Monday, July 22, 2013

ResearchGate - warning re copyright issues



Please note: (This was sent to staff and postgrads by the Research Office :
 
The ResearchGate (RG) network https://www.researchgate.net was founded in 2008 and currently has over 3 million researchers registered. 450 Rhodes University affiliated researchers are amongst these.  It is possible to upload the full-text of articles to an RG profile and many researchers have done this.
This is problematic if authors make available the published version of journal articles in infringement of publishers’ copyright regulations. To ascertain whether an article may  legally be deposited in RG it is essential that authors check publisher copyright policies.  This can be done on the Sherpa/Romeo website which summarises permissions that are normally given as part of each publisher's copyright transfer agreement. http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/
The Rhodes Research Office has recently heard that authors may be sued by publishers if their uploads to RG are in breach of copyright.
Please share this information with your postgraduate students, many of whom have RG profiles.
Please remember that your research (articles, conference papers, etc.) can be shared with others via the Rhodes Institutional Repository http://eprints.ru.ac.za/.
For more information on RG read the following:

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Apple Found Guilty of eBook Price Fixing; Amazon Cackles, Twirls Moustache

Apple Found Guilty of eBook Price Fixing; Amazon Cackles, Twirls Moustache
Why the Apple Ebook Verdict Could Make You Love Libraries Again

Why open access makes no sense (????)



Guardian article: "There can be no such thing as free access to academic research, says Robin Osborne in Debating Open Access essays – research is a process that universities teach and charge for."

Let’s hide our research from unworthy people ("The Guardian recently published an article by Professor Robin Osborne under the controversial title “Why open access makes no sense”. The author sets out to prove that there is no such thing as free access to academic research, and having caused quite a stir, I think it is worth commenting.")

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Students Prefer Print but Not Books for Serious Academic Reading

The study, “Student Reading Practices in Print and Electronic Media,” to be published in September 2014 in the journal College & Research Libraries, tracked the reading habits of 17 CUNY students through diary entries, interviews, and discussion groups over the course of two weeks.

The research found that they almost always used e-book readers, mobile devices, and tablet computers for nonacademic reading but relied on paper printouts for academic reading.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Book Allocations in a University Library: An Evaluation of Multiple Formulas

This article describes an academic library's process of running multiple allocation models in order to find one that best suits the needs of the institution. The authors employed four methods: percentage-based, factor analysis, weighted multiple-variable, and circulation-based in order to inform the redistribution of book (print and electronic) funds. A comparison of the models revealed very different results. The final consensus of Hofstra University's Reference and Collection Development Department was to employ a circulation-based allocation model to redistribute funds, while also using subject specialist experience to adjust this redistribution

Making It Their Own: Creating Meaningful Opportunities for Student Employees in Academic Library Services

Making It Their Own: Creating Meaningful Opportunities for Student Employees in Academic Library Services

Library patrons have many requests for library services and resources. With limited budgets and library staff who are already stretched thin, how can academic libraries ever hope to understand and meet the growing variety of patron needs and desires? This article will outline a successful strategy of utilizing students to pitch, pilot, and implement academic library services as well as gather feedback from fellow students about their expectations for the academic library.

Tablet prices are plunging

Tablet prices are plunging amid a flood of new devices and cutthroat competition for market share. 

http://www.iol.co.za/scitech/technology/hardware/tablet-prices-are-plunging-1.1545248#.Ud6DVqw7aVo

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Microsoft's mobile strategy: Where Android, iOS and Windows 8.1 fit in

http://www.zdnet.com/microsofts-mobile-strategy-where-android-ios-and-windows-8-1-fit-in-7000017352/?s_cid=e540&ttag=e540

This is not your dad's Microsoft. In the last few months Microsoft has been refocusing on Web services and devices instead of its mobile operating systems, Windows RT and Windows Phone 8 (WP8). Neither OS have been cutting the mustard in the market. Moving forward, I see Microsoft addressing its mobile OS issues in two ways.

Wanting to buy a smartphone?

How to buy a smartphone: A guide for newbies

Believe it or not there are still a lot of folks walking around with a flip phone. These folks have never owned a smartphone, but many are feeling pressure to grab one. Here's a simple guide to catch up with the rest of us...

http://www.zdnet.com/how-to-buy-a-smartphone-a-guide-for-newbies-7000017163/?s_cid=e004&ttag=e004

Friday, June 28, 2013

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Librarians' Views of Academic Library Support for Scholarly Publishing: An Every-day Perspective

