31 augustus 2007
Blogday 2007

Voor wie het nog niet opgemerkt heeft, het is vandaag de internationale blogday. Op die dag is het de bedoeling dat je even aandacht besteed aan vijf blogs die jij interessant vindt. Ik verander de doelstelling bij deze enigszins omdat ik vijf biblioblogs even voor het voetlicht wil brengen die mij de laatste onder ogen zijn gekomen.
De / Bibliotheek
Uit de omtrekken van een bibliotheek in Arnhem, welke precies heb ik nog niet kunnen achterhalen. Al eerder getipt door Edwin. Ik moet toegeven, sinds de vakantie ben ik wat roestig in het updaten van de lijst.
HvADD
Het weblog van de mediatheek van de Hogeschool van Amsterdam. Maar er eigenlijk sinds maart van dit jaar consequent op geblogd door Peter J. Kuipers.
Vakblog
Het weblog van Raymond Snijders, mediathecaris bij Windesheim in Zwolle. Blijkt al sinds december 2006 in de lucht te zijn, maar op een of andere manier heb ik deze tot voor kort over het hoofd gezien.
LibrarEvolution
Het weblog van Erik Hulsken, informatiebemiddelaar bij het mediacentrum Hogeschool Windesheim te Zwolle. Hoewel dit blog pas recent loopt, is er ook een voorloper, die terug gaat naar december 2006.
hogeschoolbieb
De meest spannende. Maar blogday vraagt om 5 blogs onder de aandacht te brengen. Dus dit prematuurtje ook maar even om het kwintet te completeren.
Toch wel een aardige oogst zo over de vakantieperiode.
Labels: Biblioblogosphere, Biblioblogs
30 augustus 2007
Look mum I'am a student
John MacColl's presentation
Right at this moment I am listening to the presentation of John MacCol at Ticer. Just googling some facts he was just saying, and I found his current presentation on Slideshare. Thanks John.
Labels: English, John MacCol, Ticer
29 augustus 2007
Open Source Software and XML Workshop by Eric Lease Morgan
In advance I had thought really hard about attending this session or not. After all, it is a bit outside the scope of my daily work. The objective as I formulated it to my superiors to get permission to attend this module of the Ticer summer school, was that I would gain a little bit more insight in the things they were doing at our own IT department. Not that they are really secretive about things at all, but just that I would be able to understand their language a wee bit better.
Eric Lease Morgan actually asked some of the participants about their objectives to attend his workshop. What I just described was also what I answered on his question. Perhaps another objective was that I could use some of the stuff I learned today and apply that on my own little bibliographies, or perhaps even my websites.
The workshop was started with some OSS evangelism. While he was spreading the word, I really wondered what kind of OSS tools our guys and galls were using in our systems. I really don’t know, whereas we have a completely independent in house developed LCMS. Have to find out though.
That Eric is serious about OSS, is clear from the fact that all his material used for this workshop is freely available at http://www.tilburguniversity.nl/services/lis/ticer/07carte/publicat/oss-and-xml.zip. It includes, manuals, software and exercises. So if you are really interested you can go ahead. I think I you search a little bit around the same stuff can be found at other places as well (Lockss we call that). What you don’t get, though, when you do it yourself is Eric’s humoristic and enthusiastic way of presenting seemingly complicated matters. He is a gifted teacher.
Further on in the morning we did little exercises on writing and reading MARC records, extracting them from the Library of Congress, building a database of MARC records, indexing it and search the database. Interesting assumption on his part is that he assumed that most library catalogs were based on MARC records. That might be the case in the USA, but is not necessarily true in Europe. But this did not really matter for his exercises or the purpose of the exercises.
In the afternoon, we got around to XML. It really covered the mere basics, what I found interesting were some of the exercises where we actually transformed and presented the same texts (files) with different xsl or css. I new these things, but so far never actually did these little things myself. It was a bit of getting you hands dirty yourself. Some exercises were command line prompted, that gave those annoying little stupid mistakes. Reminding me of my days programming in Fortran.
All in all, an interesting day. We could have gone a bit deeper into the details and I would have loved a little instruction on Perl as well. There are only a limited hours in day though.
Eric Lease Morgan actually asked some of the participants about their objectives to attend his workshop. What I just described was also what I answered on his question. Perhaps another objective was that I could use some of the stuff I learned today and apply that on my own little bibliographies, or perhaps even my websites.
