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Where Librarians Sound Off

Archive for April 2005

28. Apr '05
posted in Podcasts

Blended Librarians

Audio from a webcast to the blended librarians group on re-energizing academic libraries as knowledge organizations.

22. Apr '05
posted in Podcasts

Welcome

Welcome to the libsyn home of Listen Up!, your source for news and information programming from the Decatur Campus Library of Georgia Perimeter College.

We will post a brief blog entry here for each new edition. Detailed program information will be available on the main Listen Up! blog. Listen Up #1 (not hosted by libsyn) is currently available there as well.

Comments and random greetings are always welcome.


21. Apr '05
posted in Podcasts

“Breaking the K-12 Crust: The Realities of Digital Libraries for Education,” WebWise, Washington, DC

Audio portion from my WebWise presentation on how libraries and museums can work with K-12 education. You can see the streaming video at the WebWise web site. YOu can get the slides at my website.

19. Apr '05
posted in Podcasts

Jason Erik Lundberg Interview

by Jamie Bishop 1 hour, 15 minutes Unabridged Interview 2005 Publisher and writer Jason Erik Lundberg of Two Cranes Press talks to multimedia artist Jamie Bishop about the ups and downs of launching a small press startup, collaborating with fantasy...

14. Apr '05
posted in Podcasts

Credibility of Internet Information

A discussion of the credibility of information on the Internet. This is a version of a presentation I gave at an ALA/UW/MacArthur Symposium on the Credibility of Internet Information from the User Perspective.

01. Apr '05
posted in Podcasts

Fallacy Test

This is a test of Apple's built in text-to-speech capability. I took the text (well, most of it) of a 2003 article on the Digital Reference Fallacy (that asynchronous and synchronous reference are different), and turned it into speech. Why? I'm working on creating a Podcast from a listserv. Messages from the listserv will be converted to a spoken sound file and syndicated using RSS (a podcast). I'd be interested in any feedback on the results.

01. Apr '05
posted in Podcasts

VRD 99 Opening

These are my opening remarks from the first VRD conference in 1999 at Harvard. The audio quality is pretty poor, but enjoy the nostalgia.