Friday, October 30, 2020

New books (and more) added to the Gardner-Harvey Library in October!


If you've been thinking about reading a book, we have hundreds of new ones (plus a lot of older ones) ready to go!

Take a look at our New Books shelves or skim down our new materials list of items we added to the collection during October 2020! We added 127 books, e-books, DVDs, and other items during that time, thanks to your selections and suggestions. The list can be sorted by call number, area of our collection, or by title.  There is definitely something here for everyone!

Here are eight titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying: 

  • Live not by lies : a manual for Christian dissidents / Rod Dreher
  • What were we thinking : a brief intellectual history of the Trump era / Carlos Lozada
  • Body snatching in Ohio : a century of digging up corpses in the Buckeye State / by Curt Dalton
  • Is rape a crime? : a memoir, an investigation, and a manifesto / Michelle Bowdler
  • Solutions and other problems / Allie Brosh
  • The searcher / Tana French
  • Owls of the eastern ice : a quest to find and save the world's largest owl / Jonathan C. Slaght
  • To make their own way in the world : the enduring legacy of the Zealy daguerreotypes / edited by Ilisa Barbash, Molly Rogers, Deborah Willis

This tag will show you all of the prior lists of new materials, in reverse chronological order. We are eager to hear from you about individual items you would like us to buy, or types of items we should be on the look out for, or general subject areas we should build up in the collection.

Thank you for all of your suggestions and requests!  If you have a suggestion of something to order, please use our "Tell GHL to Buy It" form, email Amy Carmichael (carmicae@miamioh.edu), or drop by the library with your request. And pass your general suggestions or comments about the collection to us in those same ways.

Thanks again for keeping our collection vibrant and your information needs met!






 

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Throwback Technology Thursdays: the Compact Disc!


Next in our Throwback Technology series:  the Compact Disc!  

Well, I said last week that we would cover CD-ROMs soon, and here they are!  Now, there is actually a lot of ground to cover, in that CDs (compact discs) were originally developed for audio storage in the early 1980s.  The disc could hold 74 minutes of sound, which made it attractive as an improvement over the record and the cassette tape, which were limited to 45 minutes per side.  You wouldn't have to flip the CD over to keep listening.  

By the late 1980s, the primacy of cassettes was yielding to CDs, and at the same time CDs started to be used for computer storage.  With a CD-ROM drive (as shown above), you could write data on to the disc, which could accommodate 650 megabytes (MB).  In time this was tweaked up to 700 MB.  The CD-ROM could be used as a portable storage mechanism, with files saved on the disc then moved between computers as needed.  It could also be used to just write data once onto the disc for storage. CDs became a primary way to purchase and deliver software.   

In time, both the audio and computer storage versions of the CD ran into new means for storage and music delivery.  With speedier data transfer speeds through the Internet, it became more and more feasible to download music files from the Web.  Eventually online storage of files was much faster and could replace external storage media.  In between, the appearance of USB flash drives made the size and relative slowness of the CD-ROM passe.  

These discs served their purpose well, and have remained as a storage mechanism.  The disc shown in the image above includes a recording of the dedication ceremony when the Middletown campus opened in 1966.  The data is actually etched into the disc, so it is not as easy to lose the memory on there (as with the magnetic storage methods of a computer hard drive or the USB flash drive).  But, it's only useful to have things stored on a CD-ROM if you have the right drive to read the disc.  As those have disappeared from laptops and desktops, it's harder to find a way to get to that data (or to music CDs, as CD players are fewer and farther between).

If you'd like to see some CDs and CD-ROMs (and the drive), stop by the library.   More throwback technology is coming at you next week!

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

Dr. Tammie Gerke's National Park Talks: White Sands National Park


Join us as Dr. Gerke talks about White Sands National Park (the newest National Park!). She will discuss the geology and other interesting information about the park.

This session will run Wednesday, November 18th from 4:45pm to 6:15pm with time for questions and discussion. The event will be held as a free online meeting.  Add this event to your Google calendar!  

When it is time for the event, use the link below to join the presentation:

Join Zoom Meeting https://miamioh.zoom.us/j/84379457768?


All are welcome to attend.


"White Sands" by Woody H1 is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

TEC Tuesday Online! Dog Toys

Did you know that you could easily make a toy for your dog?  We'll give you all the steps to make it happen and give your dog something new to chew.

