Friday, October 26, 2007

Early Reviewer books on NPR

Two LibraryThing Early Reviewer books have been mentioned recently on NPR, so we figured that deserved some notice here.

The story 'Identical Strangers' Explore Nature Vs. Nurture is about Elyse Schein and Paula Bernstein's* Identical Strangers: A Memoir of Twins Separated and Reunited.

And Disease, Politics Permeate 'The Air We Breathe' is on Andrea Barrett's The Air We Breathe.


We're still/perpetually looking for more publishers to join our Early Reviewer program—more information here: http://www.librarything.com/forpublishers/

And for aspiring readers/reviewers, we'll announce the November batch of available books soon!

Oh, and Tim wants me to remind everyone about the latest book pile contest (below): Twenty-million books and/or Halloween...

*Paula Bernstein is, incidently, also an official LibraryThing Author.

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Thursday, October 25, 2007

Photo contest: Twenty-million/Halloween


Back when we had five million books!
We're about to hit twenty-million books cataloged. It should happen Monday or Tuesday. Then Halloween is coming up later in the week.

So we're doing a photo contest (see past ones)! Some ideas:
  • Make a spooky halloween book pile. Scary books and severed hands?
  • Make a twenty-million pile, or better, I'd love to get photos of people blowing out candles on books or whatever. Since we're all virtual now, I'm going to ask all the LT employees to blow out something on a cupcake. Come join us and we'll make a big montage of fire and puffed cheeks.
We'll give out a winner (lifetime account) and two runners-up (year's account) for each of the two categories. And glory, lots of glory.

Directions:
  • Post your photos to Flickr and tag them "LT20millionhalloween" (also tag them LibraryThing). If you make a new account it can take a few days for your photos to be publicly accessible, so post a URL to them here or do 2.
  • Or, post your photos on the wiki here.
  • Or, if all else fails, just email them to tim@librarything.com and I'll post them.
Contest ends MIDNIGHT Thursday, November 1.

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Friday, October 19, 2007

Pirates and haikus and contest winners

At long last, the contest winners!

Pirate book piles



I'm giving out two awards for the Talk Like a Pirate Day book pile contest, so congrats to
-Mr-Dustin-, with Treasure of Knowledge, and Emma*, for Here be Pirates—a delightful combination of books plus skull.

See other photos on Flickr, under the TLAPDLibraryThing tag, linked to in the comments of this blog post, or here on WikiThing.

Haikus

Are pirate haikus
truly art? Or attempts to
bring meaning to bilge?
-megacoupe


The age old question. Well, I love the LT haikus. More than words can describe. Especially now that I get emails which start "The haiku told me to email you about..." Priceless.

Here are a few of my favorites—gift memberships are winging their way to the authors of these gems.

But no one must see
all my birdwatching manuals!
Hide all your books here.
-gemmation

New to LibraryThing.
The day is gone. Tomorrow,
A new boss awaits.
-peter.g

Though ye sail under
many flags, your Tag Mirror
shows yer true colors.
-SilentInAWay

Cutlass, cannon, argh!
The never-ending battle.
Splitters and lumpers.
-larxol

Common Knowledge is
Uncommonly addictive
Leaves lie yet unraked
-tardis


Look at all the LibraryThing Haikus on WikiThing—there's help in haiku, general LT haikus, Library 2.0 haikus, and even Talk Like a Pirate Day themed ones.

Look, even Thomas Jefferson approves!

I delight, knowing
That my library lives on,
On the Internets.
-ThomasJefferson



*email me (abby@librarything.com) - I don't know who to give the gift membership prize to!

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Friday, October 12, 2007

Common Knowledge explodes

It's been 48 hours since we introduced Common Knowledge, our "social cataloging" initiative and it's been a HUGE success.*

Six-hundred and fifty members have contributed an edit, making 17,437 edits total (adding multiple characters, for example, counted as a single edit). Check out the changelog and watch it happen.

It's our job to support what you're doing. Apart from obsessively adding facts ourselves--Chris and I both made the top 20 contributors!--Chris has been working on UI improvements, and we've both been very active discussing it, bugs, new fields, the gender issue and other topics. There's a lot to do.

More statistics. The top contributor was shortride with an astonishing 1,383 edits. English got the lion share of edits, with second-place German coming in at 441 edits. (We're still working on how to show information from other languages.)

