Libraries

May 06, 2008

Goldwater Library Wi-Fi Hot Spot

Futurewifi

Great News! the Library now has free Wi-Fi! Feel free to bring your laptops and surf the web in our Reading Room.

Wifi What is Wi-Fi?

via PCWorld:

Wi-Fi, or wireless fidelity, is a technology that allows PCs to communicate with each other or access the Internet via radio communication rather than wires. Originally developed for laptops, Wi-Fi now incorporates devices such as mobile phones, PDAs and games consoles (including PSP and Xbox 360). You can use Wi-Fi in your home with a broadband Internet connection and a wireless router. Alternatively, when you’re out and about you may encounter Wi-Fi hotspots. These range from a single room – say a coffee shop or airport lounge – to large areas of overlapping hotspots, such as a Wi-Fi enabled city centres. You’ll sometimes see Wi-Fi referred to as a number, 802.11, which relates to the frequency the technology operates on. Most current Wi-Fi devices use 802.11g, which offers a typical data transfer rate of 25 Mbits-per-second and a range of around 30 metres. 802.11n, though, typically performs at a much more impressive 200 Mbits-per-second and has a range of 50m.

Wifitshirt1
To find out more information please visit www.wi-fi.org

January 17, 2008

Photosharing on a grand scale: LC & flickr

Reblogged from Read Write Web (thanks, Joy!):

Library of Congress teams with flickr
Written by Josh Catone / January 16, 2008 10:26 AM

Locflickrlogo

The Library of Congress and photosharing site Flickr today announced a partnership that will put photos from the LoC's collection online in a social environment and users to interact with them. The Library is home to more than 14 million photographs and other visual materials, and to start they've selected about 1500 works each from two of their collections that are known to exist in the public domain. The images come from the Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information and The George Grantham Bain Collection, for which no known copyright exists. The collections will be housed on the LoC's Flickr page.

2179922040_93bf8831c1_t As part of the pilot program with the Library of Congress, Flickr has launched a new tagging initiative called The Commons. The Commons encourages people to help describe the historical photos being added to Flickr by institutions like the Library of Congress by tagging them or commenting on them.

"From the Library’s perspective, this pilot project is a statement about the power of the Web and user communities to help people better acquire information, knowledge and -- most importantly -- wisdom," said Matt Raymond, the LoC's blogger-in-chief. "One of our goals, frankly, is to learn as much as we can about that power simply through the process of making constructive use of it."

2162726975_27734fea86_m The photos, which are already available on the Library's photo and prints page (along with over 1 million others), may not be on Flickr permanently. The length of the pilot program will be determined by the amount of interest and activity shown by Flickr users, according to the LoC.

According to George Oates, at Flickr, the pilot program with the Library has two main goals, "firstly, to increase exposure to the amazing content currently held in the public collections of civic institutions around the world, and secondly, to facilitate the collection of general knowledge about these collections, with the hope that this information can feed back into the catalogues, making them richer and easier to search."

Flickr also said today that the site now houses over 20 million tags which help to power the search function of the site.

October 31, 2007

Library Catalogues

Catalogues_2

WATSONLINE
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries Catalog

American Museum of Natural History

Brooklyn Museum Library


BCIN
Conservation Information Network: Bibliographic Database

BOBCAT
New York University: Bobst Library

CATNYP
New York Public Library: Research Libraries Online Catalog

CLIO
Columbia University

CUNY+
City University of New York: Online Catalogue

Library of Congress

PMB Online Catalogue
Pacific Manuscripts Bureau: Microfilm Holdings Search Pages

SIRIS
Smithsonian Institution: Research Information System

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