communications Commission released its National Broadband Plan Consumer Survey, Broadband Adoption and Use in America, which found that affordability and lack of digital skills are the main reasons why 93 million Americans -- one-third of the country -- are not connected to high-speed Internet at home.

“We need to tackle the challenge of connecting 93 million Americans to our broadband future,” said FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski. “In the 21st century, a digital divide is an opportunity divide. To bolster American competitiveness abroad and create the jobs of the future here at home, we need to make sure that all Americans have the skills and means to fully participate in the digital economy.”


On March 17, 2010, the Federal Communications Commission will deliver a National Broadband Plan to Congress that details a strategy for connecting the country to affordable, world-class broadband. This will be a strategy for U.S. global leadership in high-speed Internet to create jobs and spur economic growth; to unleash new waves of innovation and investment; and to improve education, health care, energy efficiency, public safety, and the vibrancy of our democracy.

As part of the plan, the FCC conducted a national random digit-dial survey of adults in October and November 2009 to assess America’s attitudes toward broadband. The Consumer Survey found that 35 percent of adult Americans do not have high-speed Internet connections at home -- or approximately 80 million adults and 13 million children over the age of five.


The survey identifies three main barriers to adoption:

· Affordability: 36 percent of non-adopters, or 28 million adults, said they do not have home broadband because the monthly fee is too expensive (15 percent), they cannot afford a computer, the installation fee is too high (10 percent), or they do not want to enter into a long-term service contract (9 percent). According to survey respondents, their average monthly broadband bill is $41.

· Digital Literacy: 22 percent of non-adopters, or 17 million adults, indicated that they do not have home broadband because they lack the digital skills (12 percent) or they are concerned about potential hazards of online life, such as exposure to inappropriate content or security of personal information (10 percent).

· Relevance: 19 percent of non-adopters, or 15 million adults, said they do not have broadband because they say that the Internet is a waste of time, there is no online content of interest to them or, for dial-up users, they are content with their current service.


The survey also found that non-adopters usually have more than one barrier that keeps them from having broadband service at home. Over half of non-adopters, when selecting from a menu of possible barriers to adoption, chose three or more. For example, more than half of non-adopters who cited cost also listed reasons relating to digital literacy or relevance.

“The gap in broadband adoption is a problem with many different dimensions that will require many different solutions,” said John Horrigan, Director of Consumer Research for the Omnibus Broadband Initiative. “Lowering costs of service or hardware, helping people develop online skills, and informing them about applications relevant to their lives are all key to sustainable adoption.”

The interaction of attitudes and use of communications goods and services creates four categories of non-adopters:


· Near Converts, who make up 30 percent of non-adopters, have the strongest tendencies toward getting broadband. They have high rates of computer ownership, positive attitudes about the Internet. Many are dial-up or “not-at-home” users, and affordability is the leading reason for non-adoption among this group. They are relatively youthful compared with other non-adopters, with a median age of 45.

· Digital Hopefuls, who make up 22 percent of non-adopters, like the idea of being online but lack the resources for access. Few have a computer and, among those who use one, few feel comfortable with the technology. Some 44 percent cite affordability as a barrier to adoption and they are also more likely than average to say digital literacy are a barrier. This group is heavily Hispanic and has a high share of African-Americans.

· Digitally Uncomfortable, who make up 20 percent of non-adopters, are the mirror image of the Digital Hopefuls; they have the resources for access but not a bright outlook on what it means to be online. Nearly all of the Digitally Uncomfortable have computers, but they lack the skills to use them and have tepid attitudes toward the Internet. This group reports all three barriers: affordability, digital literacy, and relevance.

· Digitally Distant, who make up 28 percent of non-adopters, do not see the point of being online. Few in this group see the Internet as a tool for learning and most see it as a dangerous place for children. This is an older group (the median age is 63), nearly half are retired and half say that either relevance or digital literacy are barriers to adoption.