The TEC Lab is moving online this semester to bring exciting making projects to you on the first Tuesday of each month.

On Tuesday, November 3, 2020, we will post a video and instructions on easily creating a dog toy to bring your pooch (or someone else's) hours of fun.  In addition, if you need any supplies for the project, we'll make them available for you to pick up from the library.

See the TEC Lab Makerspace: Workshops page for more details (posted on the 3rd)!


The above image was provided through a Creative Commons CC-BY-2.0 license by Ralph Daily.

Join us Online! December's Middletown Book for Discussion: The Splendid and the Vile


The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, December 1.  Our title is Erik Larson's The Splendid and the Vile.  Here is a brief summary of this biography of Winston Churchill:

"In The Splendid and the Vile, Erik Larson shows, in cinematic detail, how Winston Churchill taught the British people "the art of being fearless."  The Splendid and the Vile takes readers out of today's political dysfunction and back to a time of true leadership, when-in the face of unrelenting horror-Churchill's eloquence, courage, and perseverance bound a country, and a family, together."  

Here is where you can find the book:
  • There are several copies available through MiamiOhioLINK, and SearchOhio  .  We are back in the library and have both OhioLINK deliveries and statewide delivery from Search Ohio's public libraries running.   We do have our curbside pickup operating as well as in-house pickup.
  • Amazon has the paperback, Kindle, and audiobook available.
Our group is always finding interesting titles to share, and we look forward to the new things you'll bring to the table.  On October 27th, the members of the group also shared these titles to add to your reading/viewing lists:
  • The children's books of Alexander McCall Smith (and Jo Nesbo's Fart Powder series)
  • Leave Only Footprints: My Acadia-to-Zion Journey Through Every National Park, Conor Knighton
  • Diana Gabaldon's fifth Outlander series book: The Fiery Cross  
  • Before We Were Yours, Lisa Wingate
  • Frankenstein, Mary Shelley
  • Swing Time, Zadie Smith
  • Barnstorming Ohio: To Understand America, David Giffels
  • The Good Lord Bird, James McBride
  • Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives, David Eagleman
We will meet at 12 pm on the 1st in Zoom at 
ID: 84245447382
Password: 401749

Add this event to your Google Calendar!  (which includes the Zoom and calling information)

Please come along to our discussion to share what you've been reading/watching/listening to/experiencing!

If you're looking for something interesting to read, check out our page of past and future reads at http://www.mid.miamioh.edu/library/bookdiscussion.htm


Thursday, October 22, 2020

Throwback Technology Thursdays: the Floppy Disk!

 



Next in our Throwback Technology series:  the Floppy Disk!  Same ground rules apply:  I'll share some older "technologies" that I've gathered from the library and from my personal items. I will use a broad definition of technology to include anything people invent to help them accomplish a task or purpose.  And, I invite you to share your questions and/or memories about these items.

We've dealt a little with storage media so far, mainly audio storage on cassette tapes and visual storage of information on microfilm (and storing contact information on paper in your Rolodex).  This week's topic, floppy disks, speaks to a method for portable computer information storage.  Now, there was a time in the 1950s through the early 1970s when you didn't really need to have a portable method of storage for what you were working on using a computer.  This was because you were running programs and storing files on a mainframe computer.  You might only work on one of these at a time, you didn't have one at home, and for the most part they were not connected together with a network.  You could possibly walk around with a big reel of magnetic tape, which was used to back up files on a mainframe, but that wouldn't be very convenient (you wouldn't have a way of accessing the information on the tape).

But, with the creation of the personal computer, there was a need to have a way to store files and other data in a way that was more mobile.  You might need to work on files at multiple different computers, or, especially in the early days before computers were networked together, you might just need to move files between computers in the same room.

The floppy disk came to the rescue as a relatively inexpensive way of carrying your files with you.  It was (as shown in the image above on the left) a squarish, 5-1/4 inch piece of plastic that does indeed bend and "flop" as you wave it up and down.  You would insert the floppy into a floppy disk drive either as an external unit you plugged into your computer, or as an internal drive that would have a slot for entering disks right on your computer.  