 Some of the topics discussed in the article: (from J of academic librarianship)
  • How do academic librarians perceive their role in relation to the research community in their everyday work? 
  • How is it possible to make academic librarians active in the processes surrounding academic research
  • more integrated view of the different parts of the university in that researchers and non-academic staff are tied closer to each other
  • academic libraries ... today are expected to take a larger responsibility for the publication output of the university, primarily through the establishment and support of open institutional archives and Open Access journals. In keeping these archives, insight and participation in the scholarly processes are required in order to keep researchers aware of the opportunities offered by the university library to make research results public through internal, open channels.
  • a gap between attitudes and action, where positive attitudes about Open Access are confronted by the rigidity of the university system and its library practice.
  • basic tension between the traditional “reactive” academic librarian and the “proactive” librarian expected to meet contemporary demands
  • the importance of the pedagogical discourse that has dominated academic libraries for the last decade is now decreasing. Instead a combination of traditional bibliographic work and development of engagement in researchers' publication strategies is emerging. Even though there are several ways of looking at the practical solutions for the library's engagement in digital repository development and Open Access publishing, there is a clear sense that this will be of increasing significance for academic libraries in years to come.
  • increasing importance of bibliometric research evaluation indicators both locally and nationally is felt to be a factor which will influence both the position of academic libraries in organizational settings and the practical work for librarians, not least in relation to the digital institutional repositories, where bibliographic records must be developed and maintained.
  • With new prerequisites for scholarly publication through peer-reviewed Open Access journals and institutionally based digital repositories, academic librarians now feel that there are opportunities emerging both in relation to the individual researchers, research groups and to the universities as a whole. Turning focus from information seeking tutorials towards publication support and strategy formulation makes the academic libraries, also at relatively small universities as those in this study, active parts of the development in scholarly knowledge production.

Guardian Tech Weekly Podcast: Victor Henning on the future of Mendeley

This week Charles Arthur meets Victor Henning co-founder and CEO of Mendeley the academic and research focused online network. Mendeley was recently purchased by the publisher of the Lancet, Reed Elsevier and Victor discusses the advantages offered by the historic science publisher for Mendeley the online upstart.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Handbook of Academic Writing for Librarians

ACRL announces the publication of Handbook of Academic Writing for Librarians, written by Christopher V. Hollister of the University at Buffalo.
 
 
The Handbook of Academic Writing for Librarians is the most complete reference source available for librarians who need or desire to publish in the professional literature. The handbook addresses issues and requirements of scholarly writing and publishing in a start-to-finish manner. Standard formats of scholarly writing are addressed: research papers, articles, and books. 

Monday, June 24, 2013

More news about Google Glass

Google Glass apps for enterprises coming by early 2014

A company that specializes in Google apps is developing a series of enterprise applications for Google Glass that should be available late this year or early 2014.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Professors Envision Using Google Glass in the Classroom

Hernandez


from CHE
New digital eyewear from Google, which features a built-in Webcam and the ability to display e-mail messages and other information, has sparked a mix of curiosity and skepticism in the popular press, but several professors are rushing to try it out in their teaching and research—and early reviews are mixed.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Commerce & Law Library Festival display 2013

 The Commerce Library celebrates the Grahamstown National Arts Festival 2013. Please take a look and enjoy our display...

Photos: Anne Warring

G8 Open Data Charter: why it matters

The international community today pledged to open up government data to more scrutiny than ever before as they signed an Open Data Charter for the first time. Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt explains why every citizen will benefit. 

David Cameron sits with other G8 leaders   https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQjZ5H3yBdVOkIiIgdtiK-frX9Y5JK9k6rDF_c3dCvIR_qxsgCszA

Friday, June 14, 2013

Surface RT: The first tablet that’s ready for the enterprise



Surface RT lags behind iOS and Android for consumer consumption, but it could very well be the first tablet that’s actually ready for the enterprise.

The ASUS TF101 Transformer Android tablet should be recognized as a trailblazer, because it delivered a vision of a lightweight ARM-based mobile device that bridged the tablet experience and promised on-the-go productivity. Unfortunately, the TF101 and its successors didn’t ever really catch on with mainstream consumers. It wasn’t until the 7″ Kindle Fire and Nexus 7 that Android tablets became a viable iOS competitor, and they’re largely not suitable as productivity platforms.
After trying to make a 10″ Android tablet work in this hybrid capacity for over two years, I finally gave in and bought a Microsoft Surface RT. I suspected that it wasn’t ARM devices that were the problem, it was OS limitations. Android is a great mobile OS for smartphones and consumption tablets, but it has serious design limitations for productivity use. My guess was that while Windows 8 and RT aren’t the greatest platforms for mobile consumption, they would both be better at delivering mobile productivity. So far, I don’t think I was wrong. But there are challenges in adopting RT for a long-time and invested Android and Google services user like myself. Some of those issues may have solutions that actually work better, once you change how you approach the problem. Other issues can be worked around, but the solution isn’t ideal. Still other issues are potential deal breakers. In this post, I’m going to discuss a few of my experiences and observations about the RT device.

Crippled Windows 8?

