Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Podcast 3: Murder! Politics! Books!

LibraryThing Podcast 3, which follows on the heels of the wildly successful*—if somewhat incoherent—LibraryThing Podcast 2, is an interview with Jeremy Dibbell, who runs the Legacy Library/I see Dead People's Books project.

The (somewhat meandering) conversation explores the Legacy Library project, 18th century book tastes, the top-shared Legacy Library book (Jeremy guessed wrong a few times), what your books are saying about you, and related topics.



Here's the direct link to the MP3: http://www.librarything.com/podcast/003.mp3

The Murder Part. Jeremy came to Portland to present at the New England Historical Association. His topic was the rediscovery/reconstruction of an important 18th-century library. The library belonged to George Wythe (LibraryThing Library, Wikipedia), a prominent Virginia politician/jurist and signer of the Declaration of Independence.

Wythe, a slaveholder who ended his life an abolitionist, was poisoned by his grandnephew for the inheritance (the grandnephew had a serious gambling problem). The murderer got away because the testimony of free blacks was ruled inadmissible, but Wythe lived long enough to disinherit him.
Signing the Declaration of Independence, Wythe to the left
In his will, Wythe gave his extensive book collection to Thomas Jefferson (LibraryThing library), a longtime friend and former student. Jefferson received some 338 titles, of which he gave away 183 to relatives and acquaintances, and kept 155. Only a few dozen of these were known until now.

Jefferson's inventory of Wythe's library was recently identified by Jeremy and Endrina Tay, Associate Foundation Librarian for Technical Services at Monticello. See Jeremy's post for more on Wythe's library. Wythe's LibraryThing catalog, based on Jeremy and Endrina's work, is the first reconstruction of Wythe's full library.

Using LibraryThing's new comparison feature, you can compare Wythe's library against other Legacy Libraries, other Signers of the Declaration of the Independence, or T. E. Lawrence.


*Actually, I have no idea how many people listened.

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Last call for best blog widgets...



I forgot to close the Best Widget competition, so I'm going to extend it to 5:00 Friday, May 1.

Post your submissions here.

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Commune with the dead

Can you guess what they are?
I've made some major changes to members' Legacy Library pages, bringing this wonderful member project—the private libraries of over 100 readers from the past—closer than ever before.

It has never been easier to compare the reading of Jefferson and Adams (427 books!), Hemmingway and Fitzgerald. And is has never before been possible to compare that of Tupac Shakur and LibraryThing's Australian systems administrator John Dalton!

The core, default feature is a list of Legacy Libraries and the books they share with you. New features include:
  1. You can get it book-by-book, instead of person-by-person.
  2. From that, you can now see the top shared books across the Legacy Libraries, with you or any subset.
    The top books list is somewhat surprising. I've pasted it on the right, with the titles blacked out. See if you can guess number one. For combination reasons it's not the Bible, but it's probably not any of the others that leap immediately to mind. The top books between signers of the Declaration of Independence is also quite surprising. And why on earth did three American presidents bother to acquire General view of the agriculture in the county of Somerset?!
  3. The libraries are broken down into groups, so you can see what you share with actors, musicians, politicians, etc.
    Among these are the splinter project, the Libraries of Early America, which Jeremy, the Legacy Library project leader, is working on in collaboration with archives, libraries and museums across the country.
  4. You can filter everything in all sorts of clever ways.
  5. Although the page is a dynamic explorer, it provides a permalink to send to friends and a nifty "Share on Twitter" button. (Did you know you can enter your books through Twitter?)
Later today I'll push out a podcast I did with Jeremy, a long but enjoyable romp through the legacy libraries, cataloging, the meaning of books through history and book-love generally.

Discussion going on here.

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Sunday, April 26, 2009

What's hot?

I've added a "Hot topics" category to Talk.

Heat is calculated every hour, and is based on posts and viewers in the the last 48 hours. It adjusts for the length of posts, so one-line posts don't count as much—You hear me Drop a Word, Add a Word? A topic with a lot of flags is penalized and it adjusts the numbers slightly to prevent groups from dominating the list.

More heat on its way...

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Thursday, April 23, 2009

Reoccuring flash mob in Chicago - April 26 and May 3

The flash mob at the Puerto Rican Cultural Center in Chicago went well last Sunday, with volunteers braving dismal Spring weather to battle the uncatalogued books.

