Wednesday, March 30, 2005
Television, On Not Admitting to Watching Any
Anyone asks you what you did last night, your choices are: a) reading Shakespeare b) organizing rare collection of [fill in the blank] c) volunteering at some do-gooder event or d) attended the theatre, ballet or opera. Never let on that you have a television; and don't let it slip that you have premium cable and that you watched a whole hour of World's Wildest Police Videos on Spike TV last night.
Tuesday, March 29, 2005
Bow ties, Wearing
Bow ties can be very cool (seriously), but there are three general rules to keep in mind:
J
- No clip-ons or fake bow ties. Learn to tie it, or abandon the idea.
- Keep it small. Big bow ties are not cool.
- Wear them sparingly lest you become the "bow tie guy."
J
Monday, March 28, 2005
Thursday, March 24, 2005
Buzzword Bingo, Creating your own game of
Buzzword Bingo is a game you can play in your next meeting. Make a bingo card and in each block list a buzzword. When someone uses a buzzword, mark it off your card. When you get five in a row, yell out "BINGO!" and you win.
Some examples of buzzwords from recent library meetings:
J
Some examples of buzzwords from recent library meetings:
paradigmEnjoy!
thinking outside the box
brainstorm
utilize (used incorrectly)
content management system (CMS)
link resolver
integrated library system (ILS)
open-access
federated searching
googlization
portal
J
Wednesday, March 23, 2005
Music Selection While at Your Cubicle or Desk
Only play the following genres of music at medium- to low- volumes while at your desk or cubicle:
- Irish/Gaelic
- "World" Music
- Classical
- Soft Rock (including Celine Dion, but not including Barry Manilow)
- Country (including Tim McGraw, but not including Hank Williams)
- NPR (only the shows that feature quirky profiles and interviews with pretensious authors)
Friday, March 18, 2005
Monograph, On calling a book a
If you want to sound like a library scientist, use the word monograph instead of the word book. The word book is very pedestrian, and shows little understanding of the complexities of our great profession.
J
J
Thursday, March 17, 2005
Modernizing Your Budget
Most librarians will stay well within the strict confines of their given budgets, which is the worst thing you can possibly do. If you run out of money in the book budget, the salary budget, paper for the copier, paper clips, etc, it's your own fault. Instead, staff the library 24-hours-a-day, let the water in the bathroom sink run like Niagara Falls, buy up really expensive rare volumes of manuscripts you don't even need and make sure that every computer station has a 30" flatscreen monitor and an Ipod. You'll be out of money by the end of the first fiscal quarter, necessitating your parent company to tap into the emergency fund, and probably quadrupling the budget for next year. They're never going to give you more money because you asked for it, you've got to show them that you need a bigger budget. Some librarians actually take pride in running a leaner department (or 'doing more with less,' as the kids say nowadays). Those librarians are doing everyone a real disservice. Take a cue from our Republican friends: running up huge deficits is cool. You want to be cool, right?
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