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Apply Now! Library Tech Leader Position…

August 29, 2016 By cb_exec

Are you a technology leader, ready to blaze trails and lead a top organization into the future?

The Central Arkansas Library System (CALS) has created the new position of Head of Digital Innovation and Technology Services to help create the library of the future in Little Rock.

Are you an excellent communicator? Do you love the excitement of bringing new technology solutions to life? Do you enjoy working with an exceptional organization to serve people and communities? Then this position is for you!

We are looking for a dynamic leader who understands technology, has a heart for service, a vision for collaboration, and who approaches each day with a sense of fun and possibilities.

CALS is an organization where professionals flourish in a top-rated community where the quality of life is high, the cost of living is low, and the opportunity for innovation is boundless.

For the full job description, please use this link.

To learn more about the position, CALS and Little Rock download the position brochure:  CALS-DigitalInnovationAndTechnologyManager06.22.2016

Filed Under: Innovation, Jobs, Library

Some SXSW 2016 Trends

March 22, 2016 By cb_exec

imagesWhat’s hot at SXSW this year – and how might things impact libraries?

The annual South by Southwest (SXSW) conference held in Austin, TX each March is actually four separate-but-related umbrella events:  EDU for the education field, Interactive for digital technologies, Film and Music – and there are other SXSW offshoots (Eco and the currently-in-limbo SXSWV2) held during other parts of the year as well.  The Interactive conference is one of my primary avenues for learning, sharing, and, well, interacting.  I’ve attended since 2011 – and honored to have presented several times at Interactive & Film, and even played a gig last year during music!

SXSW Interactive is where the creators of our digital present and future gather to exchange ideas and inspiration.  There is quite a mix  – coders, CEOS, marketers, geeks, venture capitalists, developers, social good advocates, artists and yes – even librarians.  Those who attend Interactive are often among the smartest people in the room back on their home turf – but in Austin they are just another conference attendee looking for fresh ideas, new friends and opportunities.  As a library technologist, SXSW is a key place for me to get a sense of what is to come as I help libraries serve patrons now and plan for the future.

SXSW is a place of (positive) collisions and collaboration – and especially for first-time attendees – sometimes confusion.  Within this very beneficial churn are lots of opportunities for libraries to get a sense of trends that will affect our communities – and us — within the next 3-5 years.

Even though my annual SXSW experience always impacts my work, I’ve never written about it in detail.  The conference is big, it’s broad, and sometimes the significance of things are not immediately clear — especially in considering how one thing may impact other things.  This year I decided to write and share – ready or not — with the hope that there is something worthwhile for you in my impressions and (undoubtedly) rambling thoughts.

In no particular order (and with no jargon – I’m writing this for folks who may have never heard of SXSW before) here is a first installment of just a few things that got my attention at SXSW in 2016.

 

Social Trend: Women are Leaders 

It’s no secret that there is a battle of the sexes within the tech ranks.  Silicon Valley and other bastions of tech tend to be a boy’s club. Women in technology positions still trail behind men in terms of compensation.  Women in tech – despite their skills and accomplishments – are often disrespected by men.  And sometimes it’s even much worse.

Despite a very public controversy last year over cancelled SXSW “gamer gate” panels (designed to address discrimination against women in gaming – the panels were cancelled after threats of festival violence from anonymous voices on the Internet) women were visible everywhere at SXSW this year.   Even a casual glance at the schedule shows a good number of technology sessions featuring all-women panelists or at least an equal balance between female and male voices.  This might sound surprising, but it’s part of an ideal expressed by SXSW: in the process of selecting official panels, diversity of voices (gender, cultural, rural/urban, and more) always earns extra points from SXSW organizers.  This year, though, it seemed that actual gender diversity on panels was stronger than ever.

In her Film Keynote, legendary producer Gale Anne Hurd (The Terminator, Aliens, The Walking Dead, and so many others) offered a powerful, unflinching and ultra-feminine take on the challenges of being strong, smart and right in a male-dominated world (even 20160315_120734taking on the “B” word ) and through her words and actions shared both inspiration and a path for others to follow.

(As a side note, at SXSW you get to “ask the question you’ve always wanted to ask” – my question during Hurd’s keynote is at the 28:45 mark on the video. :0)

Even my own daughter hosted a panel that addressed age and gender issues for young filmmakers – and she wasn’t the only one to host a session tackling similar issues.

Is this enough? No – and I hope the presence and influence of women in the SXSW community continues to grow in significant and visible ways.  My family is trying to do its part – and will continue to support others as we move into the future.

 

Political Trend: SXSW is Important to National LeadersScreenshot 2016-03-22 08.37.46

Both President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama spoke (on different days) at SXSW, causing massive attention and gridlock to a city center already brought to much of a standstill by the conference.  SXSW has long attracted political leaders (see a listing of 2016 policy events here) — usually those involved in “Smart City” initiatives, economic development, and those cultivating digital communities.  The presence of the Obamas as bookends to the Interactive conference during an election year also demonstrated the political importance of courting those who attend SXSW.