The battle rages on, though. Despite 3,151 books cataloged, this library has MORE TO DO. As Sarah says, "kinda takes the flash out of it, but oh well." Nobody expects the flash mob to come back - this is brilliant. Those books won't know what hit them.

Also, this is a unique chance for all y'all who said "Oh, that sounds like fun, too bad I'm busy that day" to get in a few hours of altruistic cataloging.

So, for the next two Sundays (April 26th and May 3rd), there will be more mob-cataloging. The battle starts at 11 a.m. so bring your CueCat, and best snapping fingers. You can see the Puerto Rican Cultural Center catalog here.

I hear tell they had coffee and locally made Puerto Rican pastries last week, which are both delicious and culturally appropriate!

The PRCC is located at 2700 W Haddon in the Paseo Boricua neighborhood. Feel free to just show up on the day, or send a message ahead of time to let us know you're coming so we'll know how many to expect! Sarah Jackman (sbjackman@gmail.com) is the contact person for this flash-mob. Feel free to call her at (608) 330-0865 or send her an email.

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Monday, April 20, 2009

Welcome Catalonians!

This weekend saw a huge surge in registration on cat.LibraryThing.com, our Catalan-language subsite—fully 1/5 of new members on Saturday.

The surge followed brief coverage on a Catalan news site, complete with a short video about us (see Google translation*). The story even got into the Legacy Library project.**

I hope we can encourage our Catalan visitors to stay, and help improve the site for themselves and others. Catalan has an exceedingly rich literary tradition and no doubt hundreds of thousands of bibliophiles. But you're not going to find many Catalan books on Amazon and the sites that use it. LibraryThing, with access to over 690 libraries, including a union catalog of Catalonian universities, is an ideal place for Catalan-speakers to assemble, catalog their books and talk about literature.

So, Catalan speakers, apart from a president of LibraryThing who can write in Catalan***, what do you want? Are there any Catalan programmers out there who want to lend a hand in exchange for good will from your compatriots and cat.librarything.com revenues? (Seriously. We're never going to get rich off this stuff. But we might get even more interesting.)


*Google does Catalan now? Wonderful.
**Wouldn't it be great to get the libraries of some famous Catalonians? Searches turned up a handful of printed catalogs in or about Catalan and the closely-related Occitan: 1, 2, 3, 4.
***We do have you surrounded, though. Abby has good French, Chris Italian, Giovanni Spanish and my Latin is decent.

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Thursday, April 16, 2009

"New" catalog look/features

We've gone live with a number of aesthetic and functional changes to members' catalog pages.

Some examples, or see my catalog.


Before

After



Before

After

Together the changes aim to:
  • Look better. Those big clunky icons have been with us since the beginning—August 2005. The original files are on an old OS9 iMac. I'm sad to see them go, but man, they were clunky. LibraryThing is something of a "ransom note," but we're moving toward uniformity and beauty. You'll see the little icons popping up elsewhere.
  • Prepare the way for collections. Collections was too deeply integrated into the "new" catalog to bring it live separately. Doing both at the same time would have been a lot of work too. We're getting closer*.
  • Address some usability issues, particularly confusion over how to sort and "what the little numbers mean."
  • Speed up the page. The new page uses CSS sprites, moving from dozens of images to one.**
  • Fix some bugs.
Some things are missing, including:
  • Collections!
  • Better "covers" display. Mike is working on that. We decided to go ahead without him.
We've started two conversations:
  • New Catalog #1: Larger issues. Larger reflections on what we did. For the sake of argument, assume that it's "working" for you, and concentrate on whether you like how it works.
  • New Catalog #2: Bugs and small issues. Small issues, particularly ones we can just fix. I want these sequestered, so we aren't stuck with messages 2-20 in the main thread being about some trivial bug that got fixed.



*At least you're all now on the catalog we've been using for months, anyway.
**As Chris says, "Tim has found a hammer." It's all CSS-sprite-shaped nails to me now.

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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Flash news: flash-mob cataloging in Chicago this weekend!

Completely ganked from the Talk thread:

This Sunday, April 19, the Puerto Rican Cultural Center in Chicago will host a flash-mob to catalog the 1-2,000 books left in their library! The flash-mob will start at 11 am and go until 3 - or until the books are cataloged, whichever happens first.

Puerto Rican Cultural Center Website


The PRCC is located at 2700 W Haddon in the Paseo Boricua neighborhood. Take the Division exit off 90/94, go about 2 miles West on Division, then turn left on Washtenaw. The PRCC is on the NW corner of Haddon and Washtenaw. There's plenty of free street parking.

