Moving and Shaking!
I'm excited to say that Library Journal has picked me as one of their 2008 Movers and Shakers, "The People Shaping the Future of Libraries." Here's the full list, the intro and the blurb on me. (I'm on bottom right in the photo too!)
The full list makes for interesting reading. Jessamyn has a version of the list that includes names, not just our fanciful titles. ("Metadata Man"? Can't I be "Spark Plug" or "On a mission?") Certainly a lot more happens with libraries than I ever think about. Update: Bobbi Newman has a version with blogs too.
Movers and Shakers been going on since 2002, long before LibraryThing thrust me into the library world. A number of my favorite library bloggers and technologists have won it before, including Jessamyn West, Steven Cohen, John Blyberg, Meredith Farkas, Nicole Engard, Emily Lynema and Casey Bisson.
As much as I want to congratulate people, I know few of the current batch, and wouldn't have much to add. I do know Josh Ferraro of LibLime. LibLime is the driving force behind the open-source library system, Koha, that is suddenly on everyone's lips. We're eager to get LibraryThing data into Koha—beyond LibraryThing for Libraries, which already works—but Liblime may be too busy scaling to write the code anytime soon.* Fortunately, unlike all the closed systems, if LibLime can't do it, we can do it ourselves. That kinds of openness is just one of the many reasons Koha is taking over the world.
Four others caught my eye:
Marshall Shore ("The Man Who Said No to Dewey"). Shore is the guy behind Maricopa's move from Dewey to a modified BISAC system. I have mixed feelings about BISAC, but Dewey needs to be replaced, and experiments are good. I met with a member of his team at a conference; I'm eager to get their system into LibraryThing and they indicated they were willing.
Maria Redburn, Bedford Public Library. I've never met Ms. Redburn, but Bedford, a small-ish town in Texas, was the second library to enhance their catalog with LibraryThing for Libraries. Apparently Redburn took over in rocky times--the town was considering outsourcing library management to a company in Delaware. She turned the library around, winning approval for local control, expanded service and a new focus on customer service. Good stuff!
Darci Hanning, the force behind the Plinkit project, which provides free, low-hassle websites for libraries. I only heard about them two days ago; Casey is a big fan, and has a blog post about it coming up.
Mark Greek, DC Public Library. Greek worked to rescue and preserve rare materials from the Georgetown Neighborhood Library, devastated in a fire. That was my local library when I lived in DC, so a big thumb-up from me!
As for me, I think the blurb hits all the right notes: LibraryThings roots in cataloging, the social aspects, LibraryThing for Libraries and MARCThing (launched, but not yet accessible outside). But the best part is the closing quote by Karen Schneider:
*I need to dust off my PERL though!
**I'm also the first recipient from Maine, which seems wrong, both because there are a lot of innovative librarians in Maine and because I'm a "blow-in."
The full list makes for interesting reading. Jessamyn has a version of the list that includes names, not just our fanciful titles. ("Metadata Man"? Can't I be "Spark Plug" or "On a mission?") Certainly a lot more happens with libraries than I ever think about. Update: Bobbi Newman has a version with blogs too.
Movers and Shakers been going on since 2002, long before LibraryThing thrust me into the library world. A number of my favorite library bloggers and technologists have won it before, including Jessamyn West, Steven Cohen, John Blyberg, Meredith Farkas, Nicole Engard, Emily Lynema and Casey Bisson.
As much as I want to congratulate people, I know few of the current batch, and wouldn't have much to add. I do know Josh Ferraro of LibLime. LibLime is the driving force behind the open-source library system, Koha, that is suddenly on everyone's lips. We're eager to get LibraryThing data into Koha—beyond LibraryThing for Libraries, which already works—but Liblime may be too busy scaling to write the code anytime soon.* Fortunately, unlike all the closed systems, if LibLime can't do it, we can do it ourselves. That kinds of openness is just one of the many reasons Koha is taking over the world.
Four others caught my eye:
Marshall Shore ("The Man Who Said No to Dewey"). Shore is the guy behind Maricopa's move from Dewey to a modified BISAC system. I have mixed feelings about BISAC, but Dewey needs to be replaced, and experiments are good. I met with a member of his team at a conference; I'm eager to get their system into LibraryThing and they indicated they were willing.
Maria Redburn, Bedford Public Library. I've never met Ms. Redburn, but Bedford, a small-ish town in Texas, was the second library to enhance their catalog with LibraryThing for Libraries. Apparently Redburn took over in rocky times--the town was considering outsourcing library management to a company in Delaware. She turned the library around, winning approval for local control, expanded service and a new focus on customer service. Good stuff!
Darci Hanning, the force behind the Plinkit project, which provides free, low-hassle websites for libraries. I only heard about them two days ago; Casey is a big fan, and has a blog post about it coming up.
Mark Greek, DC Public Library. Greek worked to rescue and preserve rare materials from the Georgetown Neighborhood Library, devastated in a fire. That was my local library when I lived in DC, so a big thumb-up from me!
As for me, I think the blurb hits all the right notes: LibraryThings roots in cataloging, the social aspects, LibraryThing for Libraries and MARCThing (launched, but not yet accessible outside). But the best part is the closing quote by Karen Schneider:
"Tim has ported the fun of reading to the web and in doing so honors the best of our profession and suggests a path for its future."As someone outside of the profession, that's pretty gratifying to hear.**
*I need to dust off my PERL though!
**I'm also the first recipient from Maine, which seems wrong, both because there are a lot of innovative librarians in Maine and because I'm a "blow-in."
Labels: awards, library journal, movers and shakers
9 Comments:
Congratulations, Tim!
You've been moving and shaking and agitating and motivating many of us for a couple years now. The LJ honor is well-deserved. Next time, I'll buy YOU the beer.
Continued success to ya!
Hey, are you at CIL? I'll take you up on that.
Very nice! Congratulations. And thanks for your innovations.
Yay Tim!
Yay Tim. :-)
Bravo!
Super-duper! And a fetching picture as well -- and as always, thanks for all of LT!
Congrats on the moving and shaking!
I will be so happy if LibraryThing and LibLime/Koha get together somehow! I installed Koha at a small non-profit and like it a lot. We're switching to a LibLime-hosted install because of a lack of dependable tech support (I'm a library grad student and not planning on staying around permanently). Now, if I can somehow get the Family Resiliency library to use LibraryThing too...
Congrats, Tim!
Nice piece about Mark Greek, too. It was interesting to read about how he preserved the Georgetown Library (which I noticed you added to LT's "Venues" as I was trying to enter all of the DC Public Libraries to LT). :) Glad you could both be recognized as Movers and Shakers.
Post a Comment
<< Home