Free food is to be had at a library conference--candy and hors d'œuvres in the exhibitors' room and, for those lucky enough to receive an invite, a coveted meal at a vendor event. From one view this is a mild form of bribery, and from another this is the just reward for a librarian's legendary niceness.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Showing posts with label Philadelphia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philadelphia. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Nice
At this and previous library conferences, people "nice" me. That is, they are inevitably pleasant and polite, and I return the favor. Any problem in this?
Well, you become hesitant to bring any thoughts (to vendors, to speakers, to colleagues) that challenge this tacit amiability of atmosphere, since they may smack of discord or non-conformity.
"I respect faith, but doubt is what gets you an education"--Wilson Mizner
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Well, you become hesitant to bring any thoughts (to vendors, to speakers, to colleagues) that challenge this tacit amiability of atmosphere, since they may smack of discord or non-conformity.
"I respect faith, but doubt is what gets you an education"--Wilson Mizner
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Monday, May 16, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Trust Me
As I've stated, some of the talks I attended were dense—or arguably I was too thick. However, not understanding a thing does not prove the information circulated either true or false. While a speaker brings a "trust me" aura to his (her) role, as part of the audience I remain an entrenched skeptic, figuratively and literally a Missourian.
I feel a quote coming on: "Suspended judgment is the greatest triumph of intellectual discipline"—W. K. Brooks
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
I feel a quote coming on: "Suspended judgment is the greatest triumph of intellectual discipline"—W. K. Brooks
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Excess of Evil
If Emily Litella had been a librarian, when a speaker referred to the "axis of evil" she may have heard "access of evil." Maybe she would then have gone on a rant defending the right of libraries to retain pornography.
Or she might have thought of the schedule heading, "Good and evil" (BJ1400-1408.5), which has sub-divisions for "Origin of evil. Depravity of human nature" and "Value of evil" but nothing correspondingly about good. Does this reflect that evil is more widespread than good, if only in the heads of catalogers?
Never mind.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Or she might have thought of the schedule heading, "Good and evil" (BJ1400-1408.5), which has sub-divisions for "Origin of evil. Depravity of human nature" and "Value of evil" but nothing correspondingly about good. Does this reflect that evil is more widespread than good, if only in the heads of catalogers?
Never mind.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Monday, May 9, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Shhhh
In the time before a program commences, the white noise of harmless pop music fills the auditorium. Here's the principle that any music is better than none. I wish those in charge took to heart the maxim, "Don't speak, unless you can improve on silence."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Thursday, May 5, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Snap to It
Mad Magazine's Al Jaffee had (and may still have) a series called "Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions," which gave three possible comebacks to an impercipient statement. This will be a model for the too frequent situation where a speaker is told by someone in the audience near the back of the room "Speak into the microphone. I can't hear you."
Three possible responses that the speaker can make:
1) "What'd you say? I can't hear you."
2) "There's no microphone. Are you blind as well as deaf?"
3) "Now you know the difference between the more expensive and cheaper seats."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Three possible responses that the speaker can make:
1) "What'd you say? I can't hear you."
2) "There's no microphone. Are you blind as well as deaf?"
3) "Now you know the difference between the more expensive and cheaper seats."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: What's My Line
Since I dislike queues--I mean waiting in them--I found appalling the frequency and length of them for those seeking food at various counters in the conference center and the nearby food market. I guess if you live in the city this is expected. I don't, and maybe this is why I lack an immunity to queue-wait (not to be confused with the Middle East country).
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Friday, April 29, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Current Event
If you hung around after the sessions of the day ended, you'd find that the Convention Center and the Reading terminal would turn off most of their lights. Presumably, this was for the laudable purpose of saving energy, which even at that level might still take a million hamsters in a million wheels to produce. Ironically, Philadelphia was the residence of Benjamin Franklin, known for his experiments with electricity and whose face adorns the nearby power plant.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Thursday, April 28, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Now Hear This
Library conferences are not lavish affairs, though certainly sufficient. They could be much worse. Think of a conference so cheap that the single microphone is made of cardboard. This is just as well, for such a conference could only supply electricity through a small hamster running in a wheel.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Testing (4)
Asking a question of a speaker extends ownership of the talk to the questioner and concentrates the learning experience. Questions that are irrelevant or trivial or very long--as others have said, people stop looking at their watches and start looking at their calendars--can make, if not the speaker, then some of the audience impatient or testy.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Friday, April 22, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Testing (3)
Speakers are chosen by merit, but in the matter of the question/answer session, it's a free-for-all. What if there were an award for the best question, for the one that tested highest? While it wouldn't guarantee the raised quality of a question, it surely couldn't hurt. It might be an incentive to ask thoughtful questions (and within a fixed time limit).
