Quality Resources, Found for You

Welcome to ResourceShelf, where dedicated librarians and researchers share the results of their directed (and occasionally quirky) web searches for resources and information.

ResourceShelf is updated daily by an editorial team headed by Gary Price and Shirl Kennedy. Browse our postings, subscribe to our weekly newsletter, and capture RSS feeds to add ResourceShelf to your own reference collection.

View our newsletter and subscribe – it's free!

ResourceShelf is free, thanks to the support of our sponsors.

You Can Now Follow ResourceShelf and DocuTicker on Twitter

January 15th, 2009

We’re happy to report that you can now follow our posts on Twitter. We have two feeds at the moment:

1) Combined ResourceShelf and DocuTicker feed at http://www.twitter.com/resourceshelf.

2) DocuTicker ONLY feed at: http://www.twitter.com/docuticker.

We hope you find them useful , thanks again for all of your support, and make sure to tell your Twittering friends about the new feeds. (-:

Also, Gary and Shirl are doing the Facebook thing these days and would welcome RS and DT users as friends. Just hop on over here for Gary & here for Shirl and make the request.

Almost forgot, if you’re not a ‘Twitterer’ and prefer RSS, we also have RSS feeds available. DocuTicker RSS ||| ResourceShelf RSS

New Survey Results: Social Networks Grow: Friending Mom and Dad

January 15th, 2009

From the Report:

The share of adult internet users who have a profile on a social networking site has more than quadrupled in the past four years — from 8% in 2005 to 35% now, according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project’s December 2008 tracking survey.

While media coverage and policy attention focus heavily on how children and young adults use social network sites, adults still make up the bulk of the users of these websites. (Since adults make up a larger portion of the U.S. population than teens do, the 35% proportion represents a larger number of users than the 65% of online teens who use online social networks.)

Still, younger online adults are much more likely than their older counterparts to use social networks, with 75% of adults 18-24 using these networks, compared with just 7% of adults ages 65 and older. At its core, use of social networks is still a phenomenon of the young.


Direct to Full Text Report (PDF)

Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project

New and Improved Search from Library and Archives Canada

January 15th, 2009

From the Announcement:

Library and Archives Canada is pleased to announce a new, improved version of our primary institutional search page, Search All, available through Search on the top menu. Related search pages, such as Archives Search and Library Search, have been redesigned as well.

The changes impact layout and content. The new pages will feature:

+ improved functionality;

+ a cleaner, more easily navigated layout;

+ some changes in terminology;

+ less redundancy of information;

Archives Search Results now:

+ display control numbers (Archival Reference Number, Former Archival Reference Number, Accession Number, etc.),

+ allow more options for sorting and limiting results, and,

+ have higher result set limits;

+ Archives Search now includes the option of expanding or limiting a search to descriptions in ARCHIVESCANADA.ca

Direct to “Search All” Page

Source: Library and Archives Canada

Updated Research Guide (Tracer Bullet) from LC: Biotechnology

January 15th, 2009

From the LC Web Site:

While the term “biotechnology” covers a very broad area, this guide focuses on the most recent uses of biotechnology in its four major fields: 1. medicine (vaccine development, chemotherapy drugs, stem cell therapy, gene therapy, and pharmacogenomics); 2. agriculture (genetically modified organisms and cloning); 3. energy and environment (biofuel and waste management); and 4. the bioethical and legal implications of biotechnology.

This guide updates and replaces TB 84-7, and furnishes a review of the literature in the collections of the Library of Congress on the topic. Not intended as a comprehensive bibliography, this compilation is designed–as the name of the series implies–to put the reader “on target.”

Direct To: Biotechnology Guide

Source: Science, Technology & Business Division, Library of Congress

Images: Obama’s Official Portrait Released

January 15th, 2009

Direct to Official Portrait

A larger image can be downloaded here.

Source: Change.gov

Briefly: Google Slashes Recruiters, Engineering Offices and Other News

January 15th, 2009

+ Microsoft Moves Live Search Mobile Nearer Google (via PC Magazine)

+ Google Slashes Recruiters, Engineering Offices (via socalTech)

+ Google Ends Google Video Uploads, Shutters Notebook, Catalog Search, Dodgeball & Jaiku (via Search Engine Land)

New Issue of The Internet Resources Newsletter Now Available

January 15th, 2009

A great selection of new web resources and news from Roddy MacLeod and crew at the Heriot-Watt University Library.

Direct to Newsletter

Source: Heriot-Watt University Library

Map — Major Transportation Facilities of the United States, 2009

January 14th, 2009

Major Transportation Facilities of the United States, 2009

This map shows Interstate and other major highways, Amtrak and other rail lines, navigable waterways and major ports, major airports, urbanized areas and urban rail transit, border crossings, and selected national parks and monuments.

Download in PDF (10.5 MB).

Source: Bureau of Transportation Statistics

Video From ALA: Tools to Help Libraries in a Bad Economy

January 14th, 2009

A new video via YouTube from the American Library Association.