The workshop was started with some OSS evangelism. While he was spreading the word, I really wondered what kind of OSS tools our guys and galls were using in our systems. I really don’t know, whereas we have a completely independent in house developed LCMS. Have to find out though.
That Eric is serious about OSS, is clear from the fact that all his material used for this workshop is freely available at http://www.tilburguniversity.nl/services/lis/ticer/07carte/publicat/oss-and-xml.zip. It includes, manuals, software and exercises. So if you are really interested you can go ahead. I think I you search a little bit around the same stuff can be found at other places as well (Lockss we call that). What you don’t get, though, when you do it yourself is Eric’s humoristic and enthusiastic way of presenting seemingly complicated matters. He is a gifted teacher.
Further on in the morning we did little exercises on writing and reading MARC records, extracting them from the Library of Congress, building a database of MARC records, indexing it and search the database. Interesting assumption on his part is that he assumed that most library catalogs were based on MARC records. That might be the case in the USA, but is not necessarily true in Europe. But this did not really matter for his exercises or the purpose of the exercises.
In the afternoon, we got around to XML. It really covered the mere basics, what I found interesting were some of the exercises where we actually transformed and presented the same texts (files) with different xsl or css. I new these things, but so far never actually did these little things myself. It was a bit of getting you hands dirty yourself. Some exercises were command line prompted, that gave those annoying little stupid mistakes. Reminding me of my days programming in Fortran.
All in all, an interesting day. We could have gone a bit deeper into the details and I would have loved a little instruction on Perl as well. There are only a limited hours in day though.
Labels: English, OSS, Ticer, XML
Another teacher who understands it
I am about to post about the entertaining workshop of Eric Lease Morgan, all of his stuff is to be found freely available on the web. This evening, albeit 10 hours late, I found out that David Free has posted his presentation for tomorrow on Slideshare already. Interesting stuff. I wish I could be there as well. However I have chosen the other track.
Labels: English, Podcasting, Ticer, Vodcasting
28 augustus 2007
A well packed day at Ticer
Somehow somewhere I would have expected a kind of Library 2.0 day at the Ticer course today. But in the end it did not really materialize as such.
The first presentation was a sales pitch from OCLC. Well in the Netherlands we are always glad to receive some information from OCLC (Ohio) since we don’t receive that much information from OCLC Pica on their moves, strategies or plans. Should we therefore attend an expensive course to happily receive this sales pitch?
Robin Murray started to sell himself first, followed by outlining what OCLC actually is and does. His sales pitch was “synthesize, specialize, mobilize”. It is actually a well founded pitch, his whole story can be read in Ariadne.
To be honest he had some interesting observations and plans. But as was remarked later in the discussions, OCLC excels in plans, reports, and visions, but the actual products were lacking. Perhaps that is a little too harsh, since I really do like what they have achieved with open worldcat. But at the local or group level (considering the Dutch libraries as a group) there is a lot of misunderstanding as to how does open worldcat relate to the (expensive) service of NCC or Picarta. But I might be too stupid to see through all these things. The lecture was more of a sales pitch, some good ideas though. But the sales pitch was my lasting impression, rather than a round up of what direction the library world, is or should be moving too.
The second talk of today was a really nice summing up of the developments around the catalog since NCSU launched their Endeca powered catalog. Peter Binkley did his overview future enhancements of the library catalogue around the themes of clustering, ranking, exploiting, contributing and deploying. His presentation was very up to date. Peter’s preferred choice of new open source library systems was VUFind. Reminds me of Koha which he didn’t cover.
In the afternoon we had a really interesting presentation on the use of chatbots in German libraries. Anne Christensen covered 4 different chatbots in operation at German libraries. The idea is appealing. There are some serious costs involved, but they actually got used. It brings the fun on a library website, and that should be worth some money.
The last presentation was a tough one. A boring, albeit important subject, as identity management, and that spun out over an hour, at the end of the day. That was really testing us. And then going into some detailed technical level, it was a bit over the too much for me personally. It would be wonderful if people from our university IT service could have been present at this lecture as well. A scheme like this should be endorsed by the library and the IT department, and I am under the impression that there is a little disagreement on some points at my home university on this area. Interesting to hear about the developments in this field, but really and totally beyond my interest.