As to who would be the judge, maybe that could be the speaker or the audience, through applause.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
As to who would be the judge, maybe that could be the speaker or the audience, through applause.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Thursday, April 21, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Testing (2)
Sometimes it seems that speakers are chosen for the degree of incomprehensibility that they can bring to a topic, which may be recondite to begin with (e.g., knot topology). The understanding of most of the audience is tested and found wanting.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Testing (1)
Before a talk, to determine the efficacy of a microphone, a technician often says "Testing." I wish the tester were more creative. For a library conference, such as ACRL, that person should pronounce the words "Dewey" or "LC," and if more needs to come, start through the schedules.
If poetry were favored, there's Shakespeare's "Give every man thy ear but few thy voice." Me, I'd vote for a recital of Milton: "High on a throne of royal state."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
If poetry were favored, there's Shakespeare's "Give every man thy ear but few thy voice." Me, I'd vote for a recital of Milton: "High on a throne of royal state."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Monday, April 18, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Well, Shut My Mouth
During the question-and-answer session following a speaker, why do some questioners go into an expansive essay mode? Maybe a captive audience brings this out, or they're intoxicated by the speaker's charisma.
It is unfortunate that such persons are not limited, Twitter-like, to 140 characters--or to the terseness that decades past characterized telegrams ("Hello [stop]. I liked your talk [stop]. I have a question [stop]. [Etc.]") Instead, they appear to think that they are being paid by the word.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
It is unfortunate that such persons are not limited, Twitter-like, to 140 characters--or to the terseness that decades past characterized telegrams ("Hello [stop]. I liked your talk [stop]. I have a question [stop]. [Etc.]") Instead, they appear to think that they are being paid by the word.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Friday, April 15, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Filler
The room for the 8 a.m. speaker was of optimistic dimensions, but the size of the audience didn't live up to them. Even if it was about circus performance, an invited paper was insufficient motivation to get people out of bed or from their breakfasts. Then again, it is arguable if before or after the talk more of the audience were befogged.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Thursday, April 14, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Bird Calls
Some poster proposals are not accepted because they show the library as technologically backward. For example, if one were sent suggesting the use of carrier pigeons to fly e-mails between library workstations.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Sucker
In my first visit to a Philadelphia restaurant I ordered a soft drink, which came with a straw. When I put my mouth on the straw I was chagrinned to taste paper. The wrapping had been removed except for the top two inches. Presumably this was a compromise to please both a customer's sanitary finickiness and desire for convenience--this was a restaurant where you didn't even have to tear off the covering of a straw, for the waiter was tough enough to do it. After this experience I looked exactingly before sucking on a straw, and indeed found this custom repeated in other restaurants. Maybe it is native to the East Coast.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Keynote vs. Keynote
The two keynotes bookending the last day were a contrast in content and dress. The first speaker, Jaron Lanier, was a t-shirt/jeans kind of guy who spoke about technology. He reflected his subculture. The last speaker, dapper and dandiacal Clinton Kelly, spoke on fashion. (I found his subject removed from librarianship and of small interest, but going by the number of questioners he attracted, whoa! was he popular.)
The more philosophical might find the two different speakers symbolic of the split betwixt the mind and the body.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
The more philosophical might find the two different speakers symbolic of the split betwixt the mind and the body.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Friday, April 8, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Not(e)
During talks species of audience attendees were divisible among:
(1) Those who took no notes. Self-confident in their memory, they were, in appearance, unencumbered by pen and pad or laptop that would get in their way of listening to the speaker.
(2) Those who took notes. Writing in a manner that ranged from surreptitious to ostentatious, and industrious to a fault, these individuals didn't trust to memory.
(3) Those who had pen and pad or laptop for display alone. Maybe they forgot the implements were there, or heard nothing worth recording.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
(1) Those who took no notes. Self-confident in their memory, they were, in appearance, unencumbered by pen and pad or laptop that would get in their way of listening to the speaker.
(2) Those who took notes. Writing in a manner that ranged from surreptitious to ostentatious, and industrious to a fault, these individuals didn't trust to memory.
(3) Those who had pen and pad or laptop for display alone. Maybe they forgot the implements were there, or heard nothing worth recording.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
ACRL Philadelphia: Tuna and La Scala
Across the street from the conference was a food market, full of crowds and bustle. During a break between meetings I discovered that in one case displaying fish was a type with the sign "porgy" that fortuitously lay next to another, "sea bass." There they were: Porgy and Bass.
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
"One in an ACRL Philadelphia series. Collect the whole set."
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