Developed at various larger sizes in the early 1970s, by the 1980s and into the early 1990s the 5-1/4 inch floppy was very common, usually holding just 360K of memory.  That is not a lot of space, but it was sufficient for the level of memory that many files of the time required.  Over time, though, as files and programs grew in size, and started to require multiple floppy disks, larger capacity media.  Two examples of that are in the image above - in the center is a 3.5" disk (still called a "floppy", though it was not) that could hold 1.44MB, and a Zip disk (this one held 250MB).  They both required separate drives.  

I remember having a floppy disk when I was in the Computer Club in high school (mid 1980s), and then several in college.  They didn't do well in extreme temperatures, and while I only remember ruining a couple of them, leaving them in a hot car or walking around in the winter were always sources of fear about losing files. 

Portable storage kept evolving, most notably over the last 20 years with USB flash drives that could regularly store multiple GB of data, up to two terabytes.  For the most part, we have seen portable storage devices become eclipsed by storing stuff in the cloud, in our ubiquitous online file storage locations like Google Drive.  And, I'm skipping over CD-ROMs, which we'll likely cover soon.

If you'd like to see (and shake) a floppy disk (or any other ancient storage media), stop by the library.   More throwback technology is coming at you next week!

Thursday, October 15, 2020

Throwback Technology Thursdays: Microfilm!


Next in our Throwback Technology series:  Microfilm!  Same ground rules apply:  I'll share some older "technologies" that I've gathered from the library and from my personal items. I will use a broad definition of technology to include anything people invent to help them accomplish a task or purpose.  And, I invite you to share your questions and/or memories about these items.

So microfilm is really, really tiny film.  No, that's not right.  OK, it's a really, really small image of something, stuck on a piece of film.  Yeah, that's closer.  The basic idea is that you can create an image of a page (or typically two pages, side by side) of a magazine, journal, or newspaper.  And then you can take that image and shrink it onto a long piece of film.  Then, you can repeat the process until you have hundreds of pages captured on the same piece of film.  The standard length of the film is 100 feet.  Now, you could just loop the film around your arm (many times) and go carrying it around and try to convince people to hold it up to the sun and squint and be amazed that you're carrying two weeks of the New York Times with you (it's so light!).  But, after you get over your initial excitement, you should sit down and think about the practicalities involved.

So, microfilm came about to make it easier to store more information in a smaller space.  By shrinking roughly 700 pages of a periodical onto a reel of microfilm, you end up with a little box that is less than 4" x 4" x 1 2/3".  You can put a lot of those boxes in the same space it would take to hold the equivalent stacks of newspapers.  

Now, the cost of saving all the space was that you had to have something to view those tiny pages with (holding them up to the sun and squinting is not recommended, and not at all effective even for people with perfect vision).  With a microfilm reader/printer, you could make the small images large again on a screen, as you ran the loop of film between two reels and underneath a magnifying lens.  You could even print individual pages or sections of pages to take them with you.  Another cost, though, was that in the race to photograph all of those pages, sometimes pages were left out (accidentally, or in the case of advertisements, on purpose -- who needs those, some people thought).  And many color images were captured in black and white, because it was cheaper than color microfilm.  That made some microfilm incomplete, or left historians without interesting information that had been in the original periodical.  

Of course, you have to imagine the introduction of microfilm taking place before we had computers and scanning and the production of periodicals in digital formats from the beginning.  If we were designing things now, we'd just find ways to save our digital articles, etc. online, and share them around.  That is how most articles are experienced these days.  But in the microfilm days, it was a great way to keep more information available when the alternative was keeping issue after issue after issue of journals and newspapers, all stacked on shelves, and prone to getting out of order.

What is a little crazy is the transitions that libraries have had to make, from print periodicals, to microfilm (along with recent print periodicals), and then eventually to full text articles and journals online.  But, at each step people thought they were doing the right thing to preserve the past.  The most controversial step was the argument to remove print and replace it with microfilm because the microfilm would last longer.  That might be true (estimates now say microfilm will last 500 years), but paper lasts pretty long (maybe hundreds of years in the right conditions), and the loss of quality or content during the microfilming process was frustrating.  Our rush to digitize may have lost some elements of print periodicals, too, and the magnetic media that computer memory is stored on may last only about 10 years (so all of the servers we stick stuff on are being constantly updated and replaced so we don't lose stuff). 