 

Technology Trend: Virtual Reality/Augmented Reality (VR/AR) is Ready for its Close-up
_DSC1545As SXSW 2015, experiencing Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality (also called VR/AR) was a rare treat, with only a handful of places to experience devices such as Oculus Rift.  This year, VR/AR was everywhere, including the subject of a number of panels (including a special track during the gaming convention), a special selection of VR and AR vendors featuring ground-breaking use of the technology (not just from a “gee whiz” standpoint, but also as a way to personalize advocacy su_DSC1465ch as a Google Cardboard item from Planned Parenthood), physical capture devices to allow anyone to record 360-degree spherical images – (such as dedicated cameras and these special mounts for GoPro cameras),  and authoring software enabling the creation of VR experiences in a manner similar to basic video editing.  Further, there were live demo opportunities galore — such as one vendor that also tracked participant’s heartbeats in response to the virtual images and sounds they were experiencing.

Clearly, vendors are gearing up for a major push of VR/AR technologies.  Why should libraries care?  I know – the headsets may look bizarre and people experiencing VR can look especially comical from the outside – but many (including Facebook, Microsoft, and so many others) are banking on AR/VR to be the next frontier of interaction between humans and the digital world.  As anyone who has tried VR/AR can attest, there is certainly entertainment value – but there are also deep opportunities for education, communication, and much more.  In a workshop I facilitated for tech and tech-enthusiast librarians in Maryland last fall (called MD TechConnect), VR demonstrations were a major draw.

If you don’t know much about VR/AR, this is the time to start dipping your toes in the water.  It’s coming fast – and will soon find its way into our lives and many of our libraries.

Virtual Reality (VR) Example: Oculus Rift

Augmented Reality (AR) Example: Microsoft HoloLens

Basic VR/3D using a smartphone:  Google Cardboard

 

Technology Trend: Reading Emotions

By statute and by culture, libraries protect the confidentiality and privacy of library patrons.  For most of us, that means not collecting unnecessary data about our patrons.  When we do go beyond the basics of name, address and email we most often allow patrons to choose to share their personal information via “opt-in” (such as those who find value in storing their borrowing history within their ILS account).   Even in other “opt-in” situations (used by our savvy library marketers) the amount of data we collect is relatively tiny.

For the rest of the technology world, it’s a drastically different story.  Not only is data on all of us broadly collected, harvested and used to allow companies to connect to us more intimately, but it’s used to predict how we might respond to new things or future events (sometimes called “predictive analytics”).

I know that many of us in libraryland aren’t fond of this sort of data collection and tracking – even though most of us experience the results in our everyday lives as users of commercial websites and mobile devices. For instance, if you’ve used a navigation application on your smartphone, you’ve also shared information about your own activities on the road (including starting point, route, ending point, speed and time of day).  Companies use this data – among other things – to let us know if the road ahead is moving smoothly or not.  In most cases we trust our service providers (such as Google – for Google maps) to adhere to their own privacy policies and keep that data safe from unauthorized eyes.

Many non-technologists are sometimes startled when they learn about the data that is collected about our personal activities.  Although the topic is essential in libraries – this blog post is not addressing confidentiality and privacy issues, but to provide context to how technology is being developed commercially to dig an even deeper data mine and develop even more predictive services.

The next frontier is using data to connect to each of us emotionally.  Since this is an election year (and in the US politics are increasingly polarized – invoking strong emotions) it’s a prime time to test tech that can guess how we’re feeling.   Building upon research from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, one company has a product (soon to be launched) that can guess – and report – a user’s emotions as they view a video on their mobile device.  By digitally interpreting common facial expressions that indicate happiness, sadness, confusion, anger and others, the company claims they can tell, for instance, how a particular audience (both as individuals and in aggregate) responded to different candidates’ speeches or debate styles.

 

Stay tuned for my next installment:  The Library Community at SXSW: Evangelizing, Learning and Sharing.   Activities this year included the lib*interactive group; the trade show booth (sponsored by the American Library Association), the #ideadrophouse, the official library meet-ups, the emphasis on EDU (and generally a new approach to specialized communities at the conferences), coverage by American Libraries, and more tech trends!

 

****Update June 2016:  I’ve had no time to write the next installment!  Lots to write about – but I’ve had a full schedule working with a wonderful variety of libraries and teams across the country.  Next blog post when the smoke clears! **** 

 

Filed Under: SXSW Tagged With: Libraries, SXSW, Tech Trends

Let’s do I.T. again!

