In the past, rap and hip-hop cds were scattered between soul, blues, contemporary rock and countless other genres in perhaps an ode to the fact hip-hop borrows from all genres of music. But now, under the dewey classification 781.649, you'll find all of our rap and/or hip-hop in one place.
Showing posts with label Dewey Decimal System. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dewey Decimal System. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Recognized...19 years later.
After a period of only 19 years, the Missoula Public Library has officially recognized rap/hip-hop as a legitimate musical genre. Hip-hop music as an artform is much older, of course; 19 years is the length of time since the first mainstream hip-hop single.
In the past, rap and hip-hop cds were scattered between soul, blues, contemporary rock and countless other genres in perhaps an ode to the fact hip-hop borrows from all genres of music. But now, under the dewey classification 781.649, you'll find all of our rap and/or hip-hop in one place.
In the past, rap and hip-hop cds were scattered between soul, blues, contemporary rock and countless other genres in perhaps an ode to the fact hip-hop borrows from all genres of music. But now, under the dewey classification 781.649, you'll find all of our rap and/or hip-hop in one place.
Friday, June 22, 2007
The Future of The Web/Libraries?
Check out this video on a possible future of the web.
Where would a public library fit into this world? I think the predictions are pretty reasonable, given current trends. I use bloglines to get 99% of my news these days, even though I have cable and access to 20 some newspapers here at work. We, as librarians, are used to making print resources available to our patrons, and now making access to the internet readily available. We make electronic databases available and libraries are starting to allow patrons to download books, songs, movies, etc. for their own portable players. We belong to social networks to get our brand out there, and advertise. We have blogs, and send RSS feeds of new materials arriving at the library. The trick is to stay ahead of the curve. Where do we go from here?
It feels like libraries, for the most part, are simply playing catch up with advancing technology, waiting to see if things like myspace are "safe" enough for the library world. Waiting to see if Wikipedia is authoritative enough. But if libraries are to play the part of an intellectual marketplace of ideas, which is what they should be, we should be willing to try things out before we know they are safe or reliable. We should be willing to allow our patrons to tag our materials themselves(some libraries already are). We should arrange our materials in a easier to understand way, like they've done at the Maricopa County Library. We should be willing to shoulder the load of getting information out to the public in new ways and be able to dynamically deliver information to patrons based on what they are interested in. I think that is the point of a public library.
Where would a public library fit into this world? I think the predictions are pretty reasonable, given current trends. I use bloglines to get 99% of my news these days, even though I have cable and access to 20 some newspapers here at work. We, as librarians, are used to making print resources available to our patrons, and now making access to the internet readily available. We make electronic databases available and libraries are starting to allow patrons to download books, songs, movies, etc. for their own portable players. We belong to social networks to get our brand out there, and advertise. We have blogs, and send RSS feeds of new materials arriving at the library. The trick is to stay ahead of the curve. Where do we go from here?
It feels like libraries, for the most part, are simply playing catch up with advancing technology, waiting to see if things like myspace are "safe" enough for the library world. Waiting to see if Wikipedia is authoritative enough. But if libraries are to play the part of an intellectual marketplace of ideas, which is what they should be, we should be willing to try things out before we know they are safe or reliable. We should be willing to allow our patrons to tag our materials themselves(some libraries already are). We should arrange our materials in a easier to understand way, like they've done at the Maricopa County Library. We should be willing to shoulder the load of getting information out to the public in new ways and be able to dynamically deliver information to patrons based on what they are interested in. I think that is the point of a public library.
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