The first presentation was a sales pitch from OCLC. Well in the Netherlands we are always glad to receive some information from OCLC (Ohio) since we don’t receive that much information from OCLC Pica on their moves, strategies or plans. Should we therefore attend an expensive course to happily receive this sales pitch?
Robin Murray started to sell himself first, followed by outlining what OCLC actually is and does. His sales pitch was “synthesize, specialize, mobilize”. It is actually a well founded pitch, his whole story can be read in Ariadne.
To be honest he had some interesting observations and plans. But as was remarked later in the discussions, OCLC excels in plans, reports, and visions, but the actual products were lacking. Perhaps that is a little too harsh, since I really do like what they have achieved with open worldcat. But at the local or group level (considering the Dutch libraries as a group) there is a lot of misunderstanding as to how does open worldcat relate to the (expensive) service of NCC or Picarta. But I might be too stupid to see through all these things. The lecture was more of a sales pitch, some good ideas though. But the sales pitch was my lasting impression, rather than a round up of what direction the library world, is or should be moving too.
The second talk of today was a really nice summing up of the developments around the catalog since NCSU launched their Endeca powered catalog. Peter Binkley did his overview future enhancements of the library catalogue around the themes of clustering, ranking, exploiting, contributing and deploying. His presentation was very up to date. Peter’s preferred choice of new open source library systems was VUFind. Reminds me of Koha which he didn’t cover.
In the afternoon we had a really interesting presentation on the use of chatbots in German libraries. Anne Christensen covered 4 different chatbots in operation at German libraries. The idea is appealing. There are some serious costs involved, but they actually got used. It brings the fun on a library website, and that should be worth some money.
The last presentation was a tough one. A boring, albeit important subject, as identity management, and that spun out over an hour, at the end of the day. That was really testing us. And then going into some detailed technical level, it was a bit over the too much for me personally. It would be wonderful if people from our university IT service could have been present at this lecture as well. A scheme like this should be endorsed by the library and the IT department, and I am under the impression that there is a little disagreement on some points at my home university on this area. Interesting to hear about the developments in this field, but really and totally beyond my interest.
Labels: English, Ticer, Ticer07
27 augustus 2007
The Science Commons and the Library: Opportunities and Business Models
A provocative talk by John Wilbanks, the Executive Director of Science Commons. The interesting thing was that the first time I really noticed Willbanks work, or that of the Science Commons was in the last issue of CRWatch Quarterly. On which I blogged in Dutch just the other week. My problem then, was that in that issue a lot of noise was generated on the changing face of scientific communication, but none of the articles listed there actually mentioned libraries, or anybody from the library sketched their perspective on the changing face of the scientific discourse.
Today’s talk was different though. John Wilbanks pleaded strongly for an major library role in the changing face of scientific communication. That is encouraging. However, as to the exact role that libraries should take, there isn’t a single blue print yet. The Science Commons have some interesting examples of text mining initiatives on medically oriented databases, Bibliographic databases in combination with protein databases en genetic databases. I think it is an illustrative example of technologies and expertise most academic libraries have not easily, or readily available.
I think I can foresee technologies like this in the mid term future, but most libraries are not ready for the roles outlined by Wilbanks.
Should we just sit and wait for the blue prints for these future applications to arrive. No of course not. Wilbanks is also an OA advocate and presses the librarians to go out into the faculties and educate the researchers about Open Access and Copyright issues. Because at this moment copyright laws are hampering the kind of big science that e-science really stands for. In addition to his recommended reading I would like to add his paper in CRWatch Quarterly.
Willbanks, J. (2007). Cyberinfrastructure for Knowledge Sharing CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 58-66. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/cyberinfrastructure-for-knowledge-sharing/
Today’s talk was different though. John Wilbanks pleaded strongly for an major library role in the changing face of scientific communication. That is encouraging. However, as to the exact role that libraries should take, there isn’t a single blue print yet. The Science Commons have some interesting examples of text mining initiatives on medically oriented databases, Bibliographic databases in combination with protein databases en genetic databases. I think it is an illustrative example of technologies and expertise most academic libraries have not easily, or readily available.
I think I can foresee technologies like this in the mid term future, but most libraries are not ready for the roles outlined by Wilbanks.
