April 2012 (v.24 #2)

31 Mai 2012
Titre de revue: 

ISSUES, NEWS, & GOINGS ON

Rumors – p. 1

From Your Editor – p. 6

Letters to the Editor – p. 6

Deadlines – p. 6

 

FEATURES 

The Grass Really Is Sometimes Greener — Guest Editor, Forrest E. Link

The Grass Really Is Sometimes Greener – p. 1
 by Forrest E. Link — In this collection of articles, six librarians who have crossed the vendor/publisher/librarian boundary give us their perspectives on the differences in workplace culture and the lessons they learned along the way.

Changing Glasses: Does Our World Look Different as a Vendor or a Librarian – p. 16
 by Corey Seeman — When money doesn’t exchange hands it can be trickier to figure out what we are doing.
 
Crossing the Bridge Connecting the Corporate and Academic Library Worlds – p. 20
 by Valerie Tucci — After almost forty years as a corporate librarian, Valerie was ready, not for retirement, for new challenges!

The Refugee Returns Home: An MLS in Corporate America – p. 24
 by Kate Kosturski — Kate had it “up to here” when she took her next job.

Joining the Dark Side – p. 28
 by Laura Harris — In her last position, Laura worked in a cubicle and shared the room with nine coworkers.  Now she works from home.

Lessons Learned – p. 30
 by Amira Aaron — As a “seasoned” librarian who has transitioned several times between the library world and the vendor world, Amira has come to focus on the similarities rather than the differences.

The Value of Experience – p. 34
 by Scott A. Smith — Scott contends that some in the library world fail to understand the value of vendor experience.

Op Ed — Pelikan’s Antidisambiguation – p. 46
 “Being Careful What We Wish For…” by Michael P. Pelikan — We’re being marketed to with such pervasive, immersive intensity that most of the time we scarcely realize it’s happening.

Don Stave – In Memorium – p. 47
 by Richard Abel
 
Back Talk – p. 78
 Today’s Academic Library: Student-Centered and Convenient by Tony Ferguson — Tony says that working as a librarian is a bit like the work of a lumberjack — focusing on the trees instead of the forest.
 

ATG INTERVIEWS

Leslie Straus – p. 38
 President, SkyRiver Technology Solutions

Max Phua – p. 41
 World Scientific Publishing Co.

Dr. Mehdi Khosrow-Pour – p. 43
 President and CEO, IGI Global

PROFILES ENCOURAGED

 Forrest Link – p. 14

 Corey Seeman – p. 18

 Valerie Tucci – p. 22

 Kate Kosturski – p. 26

 Leslie Straus – p. 40

 Mehdi Khosrow-Pour – p.  42

 Publisher Profile – SkyRiver – p.  38

 Publisher Profile – IGI Global – p. 44

 REVIEWS

From the Reference Desk – p. 48
 Reviews of Reference Titles by Tom Gilson The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Bible published by Oxford University Press, and Women in American politics: History and Milestones published by CQ Press, are just two of the titles reviewed this month. 

LEGAL ISSUES

Edited by Bryan Carson, Bruce Strauch, and Jack Montgomery

Cases of Note — Copyright – p. 51
 Vicarious Infringement by Bruce Strauch — Range Road Music, Inc. et al v. East Coast Foods, Inc., Herbert Hudson

Questions and Answers – p. 52
 Copyright Column by Laura Gasaway — Can two journals share copyright of the same manuscript?  Lolly tells us in this issue.

PUBLISHING 

 From A University Press – p. 50
 One Size Doesn’t Fit All by Leila Salisbury — Those we serve (publishers and librarians) do not fit a single mold or model. 

 Papa Abel Remembers – p. 53
 A Tale of A Band of Booksellers, Fasicle 18: Costs and Revenues by Richard Abel — And the saga continues…

 Booklover – p.  55
 Percussion by Donna Jacobs — Donna is captivated by a photo of a boy resting on a tribal drum.

 @Brunning: People & Technology – p.  56
 At the Only Edge that Means Anything/How We Understand What We Do by Dennis Brunning — Oh Britannica and more.

 And They Were There – p. 59
 Reports of Meetings — ASA by Anthony Watkinson, and more reports from the 31st Charleston Conference compiled by Ramune Kubilius. 

 Biz of Acq – p.  64
 An Environmental Analysis Corroborating PDA and the Winthrop Example by Antje Mays — As higher education struggles with costs and course-delivery methods libraries have an enduring lead role.

 BOOKSELLING AND VENDING

Something To Think About – p.  10
 What Are We About? by Mary E. (Tinker) Massey — Mary talks about reassessing who she is, where she is now, and where she is going in life.

Bet You Missed It – p. 12
by Bruce Strauch — What do a piano and a dachshund have in common? 

Oregon Trails – p. 36
 The Ego and I by Tom Leonhardt — Tom has been reading Autobiography/Memoir and Essays for Foreward Magazine. 

Random Ramblings – p. 58
 Niche Research, Silos, and Collection Development by Bob Holley — Just because research doesn’t have practical consequences doesn’t mean that these research questions aren’t worth asking.

Collecting to the Core – p. 68
 Dance by Susan L. Wiesner — The classification of dance texts can be confusing.  Read this column for a better understanding.

Little Red Herrings – p. 70
 Is the Internet a Substitute for the Library  After All? Part I by Mark Herring — Does one bad thing follow another? 

Issues in Vendor/Library Relations – p. 71
 Schooled by Bob Nardini — Bob reflects on the changes in library – excuse me – information school. 

Acquisitions Archaeology – p. 72
 Professional Ethics by Jesse Holden — Jesse is bothered that we have a statement of our ethics rather than a code of ethics.

Notes from Mosier – p. 74
 “What Goes Around, Comes Around – Pricing Models for Print Books” by Scott A. Smith — Scott points out that pricing was a divisive issue in the 1970s and asks if it is not a divisive issue today.

 TECHNOLOGY AND STANDARDS

I Hear the Train A Comin’ – p. 8
 From the Paris of the Plains by Greg Tananbaum — Greg is using this issue’s column to present the three big picture conclusions he took away from SPARC’s first North American meeting devoted to all matters open access.

 Standards Column – p. 76
 Augmented Reality: An Opportunity for Content Creators to Extend their Reach by Todd Carpenter — Knowing what is coming and how to incorporate it into existing and future content will be keys to succeeding in the future.

 ETC.

 Charleston Conference 2012 – p.  8
 Issues in Book and Serial Acquisition — Call For Papers, Ideas, Preconferences, etc.

 Future Conference Dates – p. 14
 Future Charleston Conference dates through 2015 can be found here!

 

 

April 2012 (v.24 #2)