ALA Executive Director Keith Michael Fiels discusses the economy, its effect on libraries, and what ALA offers to help libraries survive in tough times. This video also serves as an introduction to a special issue of AL Direct to be sent January 20 on the economy and other issues.

Direct to Video

Source: YouTube

Hat Tip: Jenny L.

Article: Cooperation or Control? Web 2.0 and the Digital Library

January 14th, 2009

From the Abstract:

The Web 2.0 trend has placed a renewed emphasis on interoperability and cooperation between systems and people. The digital libraries community is familiar with interoperability through technologies like OAI-PMH, but is disconnected from the general Web 2.0 community. This disconnect prevents the digital library from taking advantage of the rich network of data, services and interfaces offered by that community. This paper presents a case study of a collection within the Texas A&M Repository that was improved by adopting the principles of cooperation embodied by the term Web 2.0.

Direct to Full Text Article

Source: Journal of Digital Information

Banning Children From Public Libraries Only Option Under New Fed Lead-Testing Law?

January 14th, 2009

From the Article:

Barring a drastic change in legal interpretation, public libraries across the nation might soon consider banning children.

The American Library Association, a nationwide library advocacy organization, fears such bans are the only option left available by a new federal lead-testing law that takes effect Feb. 10.

Source: Bristol Herald Courier

Milestones: Library of Congress: Library of Congress Leads Nationwide Digitization Effort

January 14th, 2009

From the News Release:

The Library of Congress will digitally scan “The Heroic Life of Abraham Lincoln: The Great Emancipator” as the 25,000th book in its “Digitizing American Imprints” program, which scans aging “brittle” books often too fragile to serve to researchers. The program is sponsored by a $2 million grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The Library, which has contracted with the Internet Archive for digitization services, is combining its efforts with other libraries as part of the open content movement. The movement, which includes over 100 libraries, universities and cultural institutions, aims to digitize and make freely available public-domain books in a wide variety of subject areas.

All scanning operations are housed in the Library’s John Adams Building on Capitol Hill. Internet Archive staff work two shifts each day on 10 “Scribe” scanning stations. The operation can digitize up to 1,000 volumes each week. Shortly after scanning is complete, the books are available online at www.archive.org. Books can be read online or downloaded for more intensive study. The Library of Congress is actively working with the Internet Archive on the development of a full-featured, open-source page turner. A beta version, called the Flip Book, is currently available on the Internet Archive site.

Source: LC

Pinellas library cafe owners struggle to stay afloat

January 14th, 2009

Pinellas library cafe owners struggle to stay afloat

The owners of local library cafes say they’ve felt the wrath of the economy.

“The economy is hitting everybody,” said Bernie Dillman, 59, who runs Bernie’s Cafe at Clearwater’s Main Library. “It’s slow, but people are hanging in there.”

His sales average less than $2,000 a month, according to the city’s most recent figures.

And Dalal Mansour, who runs the Bookmark Cafe at Largo Public Library, said things are so tough she won’t be able to pay her $1,752 rent and sales tax to Largo this month.

“We had a big loss. Our sales are not even $100 a day,” said Mansour, 47, whose cafe serves sandwiches, salads, gourmet coffees and pastries.

Source: St. Petersburg Times

New: Martin Luther King, Jr. Collection Now Online For Public

January 14th, 2009

From the Article:

Thousands of documents in the Martin Luther King Jr. Collection at Morehouse College will now be available online for public research, school officials announced on Tuesday.

Source: AP

Direct to Martin Luther King Collection, Jr Collection

See Also: Scholarly Access Now Available to the Martin Luther King Jr. Collection

Enhancing Child Safety and Online Technologies

January 14th, 2009

Enhancing Child Safety and Online Technologies
From Executive Summary (PDF; 188 KB):

The Task Force remains optimistic about the development of technologies to enhance protections for minors online and to support institutions and individuals involved in protecting minors, but cautions against overreliance on technology in isolation or on a single technological approach. Technology can play a helpful role, but there is no one technological solution or specific combination of technological solutions to the problem of online safety for minors.

Instead, a combination of technologies, in concert with parental oversight, education, social services, law enforcement, and sound policies by social network sites and service providers may assist in addressing specific problems that minors face online. All stakeholders must continue to work in a cooperative and collaborative manner, sharing information and ideas to achieve the common goal of making the Internet as safe as possible for minors.

The Task Force does not believe that the Attorneys General should endorse any one technology or set of technologies to protect minors online. Instead, the Attorneys General should continue to work collaboratively with all stakeholders in pursuing a multifaceted approach to enhance safety for minors online. The Task Force makes specific recommendations in Part VII to the Internet community and to parents, as well as recommendations regarding the allocation of resources….

+ Full Report (PDF; 2.7 MB)

Source: Internet Safety Technical Task Force to the Multi-State Working Group on Social Networking of State Attorneys General of the United States