February 22, 2016 By cb_exec

One of the most rewarding experiences I’ve had as a library technology consultant has been traveling across Texas helping rural librarians learn how to make, break, fix and manage their data networks.  It was so much fun (and produced such great results) we’re going out again this year!  This time the topic is hardware and software!

I’m working on the cirriculum right now and I can say we’re going to have a lot of *fun* — including  the hands-on chance to tear down PCs so that we can learn together what all those pieces and parts do individually — as well as what they all add up to.  We’ll also explore operating systems, essential software, and some computer configuration.

As librarians across Texas have witnessed, some hands-on and learning time can transform technology bewilderment to technology mastery.  Being part of that transformation is what makes my job so, so wonderful!

Are you a librarian in Texas — or do you know one?  If so, we (including the most excellent TSLAC staff of Henry Stokes, Katherine Adelberg and Cindy Fisher) hope to see you at a workshop during the spring and fall of 2016. More details here!

 

You can DO IT image

Filed Under: Teaching Tagged With: Texas, Texas Statel Libraries and Archives Commission, TSLAC

Have you LITA’d lately?

November 16, 2015 By cb_exec

Is LITA (Library Information Technology Association) on your radar?  If you want to know (and use) cutting edge technology in libraries, you should make LITA and its brilliant brain trust your next deep dive into what makes libraries great.

The LITA forum – this year in Minneapolis – just wrapped up and I was blown away by what I learned while there.  A mea culpa – for reasons unknown (yet mightily embarrassing) I let LITA fall off my radar.  I’m changing that today.

While it’s true that LITA membership is predominately from academic institutions, there are public libraries in the mix.  I think this ratio of ALs : PLs is a great thing.  With new student populations to serve frequently, academic libraries are perhaps the most underutilized resource for ideas and inspiration for public libraries.  If you’re on the PL side and want to track generational sea changes, look at what’s happening in academic libraries.  As well, many institutions have access to technology and programming talent that public libraries most often can only dream of. This dynamic makes the LITA membership mix a compelling environment.

Just a couple of highlights from the 2016 conference that even non-technology librarians can appreciate:

  • Sessions about patron privacy & privacy literacy in the digital world
  • Application of gaming to create a better experience for library users
  • Developments in Linked Data to help us discover and use our electronic resources much more powerfully
  • Providing ebooks without vendors
  • A custom app designed to help make meeting room acoustics more pleasant
  • Supporting STEM through training & design
  • Girls in tech
  • Effective project management techniques
  • New and better ways to collaborate & share computer code
  • …and many more!

There’s lots more.  Check the LITA Forum site to see the full schedule.  The twitter feed – archived here – is well worth a look.  Hit the tweets and I promise it won’t be the last click you make in pursuit of fresh ideas and approaches to library services.

As well, I was honored to give the closing keynote and used the opportunity to challenge this brilliant group to dig even even deeper and deliberately design the impact they want to make by not just connecting with our current communities but stepping outside our hangouts, mixing it up, and coming back. The reaction afterwards and on social media was exhilarating and enlightening – lots of positives and some thoughtful negatives.  In retrospect, I realized this is the first time I’ve given a talk to my own community where the emphasis was on challenge instead of comfort, and all of the feedback helped me realize when I properly landed the message I wanted to deliver, and when I missed.  LITA – thanks for the openness.  I ended the talk inviting the group to participate in a six-month experiment to see how we can keep the conference glow burning after the reality of our work lives kick in.   I’ll share the results of that experiment in six months.

If you don’t know LITA or you haven’t checked in lately – this is a great time to do it.  Solutions to our big problems are currently being incubated though the work of LITA members and I can wait to dig more deeply myself.

Filed Under: LITA, Speaking

LITA Top Tech Trends gets some press!

August 26, 2015 By cb_exec

So thrilled to have such great conversations at the ALA Top Tech Trends panel at ALA 2015 in San Francisco!  Library journal did an excellent job of covering the conversation at several different points — please see links below.

Rethinking Privacy at the LITA Top Tech Trends Panel

San Francisco Deets (scroll to bottom for Tech Trends Panel info)

ALA Takeaways (please scroll down)

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Miles and Miles of Texas – Part II

August 4, 2015 By cb_exec

Think you can’t understand your data network?  Well, think again! It’s time for the second round of visits to rural Texas for “You Can Do I.T. – Basic Network Technology Training” where participants share a day filled with fun, adventure and accomplishment, including creating network diagrams and logging into a router — breaking it — and fixing it!

Don’t believe me?  Hear the words of class participants in this nice video produced by my host – the Texas State Library and Archives Commission.

The first round got rave reviews from participants — and I can’t wait for the next round of visits in Tejas!

PS:  The homepage image (also below) shows the sites (with yellow and green pins);  the blue pin shows places where I’ve spoke or presented in Texas (in Austin multiple times — at SXSW and Texas Library Association conferences) and the red dots are my Texas clients.  Yowsa!

