"Internet Spotlight" explores Internet and Web topics relevant to librarians in the public library sector. Your input is welcome.
Ah, ALA Annual Conference: the heat, the rain, the gumbo and po’boys (after all, it was in New Orleans this year), the lovely Libraryland conversations,
and camaraderie! Amid all of that, people were hungry to hear and talk about what is happening—and will be happening—with libraries and e-content access, particularly e-books.
David: So e-books are driving the conversation at this point in the profession then? That does make sense, given that “books are our brand” in the eyes of most of the public.
Michael: Definitely. Being able to present about it and talk with folks about it is a great opportunity to get people thinking a little differently about what libraries offer in an e-book world, so that was one great thing about this year’s ALA conference.
David: Yep, we’ll keep advocating for systems that facilitate access to all kinds of e-content, not just e-books.
Michael: Exactly, and that point was made in most of the conversations and presentations on the topic that I was involved with. I had lots of conversations every day about this. And since I’m now, post-conference, a member of ALA’s Executive Board (which still blows me away a little bit, I must admit), I was asked to present to them on the topic on behalf of the Equitable Access to Electronic Content (EQUACC) Task Force that I co-chaired. I had the opportunity to address ALA Council on the work of that task force and present our recommendations.
David: So what were the recommendations?
Michael: Well, you can read about them in American Libraries magazine online. The short version is that the task force recommended, ALA Council approved, and the ALA Executive Board will now implement two actions in relation to electronic content and the future of libraries:
As ALA Ohio Chapter Councilor Pam Hickson-Stevenson wrote on her ALAOHChapCoun’s Blog (yes, that’s really the name of the blog): “Council engaged in a lengthy discussion about next steps, with numerous pleas from councilors for ALA to address these issues as quickly as possible.” It was encouraging to get this sense of urgency from Council as they commented on the task force’s recommendations, and we feel hopeful that ALA as a body will respond in even more significant ways than it has thus far.
Saturday was a good day to talk electronic content access and libraries at the “You Mean Libraries Will Be Able to Deliver Electronic Content Better Than iTunes and Netflix?” session, held by the Library and Information Technology Association. ALA Connect said 335 people signed up for the event, but there is no way that room held that many folks! We talked about EQUACC, ALA, iTunes, Netflix, Hulu, library renewal, the Hathi Trust, the Internet Archive, Harvard’s Digital Public Library of America project, and so much more. The best part? We had about forty minutes for questions and conversation. The audience was amazing, and lots of great connections were made that we all hoped would result in some fine collaborations.
Michael: And now, my voice is scratchy again! So David, what did your investigation of vendor e-book programs turn up? Any highlights?
David: Absolutely! Let’s see, where to start? Well first, just for context, I recently read an article that applies here:
A recent study by the Pew Research Center’s Internet and American Life Project reported that ownership of e-reader devices—like the Amazon Kindle, Barnes and Noble Nook, Sony Reader, and Kobo eReader Touch— doubled between November 2010 and May 2011. Now 12 percent of adults over age 18 own one, while 8 percent own a tablet computer like the iPad. . . Welcome to the future of books, where your entire library is as portable as a cellphone.1
Then an April news release from Amazon announced: Customers will be able to borrow Kindle books from over 11,000 local libraries to read on Kindle and free Kindle reading apps; Whispersyncing of notes, highlights, and last page read to work for Kindle library books.2 Amazon Kindle Director Jay Marine said:
We’re doing a little something extra here. . . . Normally, making margin notes in library books is a big no-no. But we’re extending our Whispersync technology so that you can highlight and add margin notes to Kindle books you check out from your local library. Your notes will not show up when the next patron checks out the book. But if you check out the book again, or subsequently buy it, your notes will be there just as you left them, perfectly Whispersynced.3
Steve Potash, CEO of OverDrive, which is collaborating with Amazon on the project, added, “We are excited to be working with Amazon to offer Kindle Library lending to the millions of customers who read on Kindle and Kindle apps.”4
This was pretty significant news on several levels, as I discovered while talking to vendors. Let’s start with what I uncovered talking with OverDrive folks. The company has overhauled their interface and their service and named it OverDrive WIN. Here are some of the changes they’ve made:
Then there are the folks over at 3M. What? 3M? Why is a company that makes sticky notes and self-checkout machines getting into the e-book business? Weird, right? It might be weird, but they also have an interesting-looking product:5
Baker & Taylor has partnered with Blio, a new e-book service.6
Here’s what I know:
Next up, Freading, is the weirdly named e-book product from Library Ideas, which also offers the Freegal subscription music service. Can I just say that Library Ideas needs to get their web act together? Right now the company has a one-page website that stretches horizontally; sort of odd, if you ask me. The only useful information is an e-mail address. Jim Peterson at Library Ideas told me they plan to have a new, marketing-oriented website up in a few
weeks. Much-needed, so good for them.
Freading is an interesting product that’s very different from other models, just like Freegal. It offers patron-driven purchasing of e-books: a patron picks a book, then the library is charged (the library can set a fee cap). Freading uses a “token” metaphor for patron checkout. The patron gets five tokens a week to “spend” on e-books. Popular books might cost more than one token, and less popular books might be just one token each. That’s all the patron gets to use for that week. I’m not convinced patrons will pick up on the token model very fast; we don’t really use tokens for anything else, so I’m not sure how that model will connect with patrons. The library determines the number of tokens their patrons get for the week. Books are checked out for two weeks, and can be renewed once.
Library Ideas is in talks with larger publishers, but right now they already have some smaller publishers on board. I’m glad to see a newer company trying to be innovative in a market that’s growing fast.
David: So there’s our Annual Conference e-book/e-content wrap-up.
Michael: I think David is going to go soak his feet now.
David: And if you need Michael, you’d better e-mail him rather than phoning. He’s drinking tea and resting his voice. See you next time!
References
March 22nd, 2012
Implementing “Choose Civility,” a Community-wide Campaign
March 20th, 2012
Pre Conference: Winning Grants
March 19th, 2012
Friday Sessions: Teens, Jail Libraries and Budgetary Woes
March 19th, 2012
Carlsbad library will fill the need to read
San Angelo Standard Times
Stark Library levy to appear on November ballot
Canton Repository
Lines being drawn for new county district library boundaries
Adrian Daily Telegram
UN builds 30 libraries for deprived schools in Ghana
GhanaWeb