01.28.09
Travel Woes
Posted in conferences tagged ALA Midwinter 2009, flights, flying, frustration, travel, weather delays, winter weather at 12:15 pm by andreak64
When I registered for the ALA Midwinter Conference in Denver, I wasn’t thrilled with the location of the conference for a January meeting. I think Denver is a great city, but unless you’re planning a ski trip, who wants to fly to Denver in the winter? But librarians aren’t as financially well-off as the business world, who have their conferences in warm locations in winter, so we have ours in cold locations in the winter to keep our costs down.
When I arrived in Denver late last week, the weather was a toasty 67 degrees, making me wish I’d left my boots at home and packed lighter weight clothing. But to my delight, the weather changed to winter the next day, with temperatures plunging into the 20s, then the teens, then single digits by the end of my stay there. Along with the cold came the snow, which was falling fast and furious on Monday. Yay! My winter clothes and boots were justified!
I was thankful I wasn’t flying out on Monday, however, because it was snowing pretty hard at times and I overheard murmers of worry from those who were leaving on that day. I was flying out the next day, which dawned clear and cold, with a -2 degree temperature. There was just one small fly in the ointment– a winter storm watch, then warning, was posted for my destination– HOME. I began watching the radar images Monday night, sure it wouldn’t amount to anything major.
Over 24 hours later, I’m stranded in Atlanta for the entire day and into the night, maybe longer. It’s terribly frustrating. Since Monday night, a major ice storm stretched across the lower Midwest, dumping several inches of ice and snow over the Ohio River Valley, cancelling my flights to Cincinnati and Evansville yesterday and again this morning. My husband said this morning that he and the kids were stuck at home with no electricity and an ice-laden tree bent over the driveway, preventing them from even leaving the house. My Facebook friends (those with electricity) are posting amazing ice storm pictures, the first I’ve seen since my flight home was cancelled last night. Now I understand why I can’t go home, even though Evansville’s radar pictures show the snow and ice have ended.
There’s nothing I can do to change the situation, so I’m trying to be as patient as possible. This is the worst flight delay I’ve experienced since my brother and I flew from northern Indiana to southern Indiana when we were teens. During our return trip through O’Hare, our plane was delayed in landing. While we were circling the airport, our connecting flight took off without us. We were stranded in Chicago and had to spend the night in a local hotel, which was a grand adventure for the two of us. Our mother was sick with worry and I don’t remember if we or the airline even called her to tell her where we were. So very different from my experience this time– I have a cell phone and Internet access, so I’m able to keep in touch with family and friends while I’m stranded. It’s helping me keep from missing them so much and from getting too frustrated by this setback in my travel plans.
I realize now that worrying about the weather doesn’t change the outcome of my travel plans. The snow wasn’t a problem until I tried coming home. I’ll just have to make the best of things here at the airport, where I’m not the only one here experiencing travel delays. I just hope I don’t have to live here for a while, like Tom Hanks’ character did in the movie The Terminal. I’ve never seen that movie, but will have to watch it when I return home, whenever that is.
01.24.09
ALA Midwinter Conference-Day 1
Posted in conferences tagged ALA Midwinter 2009, catalog data, catalogers, federated searching, FRBR, Internet, metadata, RDA, semantic web, smart data, Twine, vendors at 1:27 am by andreak64
I know I haven’t written much here lately…just got too busy to stop and write about things. I’m at the ALA Midwinter conference in Denver this week, so I thought I’d report on some of what I’m seeing and hearing.
One of the recurring themes centers around RDA(Resource Description and Access) and FRBR(Functional Requirements of Bibliographic Records). RDA will govern how catalogers create bibliographic data in the digital age and FRBR is a conceptual model that could affect how end users view that data. RDA is going to replace the AACR2 cataloging rules (once the national libraries train their staff to use it and it trickles down to catalogers around the world), while FRBR is still getting off the ground as a conceptual model and very slowly turning up in library catalogs. FRBR promises to pull together different variations and formats of a work, organizing them so that the user searches for the “work” (author or title), then chooses the variation and format they want, eventually finding an item they can buy, borrow, or link to digitally. The goals of RDA and FRBR are to create globally reuseable metadata.
Closely tied to this theme is the emerging concept of “smart data” and artificial intelligence. We need to develop new ways of creating and using catalog data, now that the Internet is so prevalent in our lives. Mobile devices with GPS software enable us to find information in the context of where we’re located physically, such as pinpointing local restaurants. The challenge is for libraries to do the same thing with bibliographic data. Data needs to be created and packaged for sharing by software that can mine it and display it in a simple, yet meaningful way to the end user. In this scenario, all of the data is linked, both internally and externally out to other data when needed. Nova Spivak, Semantic Web pioneer, envisioned “smart data” that is independent of software programs and can move itself around the Internet, where intelligent agents become personal assistants for gathering information on related topics. Spivak’s software, Twine, is his attempt to use the Semantic Web to link similar datasets to each other through nodes and links, because he believes “everything is just relationships.”
Pretty heady stuff for the first day. I balanced it out with some practical information-seeking behavior on a human-to-human platform in the exhibits. I spoke with staff from EBSCO, Gale Cengage Learning, Serials Solutions, and Innovative Interfaces about their federated search products. They all promise the same functionality, but prices and features vary greatly from one vendor’s product to the next. Serials Solutions staff will contact me after the conference with information on training that can help us optimize Webfeat, our current federated search software.
Time to for me to go to bed now, so I can dream of RDA, FRBR, linking, smart data, and artificial intelligence. Tomorrow’s agenda includes meals with vendors, an RFID interest group, LibraryThing’s Open Classification project, a committee meeting, and more exhibits.