Top contributorsTop fields
Shortride1383Awards and honors4412
MikeBriggs614Character name3398
fleela458Gender2297
realSandy383Important places2255
PhoenixTerran350Places of residence1587
tardis336Birthdate1197
sabreuse311Education869
VictoriaPL301Date of death552
tripleblessings291Organizations430
AnnaClaire277Description200
Rtrace275Disambiguation notice116
andyl247Publisher's editor62
rorrison242Agent60
timspalding238
SqueakyChu234
conceptDawg228


*We're pretty impressed by all the activity, especially considering it hasn't been as blogged as much as some past features.** But I gave it a good push talking yesterday at the Ohio Library Council. (Come see me talk again today.) And something like this can only grow. APIs will be key.
**Tip of the hat, however, to Superpatron, Joshua M. Neff and Wicked Librarian.

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Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Common Knowledge: Social cataloging arrives

Chris has just released Common Knowledge, the innovative, open-data and insanely addictive "fielded wiki" we've been talking about for a month.

Common Knowledge adds fields to every author and work, like:
  • Author: Places of residence, Awards and honors, Agent
  • Work: Important places, Character names, Publisher's editor, Description
All-told there are fourteen fields. But Common Knowledge is less a set of fields than a structure for adding fields to LibraryThing. Adding more fields is almost trivial, and they can be added to anything existing or planned—from tags and subjects, to bookstores and publishers. They can even be added to other Common Knowledge fields, so that, for example, agents and editors can, in the future, sport photos and contact information.* This can lead to, as Chris puts it, "nearly infinite cross-linking of data."

Common Knowledge works like a wiki. Any member can add information, and any member can edit or revert edits. All fields are global, not personal. Common Knowledge diverges from a standard wiki insofar as each field works like its own independent wiki page, with a separate edit history.

Some example:
  • Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. I've been conservative with characters and places. (See Longitude, worked on by Chris for the opposite approach.) But I wish I had her editor!
  • The history page for "important places" in Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, showing improvement over time.
  • David Weinberger. Half-filled. He mentions his agent, but I can't tree his major at Bucknell and the honors section is empty.
  • Hugo Award Winners. This is going to get very cool.
  • The global history page. Mesmerizing.

Right now we're basically slapping fields on pages, but this structure is built for reuse. The license is also built for reuse. We're not asking members to help us create a repository of saleable, private data. Whatever you add to Common Knowledge falls under a Creative Commons Attribution license. So long as you include a short notice (eg., "Powered by the LibraryThing community"), you can do almost anything you want with the data—take it, change it, remix it, give it to others. You can even sell it, if someone will buy it. Regular people, bookstores, libraries--even our competitors--are free to use it. We'll be adding APIs to get it out there all the more. Go crazy, people.**

Common Knowledge isn't the answer to everything. Some data, like web links, requires a more structured approach; some, like our "work" titles, works best when it "bubbles up" from user data; and some, like page counts, have yet to be extracted from the MARC and ONIX information we have. But the possibilities are great. Series information? Blurbers? Cover designers? Books about an author? Tag notes? Other classification schemes?*** Bookstore locations? Publicists? Venues? Book fairs? Pets? Pets' vacination dates?

Anyway, we've done our thinking, but this is the ultimate member-input feature. We're going to have to figure it out together. Fields will need to be added (and removed?). Rules will be debated, formatting discussed. Although the base is solid, the feature set is still skeletal.****

Go ahead and play. Chris, John and I spent the evening playing with it, and we guarantee it's addictive. Or talk about. Leave a note here. I've also changed the WikiThing group into a Common Knowledge and WikiThing group. I've started a first-reactions topic and another for bug reports.

Why I'm excited. LibraryThing means a lot of things to a lot of people. Some come for the cataloging, some for the social aspect. A lot come for what happens between those two poles. As I see it, Common Knowledge is the perfect LibraryThing feature. I don't mean it's good; I mean it's in tune with what makes LibraryThing work. It's social, sure, but it's based in data. It's not private cataloging and it's not MySpace-like "friending."

