I couldn’t find an up-to-date list of dedicated UK academic library Twitter accounts, so I created one. It’s openly-editable in Google Docs, so if I’ve missed off a UK university library, please feel free to add it (or correct any mistakes).
Posts Tagged ‘lists’
List of UK university libraries on Twitter
Posted on January 25th, 2012 by Paul StainthorpTags: academic libraries, Google spreadsheets, libraries, lists, microblogging, RSS, Twitter, universities
Posted in Uncategorized | (0) Comments | Click here to add a comment »
Let them tweet cake: why Library Camp was unconferencing done right
Posted on October 8th, 2011 by Paul StainthorpI’m on the way back from the first national Library Camp UK in Birmingham (a bit tired after a 4am start. Yep. 4am on a Saturday).
Here are 10 reasons why Library Camp made for a great unconference. In no particular order:
The people. There were around 200 folk there (at the weekend, remember!), from all sorts of library sectors; plus a really healthy sprinking of non-library folk – from graphic designers to poets. While the echo chamber wasn’t entirely destroyed, it at least cracked in a few places. The passion for libraries was tangible from the start. And it’s probably no coincidence that quite a few Voices for the Library people were in attendance.- The unconferencing. There was no sop to traditional conference programmes, speakers, or presentations. Not a PowerPoint show in sight. All the workshop topics were ‘pitched’ by attendees on the day, scribbled onto post-it notes, and assembled into an impromptu programme on a whiteboard. Folk were free to attend whatever sessions they wanted to get stuck into. For my own part, I took the opportunity to leave my ‘day job’ subjects—open data, repositories, e-resources, etc.—to one side, and took part in some refreshingly non-technological library discussions.
- The venue. Etc Venues’ Maple House is <10 mins’ walk from Birmingham New Street station. They let people stick things up on the walls. I think nuff said.
- The topic. Mashed Library is about libraries and technology. Cycling for Libraries is about libraries and… er, cycling. Library Camp is about libraries, full stop. Whatever your pet library topic, it was up for discussion.
- The tweeting. I think this was the first event I’ve attended where very nearly everyone used Twitter. This was brilliant in building a sense of community in the run up to Library Camp, and on the day the hashtag #libcampuk11 pretty much owned the interwebs.
- The democracy. My favourite quote from the day: “leave your perceived status at the door”. I love that “perceived”! No-one was allowed to wear an ‘official’ / institutional badge of library rank. And the internal divisions within library & information work got a good kicking throughout the course of the day. Bravo.
- The organisation. Putting a whole new national event together in a few short months is impressive to say the least. Respect is due to @BhamLibrarian, @libraryjmac, @coralmusgrave, @siwhitehouse, @timmy666, @shedsue, and the sponsors. They’d like to hand the baton on to a totally new group of organisers for Library Camp 2012, so that things are kept fresh and Library Camp is reinvented every year. Will anyone pick it up?
The city. Alright, Birmingham is a bit of a pain to get to from the depths of rural Lincolnshire (hence my 4am start). But choosing a location in the Midlands did mean that most corners of the UK were represented.- The cake. It was just… beautiful. A stunning variety and a frankly intimidating amount of cakey goodness: nearly all of it home baked with love by Library Camp attendees. And it wasn’t just for show – keeping everyone’s blood sugar levels high meant that people stayed engaged and enthusiastic until the very end of a long day.
- Did I mention the people? For a bunch of (according to the stereotype) meek library types*, people weren’t shy about getting stuck in. Without that shared enthusiasm: no unconference.
*Yeah, right. I know. ROFL.
Tags: #libcampuk11, 10, @BhamLibrarian, @coralmusgrave, @libraryjmac, @shedsue, @siwhitehouse, @timmy666, Birmingham, cake, Cycling for Libraries, etc, events, libraries, LIbrary Camp, LibraryCamp, lists, mashlib, Twitter, unconferences, venue, Voices for the Library
Posted in Uncategorized | (3) Comments | Click here to add a comment »
Your publication list on the Lincoln Repository
Posted on September 29th, 2011 by Paul StainthorpIt’s now very easy to pull up a list of your own publications from the Lincoln Repository.
Your publications can be found at the following short link (edit: URL updated 29 September 2011):
- http://lncn.eu/ep/XXXXXX
Where ‘XXXXXX‘ is your staff ID: the six-digit number you use to log in to the SafeCom printing system. For example, my own list is at: http://lncn.eu/ep/000947 (Any UoL students who have items on the Repository can use their normal 8-digit student account ID in the same place).