 

20150804_125458 (1)

Filed Under: Uncategorized

RIPL – “Ripple”

July 6, 2015 By cb_exec

Are libraries doing enough with data?  I don’t think so — and I’m on mission to learn how we can make better use of data — in ways that are safe, confidential and trustworthy — to serve patrons more powerfully, to be smarter about how we operate our libraries, and to allow staff to focus on human interactions, growth and enrichment instead of rote tasks.ripl_logo

As part of my quest I’m thrilled to participate (as a panelist and facilitator) in the inaugural gathering of the Research Institute for Public Libraries (or RIPL — pronounced “Ripple” — for short) conference in late July in Colorado Springs.

What is RIPL?  From the RIPL Website:

75-100 participants will engage in three days of hands-on, intensive workshops about…

  •  Evaluation design and implementation
  •  Data collection and use for strategic planning
  •  Measures for reporting library impact
  •  Tips for aligning research efforts with national initiatives like Edge Benchmarks and the Impact Survey

Participants will walk away from RIPL with tools for evaluation, confidence in building research into their activities, and a network of colleagues for future learning and success.

Filed Under: LRS, RIPL, Speaking

ALA Annual 2015

June 9, 2015 By cb_exec

ALA 2015 conference logo

 

It’s time again for the annual gathering of library people in the US — this time in San Francisco, CA.

I’m a presenter for two sessions at ALA – if it fits your schedule, please swing by!

Top Technology Trends  This program features our ongoing roundtable discussion about trends and advances in library technology by a panel of LITA technology experts. The panelists will describe changes and advances in technology that they see having an impact on the library world, and suggest what libraries might do to take advantage of these trends. More information on Top Tech Trends: http://ala.org/lita/ttt

Lib*Interactive@SXSW – growing and thriving  2015 was the best year ever for library activity at the annual South by Southwest EDU, Interactive, Film, and (yes) even music conferences. SXSW needs librarians — and to stay current with trends, technology and marketing libraries need SXSW. Interested? Come to this informative and (ahem) interactive session to get the skinny and get involved! There’s a place for everyone — from the leading/bleeding edge to the laid back and supportive!

Will you be at ALA too?  If so I would love to see you!  I know everyone’s dance cards are full for the conference — so please feel free to get in touch to set up an appointment!

Filed Under: ALA, Speaking

Laconi – SXSW!

May 13, 2015 By cb_exec

**Update** Many grateful thanks to LACONi and the Oak Park Public Library for being warm hosts, and especially to tall of the attendees for helping make this such an excellent session!

Looking forward to presenting a “tools you can use” session about SXSW 2015! Carson Block Live! On Libraries and SXSW!

If you’re in the Chi area join us at the Laconi (Learning – Sharing – Networking) event on Friday, June 5 in Oak Park IL!

Program Description:

Carson Block has been a library technologist for 20 years – as a library worker, IT Director and now a Library Technology Consultant.  His passions include leading technology visioning, planning and other activities designed to held build the library’s capacity to serve communities.

Libraries help people, and Carson helps libraries.  It’s that simple!

Libraries and South by Southwest (SXSW)

Library activity at the annual SXSW Interactive and EDU conferences in Austin TX is at a fever pitch!

As a place of convergence, the conferences are a place to learn about and experience new technologies *before* they become mainstream.

Library workers of all disciplines pony up the significant cost to attend SXSW to:

    • Evangelize libraries
    • And bring back new ideas that they can use

Come learn about both efforts — and ask questions about SXSW!

 

Screenshot 2015-05-13 09.36.51

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

ALA Candidate Interviews!

December 15, 2014 By cb_exec

**Update 5/8: Congrats to Dr. Julie Todaro! **

 

Original Post:

We see the names (and some are our friends) but we don’t always have the chance to chat about the issues — including technology in libraries and thoughts about leadership.  In late 2014 I talked with the four American Library Association presidential candidates for the 2016-2017 term.  The conversations were compelling and help each candidate differentiate themselves from each other.

The process was simple – each candidate was asked the same set of questions, and questions were provided in advance of the interview.  The interviews were not released (even to the candidate) until all had been completed.  Here they are, in the order they were completed between late November and Mid-December 2014:

JP Porcaro

Joseph Janes

Jamie LaRue

Dr. Julie Todaro

Who should lead ALA?  I hope the interviews give you a head start in making your choice.

Update March 2015 – Steve Thomas is featuring interviews with all four candidates in his excellent podcast series here.  The more you know…! 

Voting begins in late March 2015 – ALA will send voting information to each member at that time via email.

Filed Under: ALA, Elections, Library Tagged With: ALA, ALA Presidential Candidates, Dr. Julie Todaro, Jamie LaRue, Joseph Janes, JP Porcaro

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