Should we just sit and wait for the blue prints for these future applications to arrive. No of course not. Wilbanks is also an OA advocate and presses the librarians to go out into the faculties and educate the researchers about Open Access and Copyright issues. Because at this moment copyright laws are hampering the kind of big science that e-science really stands for. In addition to his recommended reading I would like to add his paper in CRWatch Quarterly.
Willbanks, J. (2007). Cyberinfrastructure for Knowledge Sharing CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 58-66. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/cyberinfrastructure-for-knowledge-sharing/
Labels: English, Open Access, ScienceCommons, Ticer, Ticer07
Ticer, first impressions
Today was the first day of the Ticer course 'Digital libraries a la Carte'. The 2007 version of the course, that is. A course, or a summer school? Or perhaps just another conference. Whatever wording you use to describe the course. It is well done. A lecture of an hour. Half an hour interesting discussions or Q&A followed by half an hour coffee break where you can mingle with the people. You don't fit many sessions in a day this way, but the sessions there are get the time and attention they deserve. So there were only 4 presentations today. Three really good presentations and discussions, and one definitely a lot less. But overall a very good day at Tilburg. Worth rising early, and commuting down.
Tomorrow lots more.
A tip to fellow bloggers: Use the Ticer or Ticer07 tag on your posts. I am collecting them on del.icio.us so everybody can have their read. Admitting at once there are a large number of dutch posts. Ecobibl has been most active up untill now (In Dutch).
Tomorrow lots more.
A tip to fellow bloggers: Use the Ticer or Ticer07 tag on your posts. I am collecting them on del.icio.us so everybody can have their read. Admitting at once there are a large number of dutch posts. Ecobibl has been most active up untill now (In Dutch).
Labels: English, Ticer, Ticer07
26 augustus 2007
Op naar Ticer
De komende dagen is het weer terug naar school. Zomerschool. Bijscholing dus, er valt nog zoveel te leren. Morgenochtend vroeg op weg naar Tilburg West om vier dagen deel te nemen aan de Ticer Summerschool. Ik had gedacht mijn Enegelse blog op orde te hebben, maar dat is nog steeds niet het geval, dus de komende dagen ga ik jullie toch weer vervelen met verslagen in het Engels. Steenkolenengels voor mijn part. Maar ik hoop interessant genoeg om er voor langs te komen.
Morgen staan John Wilbanks, Ronald Milne, Birte Christensen-Dalsgaard en Stephen Town op het programma. Het is vanwege het laatste verhaal dat ik zeker de eerste dag niet zou willen missen. Twee jaar geleden tijdens de 6th Northumbria International Conferences on Performance Measurement in Libraries & Information Services al eens eerder leuke verhalen van hem en zijn groep gehoord heb. Frankie Wilson, een van zijn studenten had toen een erg goed verhaal over benchmarking en library quality.
Maar allas, de komende dagen over naar het Engels.
Morgen staan John Wilbanks, Ronald Milne, Birte Christensen-Dalsgaard en Stephen Town op het programma. Het is vanwege het laatste verhaal dat ik zeker de eerste dag niet zou willen missen. Twee jaar geleden tijdens de 6th Northumbria International Conferences on Performance Measurement in Libraries & Information Services al eens eerder leuke verhalen van hem en zijn groep gehoord heb. Frankie Wilson, een van zijn studenten had toen een erg goed verhaal over benchmarking en library quality.
Maar allas, de komende dagen over naar het Engels.
Labels: Ticer
24 augustus 2007
The Internet is worse than the Nazis
Colbert kicks ass with Keen.
Voor de liefhebbers van Keen's "The Cult of the Amateur: How Today’s Internet is Killing Our Culture".
Wat een humbug.
Hattip:David Rothman
Voor de liefhebbers van Keen's "The Cult of the Amateur: How Today’s Internet is Killing Our Culture".
Wat een humbug.
Hattip:David Rothman
22 augustus 2007
Trends in wetenschappelijke communicatie; maar waar is de bibliotheek?