You can also get the same list of publications as an RSS feed, using the same staff ID number at:
- http://lncn.eu/eprss/XXXXXX
Again using your staff ID. For example: http://lncn.eu/eprss/000947
As well as subscribing to the list in an RSS feed reader, the RSS version of your publications list can also be embedded in a web page using Feed2JS to generate a bit of embeddable HTML code.
(Technical note: these short links are now possible because we’ve started using Lincoln staff/student IDs as unique identifiers for named authors in EPrints publication records. In future, we’ll be able to use these unique identifiers to create browsable lists of institutional authors, and to link lists of publications to staff profiles on other University systems. Thanks to EPrints Services at Southampton for putting this fix into place. The short URLs themselves were created using the [hidden] namespaces feature of lncn.eu – speak to Nick Jackson for a demo!)
Tags: author, embedded, EPrints, EPrints Services, Feed2JS, HTML, Lincoln Repository, lists, lncn.eu, namespace, publications, RSS, SafeCom, short URL, staff ID, unique IDs
Posted in Uncategorized | (2) Comments | Click here to add a comment »
Blogs in the Library
Posted on September 14th, 2011 by Paul StainthorpThere seems to have been a spate of my colleagues in the Library creating new, personal/individual blogs on my.blogs.lincoln:
- Judith@theLibrary, Judith Elkin, Academic Subject Librarian, created 7 September, 2011
- Sport Librarian, Oonagh Monaghan, Academic Subject Librarian, created 6 September, 2011
- Meandering into the future, Chris Leach, Systems Librarian, created 6 September, 2011
- Business Librarian, Daren Mansfield, Academic Subject Librarian, created 17 August, 2011
- Faye@the Library, Faye Cleminson, Academic Subject Librarian, created 10 August, 2011
- Thought Cloud, Elif Varol, Library (E-resources) Assistant, created 21 May, 2011
- (er… Paul Stainthorp, Paul Stainthorp, Electronic Resources Librarian, created 22 July, 2010)
Which is nice. They’re all mostly empty at the moment. But I hope people will get into the habit of blogging regularly. Our initial experiments in library blogging were based around the idea of writing for shared, multi-author, institutional news-type blogs (Library news blog, The Winch!, L&LR staff blog). But I’m not convinced that way of working has stood the test of time. Blogging seems to make much more sense when it’s done by a named (or at least pseudonymed) individual, writing in their own voice and from their own perspective about their own work. Posts could then always then be aggregated/digested into a secondary library-wide blog for ease of following.
I’ve aggregated all the individual library staff blogs into this OPML file, in case you’re desperate enough to want to follow us all. You should be able to import it into a feed reader (e.g. Google Reader).
Because a couple of|the new blogs are using the standard photo of the GCW at night as their banner image in the CWD WordPress theme, I might pick out a different library-themed photo from my flickr photostream to use on paulstainthorp.com. Don’t be surprised if it changes soon.
Tags: banner, blogging, blogs, Chris Leach, colleagues, CWD, Daren Mansfield, Elif Varol, Faye Cleminson, image, Judith Elkin, library, lists, news, Oonagh Monaghan, OPML, themes
Posted in Uncategorized | (1) Comment | Click here to add a comment »
The things that I used to do
Posted on July 29th, 2011 by Paul StainthorpIn searching the web the other day, I found this, from 2007. When I was a subject librarian I used to create one of these new book lists every month, writing the HTML and CSS in Notepad. It was time-consuming, but it meant I got to know the collection inside-out.
Tags: 2007, books, collection development, computer science, HTML, lists, new books, subject librarian, technology
Posted in Uncategorized | (0) Comments | Click here to add a comment »
It’s about time
Posted on December 1st, 2010 by Paul StainthorpClosing the University of Lincoln for the day has led to a little flurry (ha!) of interesting blogging.
When people are able to spend a few hours away from the shop floor (and I was right to stay away, by the looks of things) they have time to think: something that can be in regrettably short supply.
[I apologise to the students who have been missing lectures and library time. I'm not suggesting we should shut the campuses down more often, just to let people wander through snowy scenes, stroking their beards academically... but you've gotta make the most of these opportunities when they arise. I hope you've had a good snow day yourselves!]
In fact; lack of time, full stop, is by far the biggest problem I face at work. It begins with a kernel of my own lack of organisational ability, and is exacerbated by:
- The number of emails I receive a day: some 300~400/day ‘gross’; translating to 50~60/day that actually require my attention in some way.
- Procrastination, and an environment that invites it: at the University, there’s always something more interesting going on than the thing I should be getting on with.
