Denver on my mind

Monday, June 25, 2007 at 12:42 PM



I got the chance to visit Denver, Colorado earlier this month for the 2007 SLA (Special Libraries Association) conference. It was great to chat with librarians from around the country about Google, but I quickly fell in love with all things that had to do with the Mile High City:

Denver omelette, extra bell peppers.
• Denver Nuggets (NBA Finals 2008, 'Melo and Iverson)
• John Denver album “Rocky Mountain High,” featuring the track “Rocky Mountain High

Since I'm always excited to find something new to read, I searched for a John Denver biography on Google Book Search. The recent addition of metadata-only records to our index has expanded the number of books I've been able to find. John Denver's autobiography Take Me Home looks like a book that’s definitely worth checking out to learn more about the late folk singer.

I was also excited to find Floyd Little's Tales From the Broncos Sideline, in anticipation of football season - my uncle is HUGE fan of the Blue and Orange (note to self: stop writing about potential birthday presents on blog).

So while my heart is in San Francisco, Denver is definitely on my mind. Read the full post 0 comments

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Books on Becks

Thursday, June 21, 2007 at 9:34 AM



This weekend, David Beckham celebrated the end of his time at legendary club Real Madrid by winning the Spanish league title. The next stop in his career is Los Angeles, where he'll be playing for the not-so-legendary LA Galaxy. Beckham's move to America looks like a case of a big fish in a small pond: many in the British press wrote his career off after the transfer was announced. But perhaps with Beckham's star power, soccer will finally take off in America. If you're not familiar with soccer (or football, as it's called in the rest of the world), here are some books to get you up to speed by the time Beckham arrives in California.

For a very personal introduction to the game, I highly recommend Eduardo Galeano's book, Soccer in Sun and Shadow. This book is a series of vignettes that take you through some of the highlights of soccer, using individual games and players as vehicles to express the emotional history of the sport. While telling the story of some of the more entertaining players to have graced the game, Galeano also shares his own experiences as a fan and player. Soccer: The Ultimate Guide to the Beautiful Game has more pragmatic information, guiding newbies on rules and tactics.

If you're wondering how soccer could ever catch on in America, you're not alone: Andrei Markovits and Steven Hellerman wrote an entire study on the topic of soccer's position within American sports: Offside: Soccer and American Exceptionalism. The authors aren't overly optimistic about soccer's chances, but then again, the book was published in 2001, when it may have seemed inconceivable that someone like Beckham would choose to play soccer in America. While we're back on the topic of Beckham, why not check out one of his autobiographies -- by which I actually mean "one of his ghost-written autobiographies" (sorry Dave!). Read the full post 0 comments

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In defense of the noble film camera, or, The importance of being analog

Thursday, June 07, 2007 at 5:12 PM



Digital photography’s quick rise to prominence has left some high-profile casualties: when Minolta stopped manufacturing cameras in 2006, it ended a 78-year run. I don’t believe that film cameras are going extinct anytime soon, but in the spirit of preserving some of this soon-to-be-ancient culture, let’s take a look at what this technology has to offer us.

A Treatise on Photography is a great resource for getting acquainted with the nuts and bolts of photography. You’ll find that capturing light hasn’t changed much since 1878, when the book was published. The first few pages give a very readable history of the early development of photography. It goes on to give clear explanations of film development, printing, and camera mechanics. Your brand-new digital rig is based on the concepts that are laid out in this book, which is more than a century old.

There’s a wealth of useful information in A Concise History of Photography, especially if you’re interested in how cameras came to be so popular. A search within this book for ‘Leica’ leads to the story of how carrying a camera in public was a minor fad around the turn of the century. (The 20th century, that is.) Just like today, it was especially cool to be spotted with a tiny camera, like a Leica.

If you want to learn about another famous brand, look no further than The New Nikon Compendium, which is loaded with great photos of cameras. My personal favorites are the Nikon S and the Nikon F, but most of the models in this book are pretty wonderful. Medium Format Photography also has some images of famous cameras by Mamiya and Hasselblad—manufacturers that now produce digital models. Photos taken with medium format cameras are square, and they usually use 120mm film, which offers more detail than the 35mm film that’s found in most cameras.

Even if digital photography has the nod of approval from major outfits like Hasselblad and Nikon, it isn’t all doom and gloom for film. For example, there’s a movement around using plastic or novelty cameras, such as the Lomo, whose slightly defective technology leads to surprising aesthetic results. The Toycam Handbook explores the world of these cameras, which are relatively cheap and can take a beating.

I’m not interested in promoting a neo-Luddite agenda to save film cameras, but all the same—analog is dead, long live analog! Read the full post 0 comments

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A consortium joins the Library Project

Wednesday, June 06, 2007 at 12:13 PM



Today we announced either our 16th partnership -- or our 16th through 25th -- depending on how you count.

The Committee on Institutional Collaboration (CIC) is a consortium of University libraries covering all of the Big 10 schools and the University of Chicago. We're now pleased to add books from the collections of 10 new CIC representatives to the project, along with the collections of the University of Michigan and the University of Wisconsin-Madison (both of which are existing GBS partners and CIC members).

This is our first agreement with a consortium of this type, and it brings with it new opportunities. The collective libraries of the CIC hold more than 78,000,000 volumes -- ranging from Northwestern University's Africana collection to the Central Eurasian history collection at Indiana University, to the University of Minnesota's excellent collection of works on bee-keeping-- the list goes on.

In addition, as part of this agreement, the CIC libraries are creating a "shared digital repository," so that out-of-copyright books from any of the institutions can be easily accessed by any scholar regardless of geographic location. In essence, the repository will become both a "common good" for the consortium's 400,000 faculty and students, and a "public good" for the general public. This repository is the first of its kind, and is a great example of what libraries, working together, can accomplish.

No matter how you count it, this agreement holds tremendous promise for Google, our partners and our users. We strive to help people find all the world's books online, and today represents one more step toward that goal. Read the full post 0 comments

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