Het laatste issue van CTWatch Quarterly (hetgeen staat voor Cyberinfrastructure Technology Watch, lekker vet coole titel) is geheel gewijd aan de trends wetenschappelijke communicatie. De ondertitel van dit special issue luidt dan ook "The Coming Revolution in Scholarly Communications & Cyberinfrastructure". Een titel gekozen op toch wel enig effect bejag. Maar wanneer ik zie wie er aan bijdragen dan wil ik dat door de vingers zien. Cliford Lynch, veteraan op het gebied van de digitale bibliotheek, Paul Ginsparg die eigenhandig ArXiv uit de grond heeft getrokken, Herbert van Sompel, zonder wie we nooit Link resolvers hadden gekend, Stevan Harnad, die niet nalaat de OA boodschap er in te rammen of Peter Suber die hetzelfde op een wat meer tactvolle wijze doet. Even petje af voor de verzameling auteurs die ze hier bij elkaar gekregen hebben. Ik zou het niet hoeven te zeggen, maar dit issue is een must read voor iedereen die wil weten waar het met het wetenschapsbedrijf naar toe gaat, of iets meer wil weten van een onderwerp als e-Science.
Alleen... alle mooie en boeiende verhalen ten spijt, nergens komt er ook maar een keer een bibliotheek om de hoek kijken. Dat baart me wel een beetje zorgen. Er is ruimte genoeg voor de bibliotheek om de tanden eens fiks in de e-Science taart te zetten en hun deel te claimen. Wanneer we op basis van onze klassieke taken niet een rol spelen in dit debat of de ontwikkelingen zelf, dan moeten we razendsnel inspelen op de huidige ontwikkelingen en als de wiede weerga aantonen dat we een onontbeerlijke en betrouwbare partner zijn om de geschetste ontwikkelingen gestalte te geven.
Deze verzameling artikelen geeft genoeg aanknopingspunten om die rol vorm te geven.
Allez, werk aan de winkel.
Wil je hier meer over lezen?
Begin eens hier:
Brody, T., L. Carr, Y. Gingras, C. Hajjem, S. Harnad and A. Swam (2007). Incentivizing the Open Access Research Web : Publication-Archiving, Data-Archiving and Scientometrics. CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 42-50. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/incentivizing-the-open-access-research-web/
Fink, J. L. and P. E. Bourne (2007). Reinventing Scholarly Communication for the Electronic Age CTWatch Quarterly 3(3). http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/reinventing-scholarly-communication-for-the-electronic-age/
Fitzgerald, B. and K. Pappalardo (2007). The Law as Cyberinfrastructure CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 51-57. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/the-law-as-cyberinfrastructure/
Ginsparg, P. (2007). Next-Generation Implications of Open Access CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 11-18. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/next-generation-implications-of-open-access/
Hannay, T. (2007). Web 2.0 in Science. CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 19-25. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/web-20-in-science/
Lynch, C. (2007). The Shape of the Scientific Article in The Developing Cyberinfrastructure CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 5-10. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/the-shape-of-the-scientific-article-in-the-developing-cyberinfrastructure/
Suber, P. (2007). Trends Favoring Open Access. CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 67-74. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/trends-favoring-open-access/
Van de Sompel, H. and C. Lagoze (2007). Interoperability for the Discovery, Use, and Re-Use of Units of Scholarly Communication CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 32-40. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/interoperability-for-the-discovery-use-and-re-use-of-units-of-scholarly-communication/
Willbanks, J. (2007). Cyberinfrastructure for Knowledge Sharing CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 58-66. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/cyberinfrastructure-for-knowledge-sharing/
Alleen... alle mooie en boeiende verhalen ten spijt, nergens komt er ook maar een keer een bibliotheek om de hoek kijken. Dat baart me wel een beetje zorgen. Er is ruimte genoeg voor de bibliotheek om de tanden eens fiks in de e-Science taart te zetten en hun deel te claimen. Wanneer we op basis van onze klassieke taken niet een rol spelen in dit debat of de ontwikkelingen zelf, dan moeten we razendsnel inspelen op de huidige ontwikkelingen en als de wiede weerga aantonen dat we een onontbeerlijke en betrouwbare partner zijn om de geschetste ontwikkelingen gestalte te geven.
Deze verzameling artikelen geeft genoeg aanknopingspunten om die rol vorm te geven.
Allez, werk aan de winkel.
Wil je hier meer over lezen?