In the end, we need to think about what is involved in using a particular manner of storing information (paper: your hands and eyes, microfilm: a reader/printer, digital: your phone or laptop).  And we need to think about longevity.  Microfilm was one approach that made some sense at the time, and is still around, though much reduced in use (we just have some sample reels left over from our collection, and no reader/printer).  If you'd like to see what a reel of microfilm looks like, stop by the library and take a look.   More throwback technology is coming at you next week!

Friday, October 09, 2020

Theo-Saurus Helps You Stay Healthy While Staying Connected with the Gardner-Harvey Library!

The Gardner-Harvey Library dinosaur, Theo-Saurus, has the answers you need when using library materials and resources.  Check out Theo-Saurus' tutorials on book checkout, the book drop, curbside pickup, social distancing, using study rooms, and other ways to stay healthy when visiting the library.

Here is a YouTube playlist of 6 videos on how we are safely conducting library services during the COVID-19 pandemic.  You can also see all of our tutorials and other videos on the Gardner-Harvey Library YouTube channel.

Be like Theo-Saurus, be safe, and stay well!

Thursday, October 08, 2020

Throwback Technology Thursdays: the Palm Pilot!



Next in our Throwback Technology series:  the Palm Pilot!  Same ground rules apply:  I'll share some older "technologies" that I've gathered from the library and from my personal items. I will use a broad definition of technology to include anything people invent to help them accomplish a task or purpose.  And, I invite you to share your questions and/or memories about these items.

This is a great technology to follow the Rolodex.  The Palm Pilot took the Rolodex mission, easy access to your contacts, and digitized them into something you could carry in the palm of your hand (as it were).   But that's not all!  The early Palm Pilots could also do so much more:  it could store your calendar, keep a to-do list, take notes, use a calculator, and read emails (which you downloaded through your computer).  You could easily make updates to any of these while on the go, using the touchscreen and a stylus to tap options and to even write on the screen. It was a type of personal digital assistant (PDA) that you might carry alongside your flip phone that did not yet have any of those capabilities.

The Palm shown in the picture above is a Palm IIIC, which came out in 2000, along with a foldable keyboard (which is pretty close to a full size keyboard like you would find on a desktop computer.  The Palm would plug into the slot above the 5, 6, and 7 keys on the keyboard so that you could easily enter text into the Palm.  The Palm IIIC is notable because it was the first color Palm Pilot, with 8MB of RAM.  It was like a heavy, bulky cell phone, but it actually had no phone or online connection (though later models morphed into smartphones).  Any document you wanted to add to the Pam had to travel through a serial cable from your computer.  That was how you would update emails, or keep your calendar, memos, and contacts backed up online.  

I started using the Palm IIIC in the latter part of 2000, and kept at it until about 2004, when I switched to a Sony Clie PDA.  That in turn was replaced by an iPod Touch 2 in 2008 or 2009 (but I will leave some of that for a later Throwback Technology Thursday).  It really gave one a sense of freedom from carrying a very heavy laptop, or being tethered to a desktop computer, and also the ability to discard notebooks and pens. It was an interesting transitional device between some cross of paper organizers and a desktop computer on the one hand, and the smartphone or ever-lighter laptop on the other.  I moved to the Palm from a Franklin Day Planner, a datebook/to-do list/address book combo, and found that change very freeing.

So, feel free to drop by the library and hold the Palm IIIC (I think I have my Sony Clie somewhere, too).  More throwback technology is coming at you next week!

Tuesday, October 06, 2020

The Forgotten Pool - a Miami Middletown Mystery

"It's another ordinary spring semester day.  You've just left class at Levey Hall, and headed over to the library to sit and study for a bit." So begins your chance to solve a mystery:  is there a pool on the Middletown Campus?  Where is it?

This digital escape room is designed to teach you a little about the history of the Miami University Middletown campus and a little bit about searching for information and using archival resources.  Can you solve the mystery?  Enter the search for The Forgotten Pool!  We hope you enjoy it!  

If you have questions about The Forgotten Pool, please contact the Gardner-Harvey Library staff.


TEC Tuesday Online! Phone Holograms project is posted!

 

Update:  the project video and resources have been posted at the link below!  Enjoy the project, and if you need a transparency sheet, let us know!

