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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: openlibrary, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 6 of 6
1. I need to find a public domain image of _______. How do I do that?

commemorative cricket plate

Reference question of the day was about finding public domain images. Everyone’s got their go-tos. If I am looking for illustrations or old photos specifically I’ll often use other people’s searches on top of the Internet Archive’s content. Here’s a little how to.

1. Check the Internet Archive Book Images feed on Flickr. What I often do is search (which finds the words that surround the images) and then click straight through to the book (which is always linked in the metadata) and then fish around. For example…

  • “Oh this photo is interesting”
    https://www.flickr.com/photos/internetarchivebookimages/14598293148/
  • “Here are all the photos from that book”
    https://www.flickr.com/photos/internetarchivebookimages/tags/bookidwgcricketingremi00grac
  • Book is readable here
    https://archive.org/stream/wgcricketingremi00grac/wgcricketingremi00grac#page/n253/mode/1up
  • Internet Archive page is here
    https://archive.org/details/wgcricketingremi00grac
  • I’m more used to the Open Library interface which is a different front end on the same content for the most part, it’s here.
    https://openlibrary.org/books/OL22896607M/W.G._cricketing_reminiscences_and_personal_recollections.
  • More by Internet Archive on cricket or Open Library on cricket
    https://archive.org/search.php?query=subject%3A%22Cricket%22
    https://openlibrary.org/subjects/cricket
  • The trick, I’ve found, is to try to get as close to 1927 as possible because you’re likely to have the best illustrations and still be out of copyright. Older books don’t have good illustrations because the technology was not there yet. Enjoy!

    4 Comments on I need to find a public domain image of _______. How do I do that?, last added: 6/20/2015
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    2. My pecha kucha talk about Open Library

    14CWL

    I went to the Vermont Library Conference last week and mostly handed out Vermont Libraries Passports but I also gave a short talk about Open Library in pecha kucha format. I’d never done one of these before. Twenty slides, twenty seconds each. Total talk is under seven minutes. You have to be brief and you have to practice. This was a session with six or seven presenters and we got to learn a little bit about a lot of topics. You can probably see what mine was about by watching my abbreviated slide show. I also learned how to make an animated GIF from a slideshow which is not as tough as you might think and quite useful.

    0 Comments on My pecha kucha talk about Open Library as of 1/1/1900
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    3. a separate post – talk about my new job

    OpenLibrary front page

    I promised to write about this a few days ago and it’s been, quite a week. Short version: starting May 1st I took a job doing user support for Open Library. It’s very part time, very fulfilling and a lot of fun.

    Longer story: MetaFilter, my internet home for over a decade and my employer for almost that long, has been going through some challenges. There was a severe financial downturn (the site is nearly 100% advertiser supported, allowing them to have nearly eight full time employees) and staffing was going to have to be reduced. You can read about some of that happened on Search Engine Land or Matt Haughey’s post on Medium because this was basically a weird “I wonder what happened at Google?” situation. We’d been facing decreasing revenue for about eighteen months and things weren’t improving. As the person in charge of running the site but not managing the money aspect of it, the last year and a half had been really bad for morale. Not knowing if your job was going away, getting gloom-and-doom reports from on high, not being able to plan for the future because you don’t know if there will be a future, are just destabilizing and not allowing me to do my job to the best of my ability. I have a longer version of this that I’d be happy to explain over a beer or two, but that was the general gist.

    And ultimately, as much as I loved what I’d built–Ask MetaFilter is one of the best Q&A sites around, bar none, the moderation team is the best group of moderators there is, period–my “career goals” such as they are weren’t with website moderation, they were and remain with libraries. So when stuff started getting hairy in late 2012, I decided I needed a non-MetaFilter hobby, one that was library related, and I decided to talk to the Internet Archive about helping out with Open Library. Open Library, if you don’t know, lends ebooks worldwide. Worldwide. It’s a cool project.

    I hadn’t known at the time that Open Library was a bit of a ghost ship, being kept alive and online but not really in active development. I put my head down and just started answering emails, reporting bugs, being the change I wanted to see in Open Library. And once the writing was on the wall at MeFi, that I could stay on as the oldest employee but in a work situation that was more “Everyone works all the time” which was no longer something I wanted to do, I talked to the Archive about getting an actual job-job. I made a data-based pitch “Look, I answered 7000 emails last year and rewrote the help pages and FAQ, user support is probably something that either needs more volunteers or a paid staff member” and they agreed to take me on as a part-timer to keep doing what I was doing, and maybe do a little more.

    So I still answer emails, but I also attend staff meetings (via Skype) and have the keys to the Twitter and the blog. It’s weird working in a free culture type of place but still working with Adobe’s DRM nearly every day. I made a graceful mod exit from MetaFilter and I still continue to hang out there, because why wouldn’t I?

    Long range I’m not sure what my plan is. I’ve got the same adult education job in my small town in Vermont and don’t plan to leave that. I still write a regular column for Computers in Libraries and I’m still on the road doing public speaking stuff about once a month (contact me if you’d like me to come speak at your event) which I may ramp up depending on how this all goes. I still have a lot of Vermont libraries to visit. I’m trying, despite my tendency to overwork, to take the summer at least partly off. And one of the things I want to do, oddly enough, is spend more time on my blog, writing down more of the things I am working on, in a place that’s mine and not MetaFilter’s.

    That’s the news. I’m excited to get back to working more with libraries, all kinds of libraries.

    1 Comments on a separate post – talk about my new job, last added: 6/14/2014
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    4. Open Library – Making inroads and headway in all 50 states

    I regularly trot out Open Library as an example of both a project that is nice and library like while also being attractive and usable and, at the same time, pushing the envelope of “how to be a library” in ways that are dignifying to both patrons and librarians alike. I was delighted to read this article about the results of a recent meeting where ALL state librarians voted unanimously to form an alliance with the Internt Archive’s Open Library project.

    [Oregon state librarian] Scheppke said this allows libraries the chance to envision digitizing everything in their collection, from books about local history to works by local authors.

    “If that doesn’t happen who knows when those books will become ebooks, maybe never,” Scheppke said. “That’s what really appeals to the state libarians; it’s a solution we haven’t had up until now to have a much more complete ebook collection,” he said.

    0 Comments on Open Library – Making inroads and headway in all 50 states as of 1/1/1900
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    5. Moon Letters from The Cataloguer’s Desk


    Before there was Braille, there was Moon. Check out these photos from some antiquarian Moon books. More on Moon. This post was made the same day that the Internet Archive announced that they have one million books available in DAISY format for blind and visually disabled folks. Not just talk, here’s the list of them. Image is from this book. [via]

    1 Comments on Moon Letters from The Cataloguer’s Desk, last added: 5/12/2010
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    6. Hot Man of Children's Literature #19 Gets an Interview

    Thrills!
    Chills!
    Disembodied ... uh ... Noggins!

    M.T. Anderson's been interviewed on 7-Imp and it's an interview to put all other interviews to shame. Glad I'm not in the interview business myself. These girls would run me out of the water in a day. You know what I really got out of the piece though? Eisha's boots. I want Eisha's boots. Where did she get them?

    Eisha. Give me your boots.

    3 Comments on Hot Man of Children's Literature #19 Gets an Interview, last added: 3/20/2007
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