Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Post It #2 ~ Holy ComicCon Batman! : Perks of being a Librarian & a shout out to Barbara Gordon

What perks you say?! Take a look see:

New York Comic Con has generously extended free passes for all library staff members on Professional Day (Oct. 13), with Programming Hours from 12:00 PM to 4:00 PM and Show Floor hours of 4:00 PM to 7:00 PM open only to librarians, educators and other industry members. Please visit New York Comic Con's website ( http://www.NewYorkComicCon.com )  and click on the Professional Registration button. You'll be able to register for a completely free badge for Thursday. If you'd like to attend all weekend long, a badge for all four days is only $10.  (~from a mass email sent out by the American Libraries Association)
Sadly I’m in Albany and I have work and class..and I’m not even a “real “librarian yet (still in the little-wooden girl training phase). I can’t wait to get my degree so I can participate in all the wonderful activities! J
Click Here to buy a pack of Batgirl/Barbara Gordon Bookmarks from the ALA Store.
 They used to have the design as a poster but now its gone :(
Speaking of all this Comic-con Superhero business, I found some pretty interesting articles while looking for pictures of Barbara Gordon AKA BatGirl AKA Oracle for this post:

 “Barbara earns her paycheck as Gotham City's head librarian, but when crime strikes, she lets her hair down, trades her twinset and pearls for a skin-tight unitard and thigh-high stiletto boots, and kicks arch-villain butt. Even without her alterego Batgirl, Barbara Gordon is no shrinking violet. She's an independent career woman… Barbara Gordon is a superhero with or without the mask and cape and while she may not be the most realistic representation of librarians that the media has to offer, she’s certainly the most multifaceted” - Elyse Kroll Information Outlook, Feb. 2004 (Thanks to http://librarianstereotypes.wordpress.com/ who posted this quote and information about this article in their blog)



When it comes to Batman I’ve always been a bigger fan Harley Quinn but Barbara Gordon is my librarian muse. <3 

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Thing 14: Mendeley, Ranting about Reference Software, & Ignoring CiteUlike

So I tried out Mendeley last week. If Evernote & Zotero were to combine, I feel that Mendeley would've been the outcome. Like Evernote, Mendeley allows you to save, organize, and take notes on articles. Like Zotero, Mendeley pulls the bibliographic information from your articles and allows you make citations. The nice thing about Mendeley is that it syncs with your other devices...so you can use it on other computers, laptops, and  tablets (provided you've downloaded the software and logged in).



With all that being said, a word to the wise about Zotero and other Bibliographic Citation programs; I know when you encounter it for the first time...it seems magical. Your eyes sparkle with all the possibilities of the things you can do with the extra time you'll save on your paper. You shake your fists thinking of all the precious moments you've wasted doing things the hard way. Be cautious my eager friends! The citations made be the programs are not always correct...make sure you double check your work.

It's not Zotero's fault that it could not pull all the information from your downloaded article and left out information it's yours! To be fair, most of the time it's the fault of the information contained in the PDF file. Some PDF files....especially older ones aren't able to be properly "read" by Biblio Cite Software.

It was in with this issue I found Mendeley to be more helpful. Mendeley asks you to VERIFY the bibliographic information and gives you the option of using Google Scholar to find and fill in any missing information. CLICK THE IMAGES BELOW TO ENLARGE
some of the info is missing? (vol? issue?)
yay! Mendeley found it using Google Scholar!


Another suggestion...often academic databases and journal archives will often have a spot that will provide the correct citation for you works cited...on their page. Yes, I know it doesn't help with in text citations but it's useful. For example here is a screen shot from EBSCO.
CLICK THE IMAGES BELOW TO ENLARGE

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Post It #1 ~ Muppet Archivist

  With school starting and my new job I know that there will be times when I won't be able to post as often as i'd like. I've noticed that other blogs have reoccurring segments and I have always enjoyed and envied them. Thus my segment (that I just came up with in the past 5 minutes) the Post It!
Post It Terms & Conditions
 - 1 mini post every other week - NO EXCEPTIONS
                    - Twitter-like brevity (140 words MAX instead of 140 characters)
____________________________________________________________________________

Post It #1: Muppet Archivist

image may be subject to copyright
In Library school you tend to stick to thinking about the typical environments in the field; primarily Schools & Universities, Museums, and Public Libraries. But if you use your info science skills to dig deeper you can find a whole world of interesting places that need information professionals. Which brings me to the topic of this Post-It : The Jim Henson Company wants Library and Archive Interns! The company behind the Muppets, Labyrinth, Fraggle Rock, and the Creature Shop! A reminder to all that information professionals can go anywhere...so it wouldn't hurt to find out if there are positions waiting for you in organizations that harbor your other interests. 

Other Muppet related news: Two weeks ago a cover album of Classic Muppet Songs was released. Listen free on NPR's website.