The Consumer Survey interviewed 5,005 adult Americans between October 19 and November 23, 2009. The margin of error based on results based on the entire sample is plus or minus 1.6 percentage points. The survey included an over-sample of non-adopters, resulting in interviews of 2,334 adults who are not broadband users at home. The margin of error for results based on non-adopters is plus or minus 2.2 percentage points. Interviewers conducting the survey provide a Spanish-language option for respondents wishing to take the survey in Spanish.

See full 52-page report at Broadband Adoption and Use in America.

Deeper Web for Google Searches

Marin Teacher Librarian Tom Kahn alerted California School Library Association members to "Deeper Web", a beta test of a new service to help search Google. It's also available as a Firefox add-on. Very nice. It puts search results in tag or phrase clouds.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Search On - Google Commercial

Google advertised its search engine during the 2010 Super Bowl:

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Social Media Online Guide

Here's a colorful and useful guide to social media from SMO.com that is downloadable. It includes 10 websites (left column) by customer communication, brand exposure, traffic to your site, and SEO (search engine optimization).

Websites covered include:
Decorate your library, lab, office, or classroom.

Checking Out the Future - OITP

The American Library Association's Office for Information Technology Policy released the first of several 2010 policy briefs on the revolution in information technology and its implications for the future of libraries. The 24-page February 2010 policy brief by Jennifer Hendrix, Checking Out the Future: Perspectives from the Library Community on Information Technology and 21st-Century Libraries "explores how many library professionals are driving adaptations designed to ensure that libraries remain an integral part of our society’s commitment to education, equity, and access to information...."

Monday, March 15, 2010

The Conversation Prism

My son alerted me to The Conversation Prism: The art of listening, learning, and sharing. It is a fascinating, detailed social media map by Brian Solis, the "father" of the term "PR 2.0". See below. Zoom in to see the detail! This is a good poster to hang in a library by the computers.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

READABILITY - Tool to Cut Clutter

Learned about Readability, a potentially powerful new cool tool by arc90 that eliminates website clutter when you want to just focus on the content and not the surrounding "stuff". It is meant for articles, not home pages. According to its website, it is a 2-step process select your settings; add your bookmarklet. See the video:

Readability - Installation Video for Firefox, Safari & Chrome from Arc90 on Vimeo.



I tried it by going to sfgate.com, selecting an article, hitting "Readability" marklet that I put in my toolbar, and MAGIC: it worked like a charm! This is also a good tool to add to library and lab computers.

Thanks go to American Libraries Direct for alerting me to this tool:
"
Readability makes web pages easy to read and print
Phil Bradley writes: “Readability is a simple tool that makes reading on the web more enjoyable by removing the clutter around what you’re reading. This is a work of minor genius. We all get faced with pages that are too small to read properly, or too dense, or covered with ads or other extraneous material. These same pages are also usually a real pain to print out. Along comes this tool, which is a simple add-on to your browser bar.”...
Phil Bradley’s Weblog, Jan. 29

Monday, March 8, 2010

PIVOT - Gary Flake

A "tweet" from Bill Gates alerted me to a 6 minute TED presentation by Microsoft Technical Fellow Gary Flake on PIVOT, a tool that looks for patterns in massive amounts of data to find information and possibly knowledge. See the video below:

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Ray Kurzweil's eBook Reader - blio

"Technologies don't really take off until all the necessary enabling factors are in place..." according to Ray Kurzweil (Kurzweil Technologies, Inc.), who demos his new blio ebook reader and discusses the future of books and publishing, artificial intelligence, and more with Tim O'Reilly (O'Reilly Media, Inc.). Ray Kurzweil has a partnership with the National Federation for the Blind, KNFB Technologies. He has also written a book, "The Singularity is Near". Below is the discussion from YouTube, which lasts about one hour.

Avatar Introduces Anti-Plagiarism Tutorial

UC San Diego Libraries created an online, interactive anti-plagiarism tutorial. An avatar welcomes readers and introduces the tutorial. This avatar's eyes then follows the mouse. This is a good way to capture the attention of students, while offering a short but valuable lesson.

The library lists other classes and workshops, as well as a list of library subject-specialists for faculty to work with on targeted library/research instruction.