- The number and the breadth of projects in which I’m involved. E-resources is a broad and varied field; Lincoln’s going through a whole load of interesting changes, and I find it difficult to say “no”.
I could, as others have done, abandon distractions such as Twitter entirely, but I’m still having far too many valuable conversations to pull the plug completely.
My latest simple trick to keep the work flowing: a massive, imposing ‘To Do‘ list, Blu-Tack®-ed to the wall near my desk, and updated every couple of days. Actually it’s two lists: one page of individual tasks, ordered by priority; and a second page of wider project ‘threads’ – all the work I mustn’t forget about, even if it’s just bubbling away in the background. If someone asks me to do something now, it gets added to the überlist (priority negotiable, and dependent on who’s asking…) or it doesn’t get done at all. It’s crude, but it’s helping.
Q. How do you keep on top of things?
Tags: blogging, email, lists, priorities, procrastination, projects, reflection, snow day, tasks, techniques, thinking time, time, to do, Twitter
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off
-

This blog by Paul Stainthorp is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 UK: England & Wales License. -
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- brok3rz on Hack da Fens: open bib hack day objectives!
- Orbital used to release library activity data under CC0 license | Orbital on 1.8 million library loans from the University of Lincoln under CC0 – Copac Activity Data/SALT2 project
- Owen Stephens on Return of the Mash
- Paul Stainthorp on Java, John and JournalTOCs
- Roddy MacLeod on Java, John and JournalTOCs
Tags
A-to-Z activity data Athens authentication Blackboard CLOCK data databases discovery e-journals e-Library EBSCO engineering EPrints ERM events GCW Jerome Jerome blog JISC Joss Winn libraries library library catalogue Library news blog Lincoln Repository LNCD mashlib meetings open data Orbital Portal projects RefWorks repositories repository RSS slides team Twitter UKCoRR University of Huddersfield University of Lincoln website workshopsLinks
- blackboard.lincoln.ac.uk/bbcswebdav/users/pstainthorp
- blogger.com/profile/09480156575692685770
- blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/pstainthorp
- citeulike.org/user/pstainthorp
- dcc.ac.uk/rdmf/user/94
- delicious.com/pstainthorp
- facebook.com/pstainthorp
- flavours.me/pstainthorp
- flickr.com/people/pstainthorp
- flickr.com/photos/pstainthorp
- formspring.me/pstainthorp
- foursquare.com/pstainthorp
- friendfeed.com/pstainthorp
- getsatisfaction.com/people/pstainthorp
- github.com/pstainthorp
- google.com/profiles/pstainthorp
- google.com/reader/shared/pstainthorp
- gplus.to/pstainthorp
- gravatar.com/pstainthorp
- identi.ca/pstainthorp
- joindiaspora.com/u/pstainthorp
- lanyrd.com/people/pstainthorp
- last.fm/user/pstainthorp
- learninglab.lincoln.ac.uk/wiki/user:pstainthorp
- library20.org/profile/pstainthorp
- librarything.com/profile/pstainthorp
- linkedin.com/in/pstainthorp
- lisn.org.uk/
- lisnpn.spruz.com/member/?p=23899B54-8C4B-44CC-AB53-97BC110A9B32
- mashedlibrary.com/members/pstainthorp
- member.acm.org/~pstainthorp
- mendeley.com/profiles/paul-stainthorp/
- myskype.info/pstainthorp
- myspace.com/pstainthorp
- ojs.lincoln.ac.uk/index/user/pstainthorp
- paper.li/pstainthorp
- phone.online.lincoln.ac.uk/pstainthorp
- picplz.com/user/pstainthorp
- pipes.yahoo.com/pstainthorp
- plus.google.com/105114919110752691970
- portfolios.lincoln.ac.uk/user/view.php?id=14
- posterous.com/pstainthorp
- refworks.com/refshare/?site=042231169787600000/RWWEB1041131877/029191288021431000
- rollyo.com/pstainthorp
- scholar.google.com/citations?user=E8KhpP8AAAAJ&hl=en
- scribd.com/pstainthorp
- slideshare.net/pstainthorp
- twitter.com/pstainthorp
- ukcorr.org/committee.php
- visit.lincoln.ac.uk/MySite/Public.aspx?accountname=NETWORK\pstainthorp
- webpages.lincoln.ac.uk/pstainthorp
- wikipedia.org/wiki/user:pstainthorp
- wordle.net/gallery?username=pstainthorp
- wwh.lincoln.ac.uk/people/pstainthorp
- yammer.com/lincoln.ac.uk/users/pstainthorp
- youtube.com/user/pstainthorp
- zotero.org/pstainthorp
