Business Law

Showing posts with label 2011 #1 Spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011 #1 Spring. Show all posts

ChapterNews―Spring―2011

  1. Message From the President: What SLA-NY Projects for 2011
    Pamela Rollo, SLA-NY Chapter President 2011 | pamela_rollo@standardandpoors.com
  2. Report on the 2010 LITA and Charleston Conferences
    Leigh Hallingby, SLA-NY Chapter Past-President 2011 | lhallingby@sorosny.org
  3. Making the Business Case for Taxonomy
    Seth Maislin, Senior Consulting Taxonomist | sethm@earley.com | Earley & Associates, Inc.
  4. Best of 2010: Tracking Down the Contents of the Port Authority Library
    Anthony W. Robins | http://www.linkedin.com/in/anthonyrobins
  5. Best of 2010: An Enforceable Code of Ethics: Why Archivists Should Be Demanding One
    Paul Morris | p.morris54@gmail.com
  6. Best of 2010:  The American Numismatic Society Library
    Elizabeth Hahn |
    hahn@numismatics.org | http://www.numismatics.org/Library
  7. Best of 2010:  Queering Artists' Books: A Queer Critical Analysis of Artists' Books
    Michael Carosone l michael@michaelcarosone.com
Chapter News reports on the upcoming activities of our many groups and committees, announces upcoming events, and highlights the extraordinary work being done by members of the New York Chapter of the Special Libraries Association.

As this is "for members, by members" we hope you’ll share your ideas for future stories and volunteer to write an article for an upcoming issue. Please contact Toby Lyles at lylesta@gmail.com to get involved. For our vendor members, numerous advertising opportunities are available. Please contact Happy Blitt hBlitt@elliottmgmt.com for details.

The summer 2011 issue will be published June 20, 2011. Submissions are due May 20, 2011.

Message From the President: What SLA NY Projects for 2011

Pamela Rollo, SLA-NY Chapter President 2011 | pamela_rollo@standardandpoors.com

SLA-NY created the blueprint for its 2011 activity with a huge strategic effort executed in 2010 under Leigh Hallingby’s leadership. One of the ways that we seek to execute those goals is to recruit more members to the Advisory Board’s new committee structure that we are building. We have built two super committees: Career Development and Programs & Events which now help to coordinate all the activities in the two most important services that SLA-NY provides to members. This committee structure does not replace any previous roles, but tries to help us “connect the dots” as we serve students, new professionals, mid-career members and experienced members. The committee structure will also provide more roles for members to influence the board’s decisions and also relieve the stress of only a few people pulling off a string of events.

Agnes Mattis has graciously accepted the chair of the Career Development Committee as it continues under Steve Essig’s leadership to offer our very popular Professional Development series enabling members to secure training on applications and databases. We also hope to expand training in topics of interest to aspiring and current managers. This committee will continue to experiment with providing formal instruction as we did this last October with our Introduction to Taxonomy course which was well received. If you would like to volunteer with the Career Development Committee, please contact Agnes at Agnes.Mattis@Skadden.com

The Program & Events Committee will continue to create programs of interest to the whole chapter but also will provide niche events for students and new professionals.

Members of these committees plan and launch events and there is enough planning, follow-up, funding and hosting to take on the interests of our members. This committee reports to the President–elect, Donna Severino, who can be reached at Donna.Severino@Credit-Suisse.com. Hospitality still has room for more volunteers and Vida Cohen could certainly put more members to work. Please contact Vida at Vidacohen70@gmail.com. You will also notice our efforts to work more effectively with other professional associations such at LLAGNY and ARMA to provide more programming of interest to the greater community.

We are still looking for members who want to lead special interests group such as Business  Finance. New York Chapter has always had the right to create and support division interests within the Chapter. We would welcome a KM, taxonomy or any other interest group that members would like to form. Interest groups may create specific programs of interest to their niche group.

The New Year has already brought us a chapter visit from Cindy Romaine, our current SLA President and a book talk with Joseph P. Quinlan, author of The Last Economic Superpower: The Retreat of Globalization, the End of American Dominance, and What We Can Do About It and Professional Development has begun an instructional series with Westlaw.


The Leadership Summit in January featured the new template for chapter and division websites and New York Chapter has volunteered to be a beta site. The new template is from WordPress and we look forward to providing the chapter a new web presence in 2011. Our old web presence is still viable and we continue to have several programs and lunches available for members over the next 60 days, so do check it out.

I would also like to extend congratulations to our own Clara Cabrera who has been recognized by the association as a 2011 "Rising Star."

Suggestions for programs can be sent to Donna Severino. Any other comments or suggests can come to me Pam Rollo at Pamela_rollo@sandp.com

Report on the 2010 LITA and Charleston Conferences

Leigh Hallingby, SLA-NY Chapter Past-President | lhallingby@sorosny.org

In the last quarter of 2010, I had the pleasure of attending two excellent relatively small-sized library conferences from which I gained a great deal of useful information.