LibraryThing is sometimes called a "social cataloging" site. When I used this term at the American Library Association, it became an unintentional laugh line. Social cataloging sounded impossible and funny, like feline water-skiing. This more than anything else got me fired up about doing this. True "social cataloging"; it was an idea that had to be tried!*****

Details, acknowledgements and caveats. Common Knowledge is deeply unstructured. This is going to give some members hives! Names aren't in first-middle-last format, but free text. You can enter places however you want. We've arranged some careful "hint" text, and fields have a terrific "autocomplete" feature, but we're not validating data and returning hostile error messages. We're aiming for accessibility and reach, not perfection. This is Wikipedia, not the Library of Congress. It scares us too, but we're also excited.

Abby, Casey, Chris and I planned this feature during the Week of Code. We worked through the issues together, and Casey, Chris and I all wrote the initial code. When we broke up, the rest of the coding and the interface design all fell to Chris. Although it was a team effort, this is really his feature. I'm very pleased with what he did with it.

We decided to work on this (and on our standard wiki, WikiThing, which grew out of it) because it was an ideal project for the entire group to tackle. This jumped it past collections. I still think this was a good idea, but there has certainly been some grumbling. We heard you. Collections is next on our list, with nothing new in between.


*So far we have only three data types—radio buttons (gender), long fields (book descriptions and author disambiguations) and short fields (everything else).
**Competitors who use it might want to stop asserting copyright over everything posted to their site. This was legally bogus already, but it certainly would conflict with a Creative Commons license... Incidentally, we haven't decided whether to go with CC-Attribution Share-and-Share-Alike or straight CC-Attribution (discussion here), but it's going to be one or the other.
***This particular one may happen very soon.
****And yes, we can discuss the whole radio-buttons-for-gender topic. See here, here. I'm of the opinion that two genders plus maybe "unknown" and "n/a" (for Nyarlathotep?) are the best you can get without consensus-splitting disagreement. You'll note we aren't including other potentially-contentious fields, like sexual orientation or religion.
*****In conception, Common Knowledge most closely resembles the Open Library Project, the Internet Archive's incipent effort to "wikify" the library catalog. Open Library is also a "fielded wiki," based on Aaron Schwartz's superior Infogami platform. You'll notice that we've mostly steered clear of the "traditional" cataloging fields that Open Library is starting from. We do cataloging differently, and we don't want to duplicate effort. Anyway, we're hoping they and others mash up the two data sets, and others.

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Tuesday, October 09, 2007

LibraryThing at the Frankfurt Book Fair

Well, the rest of us didn't get a trip to Germany, but Giovanni lucked out—he's already there. So he gets to represent LibraryThing at the Frankfurt Book Fair.*

Look for him around the AbeBooks booth, and running a discussion: "LibraryThing.de: Meine Bibliothek im Internet." That's happening in the "Forum Innovation Hall 4.2 P421" from 10:45 to 11:15 on Wednesday the 10th (which is today, if you're in Germany).

*The world's largest book fair. Tim went last year. Jealous? Me?

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"Your library" tab now remembers

I made a small change, but a basic one. It may cause some confusion, so I figured I'd do a quick blog post about it.

The "Your library" tab now "remembers" where you were in your library, rather than resetting things. This recreates the dead (and much-mourned) "back to catalog" button, found on work pages until they were redone. So, if you are on the fifth page of your catalog, go to an author and from there to a tag, a help page, the wiki, your email, a YouTube video of laughing babies and then back to LibraryThing and the "your library" tab, you'll find it where you left off.

Because it's basic, there may be some hiccups. Report problems on Talk, here.

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Monday, October 08, 2007

New book pages

Chris and I have made some major improvements to our book pages (e.g., Blood Music, The Magician's Assistant).* The overall goal was to make them simpler and more user-friendly. We wanted to appeal more to first-time visitors, and to members uninterested in seeing excessive detail (eg., 100 alternate covers) on a book's main page.

At the same time, we didn't want to "take anything away," or dampen the community's characteristic lust for detail, gorgeous detail. So we arranged and rearranged, added pages and changed labels. On the whole response seems to be pretty positive. (Feel free to comment here or there.)

A second goal was to speed loading time, and here we know we've succeeded. Popular books are no longer sand-traps for unsuspecting visitors. Once we install our new web server**, things will take another big jump.

