Archive for July, 2009

NaBloPoMo, Librarian Style

It’s likely you’ve heard of NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month), that time in November when it’s starting to get cold and hundreds of people make a pact together to write a novel in the period of one month. Many fail, some succeed, some get published, and some of the work is actually really good (which begs the question, “Did you really write this in one month, or have you been cheating all year?”).

Well, it was news to me that there is now NaBloPoMo (National Blog Posting Month). As November seems like the ideal month to cuddle up by the fire and furiously write a novel in a month, July seems just as fit to grab your laptop, go to an outdoor cafe and write a blog. The deal is you have to blog once a day for a month, but just as not everyone finishes their novel by December 1, not everyone who celebrates NaBloPoMo will blog each day in July. You’re still allowed to celebrate all things blog. And (technically speaking) this runs all year long, so have fun with it!

Here’s a round up of some of our favorite library blogs to keep you satiated during the last couple weeks of NaBloPoMo:

  • Harford County Public Library’s blog
  • The Pelham Public Library’s blog on banned books
  • Las Vegas – Clark County Library’s blog
  • Memphis Public Library’s blog
  • Oregon State University Libraries Special Collection: The Pauling Blog
  • UC Berkeley’s blog collection
  • For a very extensive collection of library blogs, check out the blogging libraries wiki.

    Happy blogging!

    –Cara Binder

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    On the Tweet Train

    Seems as though everyone is on Twitter these days. We’ve been testing it out since about February and are finding it to be a fun way to connect with our users–to share particularly exciting items on the Archive, update you about current changes in our organization, and share articles and media pieces that we think may be of interest to our audience.

    So hop on the Twitter board. What used to be seen as a a medium for people with too much time on their hands has proved itself to be a powerful way to interact. Of course, we have to practice expressing all of our thoughts in 140 characters or less. :)

    Follow us! Internet Archive’s Homepage

    –Cara Binder

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    archive.org supports the new [video] HTML tag!

    We now support the new [[video]] HTML tag when viewing movies from our site.

    You’ll need Firefox v3.5+ (full or beta release) or Safari v4+ for us to show you a “try the new [[video]] tag” section under the “click to play” video area.

    You can even persist a choice to always use it on our site (by us setting a cookie for you) (and you can change your mind and go back to the normal flash plugin based option).

    -Tracey Jaquith


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