A claim I frequently hear is that Windows RT is confusing and limited. I think this is the wrong perspective. It isn’t fair to compare RT to Windows on IA. Instead, RT should be compared to Android and iOS. Especially for professionals working in a Windows environment, RT offers the most seamless integration of any mobile OS. With few exceptions, every shortcut or feature — even my favorite Windows keyboard shortcuts, plus Windows Snapping and Resizing — work the same in RT. While there isn’t a keyboard shortcut to take a screenshot on Surface RT, holding down the tablet’s Windows button and Volume down easily performs the same task. Once you have a screenshot, you can open and edit it in Microsoft Paint, just like you would on a traditional PC. You can even copy and paste the image right into Word or PowerPoint. Honestly, the ability to open a file or image in the Classic desktop, left-click to highlight, right-click to copy, and then paste it into any other app, including a Modern UI app, is something that you have to experience to appreciate.
Windows RT can be easily joined to a Windows Workgroup, gaining access to all shared resource. With some simple and familiar administrative modifications to the services control panel, the RT device can share its resources on your Windows network as well. Android offers SMB support for sharing through 3rd-party file managers, but these are not an OS-level integrated solution.
Printing support for both Android and iOS has been consistently frustrating and complex. RT isn’t perfect, but the printer support is still miles ahead of the competition. In my case, I have an OfficeJet 7310 All-in-One network printer. This printer isn’t currently supported by HP, but I gave the included Windows “HP OfficeJet 7000 E809 series” driver a shot, and it seems to work fine. If you’re familiar with a Windows environment, you’ll find RT to be a more powerful and smoother process than any other mobile platform. Inevitably, when I encounter shortcomings with RT, it’s more about getting my mind around the issue than RT being inferior. For example, I took screenshots on my TF300 and my RT device to illustrate that the desktop IE browser on RT gave a full desktop experience when writing a blog in Google Docs and publishing it to my site on blogger.com. On the Android TF300, I went into the Gallery, pressed on the images, tapped the Share icon, and selected Dropbox from the pull-down menu. On the native RT Modern UI Dropbox app, I couldn’t find the method to upload a local file to Dropbox. A quick web search indicated that it isn’t possible with the Modern UI app — and of course, the Windows Classic Dropbox app is Intel-only. Then I realized I was missing the example I was trying to illustrate in the first place. I went to dropbox.com from the Classic IE, logged in, and uploaded the image from the web interface. Surface RT is the only ARM-based platform that delivers a true desktop browser on a mobile device, and — in many cases — this opens a whole new world for ARM tablets. Not only is Microsoft Office included with RT, but RT also currently delivers a better experience in Google Docs than any Android tablet.

The FUDder becomes the FUDdee

For years, Microsoft has been accused of spreading fear, uncertainty, and denial (FUD) about competitive products. With the arrival of RT, Microsoft is now the victim of FUD. While some people may consider this “just desserts” for Redmond, many users could be missing out on a fantastic platform because they’re listening to half-truths and outright lies. The Modern UI portion of Windows 8 is not as mature of a mobile OS as Android or iOS. For achieving the goals of hybrid mobile devices though, RT is more like a real desktop than a mobile device trying to stretch and reach that goal.

Bottom line

When I try to use Surface RT as a classic mobile device, I’m less thrilled. For consumer consumption and non-business driven social media, RT lags behind iOS and Android. The app ecosystem is struggling, the Modern UI social media integration is not consistent or robust, and the media content is not as rich. I’ve asked before, “What good are tablets in the enterprise?” and I still wonder that when it comes to Android and iOS. To me, it seems like a way to justify consumer content consumption devices in the workplace. Surface RT, however, may be the first tablet that’s actually ready for the enterprise.

Google Preparing to Penalize Non-Mobile Friendly Websites in Search Rankings


Get your mobile on or else …

Visiting a desktop-only or misconfigured website on your mobile device can be a very frustrating experience. They are not easy to navigate or fail to work properly, leaving you with little to no satisfaction. To encourage websites to adopt good ‘mobile compliant’ practices, Google will be introducing new changes in how websites are ranked when users search on a mobile device.
Two of the most common problems that mobile users face are faulty redirects and smartphone-only errors. The search changes Google has in mind will focus on giving a better ranking to websites that follow good ‘mobile compliant’ practices.

To improve the search experience for smartphone users and address their pain points, we plan to roll out several ranking changes in the near future that address sites that are misconfigured for smartphone users.

Social media and academic libraries: Current trends and future challenges

 From: Proceedings of the ASIST Annual Meeting, Volume 49, Issue 1, 2012

 Academic libraries are increasingly using social media tools to promote services and highlight resources to patrons. This longitudinal study examines the social media adoption rates and practices in academic libraries in the province of Ontario over a fourteen month period beginning in April 2010.
Findings indicate that while interest in social media technologies amongst librarians has plateaued, patrons of academic libraries are using these tools in increasing numbers. Outcomes suggest libraries should attempt in the future to create more original content in areas of patron interest as well as utilize their preferred platforms with greater regularity