Some new features:
  • We've added book descriptions, something we've always lacked. So far they're all in English and all from Amazon. That will change, and members will be able to craft a community summary, free of promotional jib-jab.
  • More stats can be seen at a glance, including popularity, recent adders and ratings.
  • Instead of a square box, we now have an attractive "default cover" (example book). In the near future we hope to allow members to choose their default cover. As we've mentioned, we'll have some sort of contest for these.
  • The main cover is bigger. The top-six covers are shown on the right, with a link to see all covers. Covers there are larger.
  • The conversations page looks and works better.
A couple things need work:
  • We haven't found a place for everything on the old work pages. This includes the "elsewhere on the web" section, which had Wikipedia links. We'll get them on soon.
  • The "members" page is missing a new "Connections: Who has it?" section. Also coming soon.
  • *We have a "customization" page for works already built. It will allow you to determine what the "main page" has. (Don't like tags? Junk 'em.) We aren't going to put customization out there until the feature set and labels have settled down.
The new book page was a necessary first step for some other cherished improvements—our wiki-like "Common Knowledge" feature, coming tonight or tomorrow night—and collections, which is next on the plate. Meanwhile, Casey is hard at work on better library-data parsing. It's going to be a week or two more, but I can reveal one thing. Besides improved data quality and character handling, we're going to at least triple the number of libraries around the world.

Update: We also made similar changes to the author pages. These are still in flux.


*We call them "work pages," but not everyone knows that.
**It came today. Unfortunately, I was sleeping, so DHL will have to come back tomorrow.

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Welcome Felius!

We've gone ahead and hired our first full-time, dedicated systems administrator. His name is John Dalton, but you know him as Felius, a LibraryThing member since September 14, 2005—two weeks after we launched! When he bleeds, he bleeds LibraryThing.

John's mission at LibraryThing is simple:
  • Make things stable
  • Make things fast
John isn't a miracle worker. A lot of our problems are in code, not systems (ie., blame me)*. Being without a dedicated, full-time "sysadmin" for so long has given him a lot of work to do. And our continued growth is scary. But we're overjoyed to have him on board, and expect great things.

A few more things:
  • John lives in Tasmania, Australia. Seriously. This presents fewer problems than you might think. Although he's fifteen hours ahead, everyone at LT works like a maniac, so our work days overlap a lot. And what is to our US and European members late-night maintenance and downtime takes place during his lunch hour.**
  • As we promised when we advertised for the job, whoever discovered our next employee would get a $1,000 book spree. We allowed people to find themself, which is what John did. Don't you wish you worked for LibraryThing, or at least sent me a note about this guy Felius? He promises to be the first user of our upcoming wishlist feature. Then he'll get his wish.
  • Favourite authors include Neal Stephenson, Arthur C. Clarke, Neil Gaiman, Bill Bryson and Simon Winchester.***
  • When not watching a dozen terminals or poring over columns of sar output, or reading, John's interests include spending time with his wife and two young boys, gaming, playing cricket (badly) and occasionally performing in the Tenor section of the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra Chorus.
*John is also a programmer, but we're not going to be calling on these skills regularly. There's enough pure systems stuff to do.
**Between John in Tasmania, Casey is Seattle and Giovanni in Germany, we can now officially claim that the "sun never sets on LibraryThing." We can also claim some really complex accounting. John is even paid in Australian dollars, which fluctuate rather wildly against the dollar.
***He and I share Alfred Bester, Clifford Stoll and Paul Graham—right on.

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Monday, October 01, 2007

Free books: October Early Reviewer books

I'm thrilled to announce our October batch of books for LibraryThing Early Reviewers. This is by far our largest batch yet—12 publishing houses, 31 different titles, for a grand total of 578 copies to give out!

Thanks to the following 12 publishers, who contributed fiction, non-fiction, poetry and even children's books:
See all the books and request the ones you'd like to review here: http://www.librarything.com/er/list.

And here's a mash of all the covers:



The deadline to request one of these books is Wednesday, October 10th at noon EST.

What is Early Reviewers? How do I sign up? Where do I post my review? These questions and more are answered here, in the Early Reviewers FAQ.

There's been some talk lately on how to score a book—so for the record, the basic algorithm is randomness, but other factors come into play. For one thing, LibraryThing's matching algorithm will try to match up books with readers, based on the rest of your LibraryThing catalog. And if you complete a review—good or bad!—you're more likely to get another. Finally, getting a free advanced readers copy comes with NO obligation. Under no circumstances will a bad review change your chance of getting another. More on this in the Rules and Conditions.

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