Archive for the 'sla2008' Category

A clever way to experience SLA

Friday, June 20th, 2008

Going through the posts tagged for SLA2008, I came across this one about delegate April Younglove’s personal goals for the conference: to accept a scholarship award and get through the entire thing without paying for any food.

“The secret genius of my original goals, I later discovered at the convention, is that they actually caused me to do far more networking and professional development than I might have otherwise. Getting an award became a natural conversation starter, and by forcing myself to find out where the food was, I had to sit at tables with strangers and meet them. I had to attend events sponsored by divisions like the agricultural division and the military division that I never would even have dreamed of attending otherwise, had it not been for my personal scavenger hunt.”

What a clever challenge to set for yourself. April goes on to list some interesting things she learned about transferable skills as well as some creative career development tips.  This would make a fascinating full-length article (in Information Outlook, perhaps?)!

SLA 2008 - Opening general session - Charlie Rose and Dr Vinton Cerf (Sunday, June 15)

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

The opening general session was a combined awards ceremony and keynote speaker event. The awards shone a spotlight on some of the association’s most inspiring members. I was especially glad to see Sabrina Pacifici recognized for her excellent LLRX and Be Spacific sites, with the Innovation and Technology award. After the awards, we were treated to an engaging discussion between Google’s Chief Internet Evangelist, Dr. Vinton Cerf, and the American television journalist Charlie Rose. Dr. Cerf is one of the “founding fathers” of the internet and he gave us a brief overview of its early development. He also shared “the truth about Al Gore” (Gore sponsored legislation that was critical in the advancement of the internet and deserves a lot of credit).

In his interview, Cerf asserted that the internet should be like infrastructure; like a roads system. There when you need it, and in some ways, invisible. But, he thinks, we still have a long way to go. He views the digital divide as a major problem and thinks lowering the costs of internet access and improving accessibility should be some of our major priorities.

He described how mobile technology is really the next big thing, and believes it will be the catalyst for the growth that brings the internet to parts of the world where it would otherwise be unavailable. He predicts that within ten years, everyone on the planet will have access to the internet in one way or another.

Cerf believes that the power of the ‘net is its openness and freedom, and that access to it must be preserved and improved. The internet provides a forum for every person’s knowledge inasmuch as they are willing to share. One powerful axiom is “You could learn something from everyone.”

Digital objects, such as Excel spreadsheets, are complex and intricate and are interacted with and manipulated in ways completely different from analog (print) resources. As such, we must be conscious now that as an increasing amount of our world’s information is produced digitally and accordingly, a decreasing amount physically printed, it is essential that we preserve the software that allows us to read and interpret this digital information. Cerf sees the internet as a place to make available outdated or superseded software versions that we will likely require in the future to access today’s information.

Cerf thinks that within the next 15 years we will begin to see an improvement in search with the growth of the semantic web; that is, searching not just for text but for meaning. This, he predicts, will be hard. Natural language translation is improving rapidly but he thinks that true artificial intelligence may not ever be realised.

When asked what he feels optimistic about, Cerf replied that if the internet stays open and unrestricted, its abilities know no boundaries. When asked what he is fearful of, he said it was that the internet won’t be open; that it will be constrained by business or political forces.

Rose and Cerf took the saying “Knowledge is power” and tweaked it: “Knowledge SHARING is power”.

Seattle at last!

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Here I am in Seattle, attending the 2008 SLA Annual Conference. Seattle is an awesome city and I’m really excited to be here. This morning I went on the Bill Speidel Underground Seattle Tour (so cool) and am set to attend the Opening General Session at 5. In the meantime, my mission is to find a pair of sunglasses (At last! Summer sunshine!) and do some planning for which sessions to attend. I’m extra-lucky this year (aside from the hotel hell I’ve already endured)because I’ve got two friends/colleagues (techs from other firms) attending as well. Going to a conference by yourself can be lonely. It’ll be nice to have people to meet up, compare notes and ideas, and discover the city with.

 Over and out for now!

SLA 2008 - Seattle, here I come!

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Woo hoo! My favourite time of the year - conference planning begins!

I whipped up a map of all the conference hotel locations in relation to the convention centre, and that made it quite easy to select the one with that would work for me.

With the conference being so close to Vancouver this year, I think more of my lib tech colleagues will be attending. Should be a blast!