Begin eens hier:
Brody, T., L. Carr, Y. Gingras, C. Hajjem, S. Harnad and A. Swam (2007). Incentivizing the Open Access Research Web : Publication-Archiving, Data-Archiving and Scientometrics. CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 42-50. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/incentivizing-the-open-access-research-web/
Fink, J. L. and P. E. Bourne (2007). Reinventing Scholarly Communication for the Electronic Age CTWatch Quarterly 3(3). http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/reinventing-scholarly-communication-for-the-electronic-age/
Fitzgerald, B. and K. Pappalardo (2007). The Law as Cyberinfrastructure CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 51-57. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/the-law-as-cyberinfrastructure/
Ginsparg, P. (2007). Next-Generation Implications of Open Access CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 11-18. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/next-generation-implications-of-open-access/
Hannay, T. (2007). Web 2.0 in Science. CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 19-25. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/web-20-in-science/
Lynch, C. (2007). The Shape of the Scientific Article in The Developing Cyberinfrastructure CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 5-10. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/the-shape-of-the-scientific-article-in-the-developing-cyberinfrastructure/
Suber, P. (2007). Trends Favoring Open Access. CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 67-74. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/trends-favoring-open-access/
Van de Sompel, H. and C. Lagoze (2007). Interoperability for the Discovery, Use, and Re-Use of Units of Scholarly Communication CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 32-40. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/interoperability-for-the-discovery-use-and-re-use-of-units-of-scholarly-communication/
Willbanks, J. (2007). Cyberinfrastructure for Knowledge Sharing CTWatch Quarterly 3(3): 58-66. http://www.ctwatch.org/quarterly/articles/2007/08/cyberinfrastructure-for-knowledge-sharing/
Labels: bibliotheken, e-Science, Scholarly communication
Bibliotheken gaan over verhalen
Een boek dat ten grondslag ligt aan veel ideeën over Web 2.0 is de Clue Train Manifesto van Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls en David Weinberger uit 1999. Crux van dat verhaal is dat markten conversaties zijn. Vertaal dat even naar de wat meer documentaire wereld van bibliotheken, en je komt uit op "markten zijn verhalen".
Bibliotheekveteraan Walt Crawford heeft een serie artikelen geplaatst op Web Junction die precies daar over gaan. Bibliotheken gaan over verhalen. Verhalen die uitgedragen moeten worden. Bibliotheken kunnen met goede verhalen zich prima in de markt kunnen zetten is zijn boodschap.
Walt heeft zijn verhalen over dit thema bij elkaar verzameld in zijn blogpost The Storied Librarian
Bibliotheekveteraan Walt Crawford heeft een serie artikelen geplaatst op Web Junction die precies daar over gaan. Bibliotheken gaan over verhalen. Verhalen die uitgedragen moeten worden. Bibliotheken kunnen met goede verhalen zich prima in de markt kunnen zetten is zijn boodschap.
Walt heeft zijn verhalen over dit thema bij elkaar verzameld in zijn blogpost The Storied Librarian
Labels: bibliotheken, Marketing
03 augustus 2007
Vakantiewerk: Jeu de Boules club de Entekoele op het web
Van te voren zat het er al een beetje in. Vakantie in Ommen, vlak bij pake en beppe, dat is een regelmatig weerzien in en met Zuidwolde. Er zat ook een staartje aan.
Vorig jaar had ik al eens gezegd op de jeu de boule club van pake, dat ze een website zouden moeten maken om potentiele leden op hun bestaan te wijzen. Deze vakentie moest de daad eens bij het woord gevoegd worden. Als eerste een folder gemaakt om leden te werven en vervolgens daarnaast een simpele website om de Jeu de Boule club van Zuidwolde op te stoten in de vaart der volkeren.
Eens kijken of er volgend jaar meer leden zijn.
Voor volgend jaar mijmer ik nu al over pastis en petanque onder platanen.
Vorig jaar had ik al eens gezegd op de jeu de boule club van pake, dat ze een website zouden moeten maken om potentiele leden op hun bestaan te wijzen. Deze vakentie moest de daad eens bij het woord gevoegd worden. Als eerste een folder gemaakt om leden te werven en vervolgens daarnaast een simpele website om de Jeu de Boule club van Zuidwolde op te stoten in de vaart der volkeren.
Eens kijken of er volgend jaar meer leden zijn.
Voor volgend jaar mijmer ik nu al over pastis en petanque onder platanen.
Labels: vakantiewerk