The first, in Atlanta, was the LITA (Library and Information Technology Association) National Forum, from September 30th to October 3rd, exploring leading-edge technologies and their applications, mainly in academic libraries. Most of the presenters were IT people who work in libraries, but the audience was much more skewed toward librarians. With its clever theme, “The Crowd and the Cloud,” this conference introduced me to cloud computing, which is basically Internet computing where the programs, data, and storage space, for instance, are available on the Internet, rather than on local servers.

At a pre-conference workshop on website redesign (inspired in part by SLA-NY’s website redesign project), the instructor gave such advice as: cut two-thirds of the verbiage from your website; blocks of text are bad; bullets are good; have simple navigation on every page; allow visitors to perform an action right away on the home page; have contact information on every page; ease of finding is more important than multiple ways of finding information; and links must be descriptive of content to which they connect.

A session on Wikipedia included this new maxim: “Wikipedia could only work in reality. It could never work in theory.” The presenter, an academic, said that the articles range from trash to better than any peer-reviewed journal, pointing out that even peer-reviewed journal articles are instantly out of date, whereas Wikipedia entries can be updated constantly. The more people there are editing and watching Wikipedia articles, the better the articles tend to be. Generally she was amazed at how well the process works and at the high quality of Wikipedia articles.

Three library IT professionals from Wake Forest University in North Carolina spoke about making the actual transfer from relying on the university’s IT department to becoming self-reliant via cloud computing. When it was time for their servers to be replaced, they decided instead to move to the cloud. Two advantages were low start-up costs and moving from the standardization required by the IT department to the customization which the cloud allows. But as they have gained much more control now over their technology, they also now need to know a lot more about their programs and data, as there is no one from the university to assist them when they run into problems.

One major drawback to cloud computing is security since the information is no longer stored locally. The cloud is not appropriate, for instance, for confidential health care records. There is also the possibility of needed websites being down. Nonetheless, the advantages are huge: With the cloud, one gets resources like software, data and storage space on demand, as with electricity. If files exist in the cloud, the information in them is always accessible from multiple devices. When platforms for software development are in the cloud, the cost of innovation is lowered and innovation is speeded up. In other words, computer power of all kinds becomes a commodity to be purchased as needed for reasonable sums of money.

The Charleston Conference, subtitled Issues in Book and Serials Acquisition, took place from November 3 to 6. An annual event bringing together librarians, publishers and vendors, it is always held in Charleston, S.C., and now draws about 2,000 attendees. This was the 30th anniversary of the conference! Below is a sampling of wisdom gained from various plenary and concurrent sessions:
  • The Wikipedia speaker, like the one at the Atlanta conference, feels that Wikipedia entries have gotten to be impressively high quality. Also, he thinks that students are using them correctly – which is not for in depth academic research, but for defining a topic and looking up initial citations. An unintended consequence of Wikipedia is that it is evolving into a kind of search engine.
  • There was emphasis by several speakers on the fact that patrons need smaller rather than larger “chunks” of information. For instance, they need articles rather than journals and chapters rather than books. “Reading a journal” now frequently refers to reading the Table of Contents.
  • Finding content is easy. Reading it is hard.
  • There are too many catalog records for books. As catalog records that used to be available only to librarians become available to patrons, such as through Worldcat, it is important to have fewer records for each item. And creating multiple records is ultimately a waste of time.
  • Regarding academic journal articles, social networking is impacting academic research by extending it, through wikis and blogs, to new audiences who are not necessarily academic and also by making international communication easier. The research life cycle speeds up when study results move around more rapidly. Also, a phenomenon that might be called post-publication peer review is developing via online opportunities to comment on published articles.
  • Google has now scanned over 15 million books in 483 languages. Within the next 20 years, the vast majority of books in the world will have been scanned. Google can enhance a book by, for instance, adding a map pointing to all the places mentioned in the book. Metadata remains challenging. For instance, there is one ISBN that is shared by 1,413 books, and there are 6,000 ISBNs that match at least 20 titles.
  • With Google-scanned books and print-on-demand increasingly available, libraries may have to realign their missions and aim for something much greater than giving access to a limited set of materials. They may have to strive to give access to every book that has ever been published and make that access available immediately.
  • E-books are being enhanced, similar to DVDs, with extras, often in audiovisual format, such as author interviews.
  • E-journals now may include videos, such as of how to perform an experiment.
  • Twenty years of relative “calm” of “The PC Era” is ending and being replaced by mobile computing and cloud computing.
The 2011 LITA Forum will be held in St. Louis, Missouri, from Thursday, September 29th to Sunday, October 2nd, 2011, with the theme of, “Rivers of Data, Currents of Change.”

The 31st Annual Charleston Conference will take place from Wednesday, November 2nd to Saturday, November 5th, 2011.