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Latest Library Links, January 31, 2015

News from ALA and the profession

January 30, 2015

Welcome to Jason Segel's Nightmare
Welcome to Jason Segel's Nightmare

Midwinter Meeting News

US senator tells librarians: “Get organized”

Welcome to Jason Segel’s Nightmare

Ben Bizzle on targeted library marketing: Get a little risky

Comic books promote literacy, diversity

Ignite Session: Diversity, website optimization, and partnerships

Booklist / ERT Author Forum: Bell, Smith, Mouly, Yang parts one and two (video)

Author Cece Bell at Booklist / ERT Author Forum (video)

Librarians kick off Midwinter with Zumba class

Throw the book at stress

Top tweets for Friday

Read the Saturday Cognotes

Division News

ALSC mentorship

Libraries in the News

More than 1 million rare items destroyed in Moscow science library fire (more)

A Jefferson book, rediscovered in the Law Library of Congress

Librarian uses own money to purchase bookmobile when school library closes

Issues

Privacy board: Obama must end NSA phone record collection

Can students have too much tech?

The net neutrality bait and switch

Tech Talk

QR codes: Traditional and unique uses

Tips & Ideas

How to watch Superbowl XLIX online

Google Earth Pro is now free

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Paper books will never die

Latest Library Links, January 30, 2015

News from ALA and the profession

ALA Top Ten Tweets

Top Ten(ish) Tweets – Friday (Day 1)

Discover the opening day's best tweets from ALA Midwinter

Latest Library Links

  • 8h

    Youth Media Awards logoEach year ALA’s Youth Media Awards—including the Newbery, Caldecott, Printz, and Coretta Scott King Book Awards—honor outstanding books, videos, and other materials for children and teens. The 2026 Youth Media Awards will be held on Monday, January 26 at 10 a.m. Central at the Hilton Chicago hotel. The event will be free and open to the public, but registration is required by Wednesday, January 21, for in-person attendance. The announcement will also be live streamed at ala.unikron.com and on the ALA Facebook page.

    ALA Youth Media Awards

  • 13h

    From the Treasurer by Larry NealLarry Neal writes: “When I volunteered to serve as ALA treasurer, I knew it was going to be one of the greatest challenges of my career. Only a few months in, it has already exceeded my expectations. ALA’s financial picture is not a pretty one. And it’s a similar picture currently seen at many other associations and nonprofit organizations. Fiscal year 2025, which ended in August, saw a deficit of $15.4 million. If this sounds like a financial crisis, it is. If it sounds like significant change is needed, it’s long overdue. If it sounds hopeless, it isn’t.”

    American Libraries column, Jan./Feb.

  • 16h

    Illustration by Antonio Rodriguez of a person reading a book to others in the libraryLast April, Choice convened the virtual panel “Affirmative Action and the Future of DEI.” Moderated by Fatima Mohie-Eldin, social sciences editor for Choice, the panel explored how these coalescing issues are impacting academic librarians and information scholars. The following are edited excerpts of their discussion, which considered how institutions can pursue and reaffirm their commitments to diversity, equity, and inclusion principles, the murky legal and political territory around education and information, and how collaboration can support access and inclusion.

    American Libraries feature, Jan./Feb.

  • 4d

    Montage of hockey-related books“For many readers and viewers, HBOMax’s recent adaptation of Rachel Reid’s Heated Rivalry has become an entry-point for casual observers of the game played on ice with a puck—and hockey romances. You may not know what exactly is happening on the rink, or even in the locker room, but you can guess, and that’s half the fun!” See other lists from Johnson County (Kans.) Library, Multnomah County (Oreg.) Library, Mesa County (Colo.) Libraries, or Omaha (Nebr.) Public Library.

    St. Louis Public Library, Dec. 27; Johnson County (Kans.) Library, Dec. 13; Multnomah (Oreg.) County Library, Dec. 11; Mesa County (Colo.) Libraries, Dec. 18; Omaha (Nebr.) Public Library, Dec. 4

  • 5d

    Interior of Seattle Central LibraryStefan Milne writes: “Seattle Public Library is the only US library system that makes its anonymized, granular checkout data public. The hitch is that the library’s data set contains nearly 50 million rows. To track trends in the catalog over the last 20 years, University of Washington researchers analyzed the checkout data of the 93 authors included in the post-1945 volume of The Norton Anthology of American Literature, which is instrumental in standardizing the books and writers we’ve deemed culturally important.”

    University of Washington News, Jan. 8

  • 5d

    Close-up of a trowel spreading mortar on an under-construction brick wallJanette Wright writes: “I was appointed to a leadership role in local government during a period of corporate change and budget constraint. Staff had a low level of trust in leadership, a history of conflict and incivility, and low expectations of the opportunity for service improvements or development. In this article, I’ll reflect on the leadership challenges inherent in such transitions, drawing on my personal experience across the library sector and applying a theoretical framework to offer practical insights for leaders navigating similar terrain.”

    Katina, Jan. 8

  • 5d

    Robot with a magnifying glass inspecting an abstract representation of a search engineHong Zhou and Hiba Bishtawi write: “For decades, discovery has revolved around keywords: carefully chosen terms, Boolean operators, and increasingly sophisticated relevance ranking. Today, generative artificial intelligence (AI) systems are introducing a different interaction model altogether. Instead of asking how to search, researchers are starting to ask what they want to know and expecting the system to figure out the rest. When does natural language outperform traditional approaches, and what do current AI-powered discovery tools actually do well? We conducted a comparative analysis of four widely used AI-enabled research discovery tools.”

    The Scholarly Kitchen, Jan. 6

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