Feel free to just show up on the day, or send a message ahead of time to let us know you're coming so we'll know how many to expect! Sarah Jackman (sbjackman@gmail.com) is the contact person for this flash-mob. Feel free to call her at (608) 330-0865 or send her an email.

We hope lots of Chicago-area LibraryThingers will come out to help - can't wait to see you all there!

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Monday, April 13, 2009

Let the Wild Rumpus Start!

Fans of Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are* will enjoy President Obama's rendition (via C-SPAN) of the book to a group of kids at the annual White House Easter Egg Roll.

Where the Wild Things Are is followed by the first lady and children doing If you Give a Mouse a Cookie. I'm not as fond of that book, and it's fortunate the President didn't take it on—it too easily reads like a satire on the legislative process.

UPDATE: Chris Holland couldn't believe that I neglected to link to the trailer of the upcoming Where the Wild Things Are movie. Duly added.


*It's too bad he didn't do Sendak's Pierre. He would have locked in the Liam vote.

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Friday, April 10, 2009

LibraryThing podcast 2: Unstructured yapping

At some point, I want to get a LibraryThing podcast going. I did one formal episode already, an interview with librarian Jason Griffey, a cool librarian, about a year ago.

What I'd really like to do is something like Uncontrolled Vocabulary, Greg Schwartz's weekly, freewheeling phone-in conversation, now on indefinite hiatus, or the Stack Overflow podcast, a similar shoot-the-breeze between star-programmers Joel Spolsky and Jeff Atwood.

Until that day, here's a 50-minute kaffeeklatsch between LibraryThing employees, recorded back during out "week of code." It was originally filmed, but, well, I'm vain.



Here's the direct link to the MP3: http://www.librarything.com/podcast/002.mp3

In the conversation (around the room clockwise): Tim Spalding, Mike Bannister, Casey Durfee, Sonya Green, Chris Catalfo, Luke Stevens, Chris Holland. Alas, Abby was in Boston, John in Hobart and Giovanni in, I think, Thailand.

Topics:
  • The Kindle
  • Comic books
  • Academic publishing
  • Archaeology
  • Newspapers
  • O'Reilly books
  • Marginalia
  • Female archaelogists who wear plants
  • Why Chris Holland is above CSS books
  • Internet Explorer 6
  • Bad collections forecasting
Enjoy! And tell us what idiots we are on Talk.

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Thursday, April 09, 2009

Widget statistics and work page customization

Widget Statistics: The new LibraryThing widgets now have their own statistics page, so you can see how often your widgets are visited.

Check out your Widget Statistics or Luke's account, with some data.

The graph has an exceedingly nifty feature that makes the lines the same color as the background of the widget or, failing that, the main font color. This makes it easy to see which is which and is the kind of nice little detail Luke enjoys putting in.

Discuss it here: http://www.librarything.com/topic/62183

Reminder: There is a best widget contest going on.

Work page customization. Work pages are now customizable, with each section collapsible, and rearrangeable with a nifty drag-and-drop action, remembered between sessions. The feature is quite powerful—a lot cooler than I'd have thought possible.

Discuss it here: http://www.librarything.com/topic/62134

Collections progress. Follow our collections progress here.

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

April Early Reviewer Books

The April batch of Early Reviewer books is up! We've got 43 books this month, and a total of 1,129 copies to give out.

First, make sure to sign up for Early Reviewers. If you've already signed up, please check your mailing address and make sure it's correct.

Then request away! The list of available books is here:
http://www.librarything.com/er/list

The deadline to request a copy is Friday, April 24th at 6PM EST.

Eligiblity: Publishers do things country-by-country. This month we have publishers who can send books to the US, Canada, the UK, Israel, Australia, France and Germany. Make sure to check the flags by each book to see if it can be sent to your country.

Thanks to all the publishers participating this month!
Little, Brown and CompanyCrosswayMSI Press
St. Martin's GriffinHoward BooksHampton Roads Publishing Company
WaterBrook PressHachette Book GroupAlgonquin Books
PicadorOther PressDoubleday Books
The Permanent PressBeacon PressHarperCollins
Between the LinesBethany HouseChosen Books
Vanderbilt University PressOrca Book PublishersLitwin Books
St. Martin's PressNorth Atlantic BooksMcClelland & Stewart
HighBridgeBroadway BooksRiverhead Books

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