Did you know that you could make a video that looks like a hologram?  Did you know that you could project this video (and lots of other holograms from YouTube) from your phone?

The TEC Lab is moving online this semester to bring exciting making projects to you on the first Tuesday of each month.

On Tuesday October 6, 2020, we will post a video and instructions on easily creating hologram videos and also creating a viewer that brings your hologram into the world to amaze everyone.  In addition, if you need any supplies for the project, we'll make them available for you to pick up from the library.

See the TEC Lab Makerspace: Workshops page for more details (posted on the 6th)!


"Hologram" by m_hweldon is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Thursday, October 01, 2020

Throwback Technology Thursdays: the Rolodex!

 


Next in our Throwback Technology series:  the Rolodex!  Same ground rules apply:  I'll share some older "technologies" that I've gathered from the library and from my personal items. I will use a broad definition of technology to include anything people invent to help them accomplish a task or purpose.  And, I invite you to share your questions and/or memories about these items.

So, back in the day, if you had a lot of people to stay in touch with, your options for keeping track of them would be limited to lists that you could write or type up.  You might have an address book, perhaps spiral bound, with pages marked or with little tabs hanging out for letters of the alphabet.  That would work all right as you went along and added names, but sooner or later you'd fill up all the space in the S or N or D pages, and then what do you do when you want to remember Kathy Nelson's address or phone number?  It's a mess, even if sometimes you might be lucky and not have as many contacts in O as in N, and you could just start your overflow Ns after O'Neill, or something.  

Starting in 1956, a new method arrived on the scene:  the Rolodex (a portmanteau of "rolling" and "index").  Each individual contact you wanted to keep track of could be added on a small card that was attached to a turning spinner, creating a rotating group of cards that you could flip through to find your contact.  Generally, people would alphabetize the contacts, and you could easily expand a given section of the alphabet as needed by just sticking another card in (rather than having to retype a list, or move to a bigger address book).  

For librarians, used to organizing our book catalogs with cards that could be slotted and moved around in drawers to accommodate changes, an inflexible organization method like a list or address book just wouldn't do for our business contacts.  So the Gardner-Harvey Library at some point in its early history invested in the Rolodex shown in the image above.  It was a handy way for keeping track of contact information for our vendors and suppliers, as well as important contacts around the University.  I believe that there were actually two different Rolodexes around when I started (I picture a smaller one with information about the many magazines and journals that we received).  Of course, for the library as well as for many individuals and businesses out in the world, many electronic and online methods for tracking contacts have been developed over the years.  The library Rolodex was moved into our technology archives some time ago. It is interesting to imagine using one to track down a phone number (and also building up a Rolodex over the course of a career).  I remember starting work as a librarian in the mid-1990s and being given Rolodex cards at conferences by vendors and publishers to stick in my non-existent Rolodex.

I found a great article from 2020 in the Columbia Journalism Review by Merrill Perlman that provided some interesting history on the Rolodex and the dates and other facts I shared above.  Rolodexes are still out in workplaces and homes somewhere (do you have one?), and the original manufacturer still sells them (though not at the 3" x 5" card size that we have).  If you'd like to give our library one a spin, stop on by!


New books (and more) added to the Gardner-Harvey Library in September!

 


If you've been thinking about reading a book, we have hundreds of new ones (plus a lot of older ones) ready to go!

Take a look at our New Books shelves or skim down our new materials list of items we added to the collection during September 2020! We added 139 books, e-books, DVDs, and other items during that time, thanks to your selections and suggestions. The list can be sorted by call number, area of our collection, or by title.  There is definitely something here for everyone!

Here are eight titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying: 

  • White too long : the legacy of white supremacy in American Christianity / Robert P. Jones
  • Just us : an American conversation / Claudia Rankine
  • The gaming mind : a new psychology of videogames and the power of play / Alexander Kriss, PhD
  • The secret life of groceries : the dark miracle of the American supermarket / Benjamin Lorr
  • The sprawl : reconsidering the weird American suburbs / Jason Diamond
  • The lying life of adults / Elena Ferrante
  • Transcendent kingdom / Yaa Gyasi
  • Our malady : lessons in liberty from a hospital diary / Timothy Snyder

This tag will show you all of the prior lists of new materials, in reverse chronological order. We are eager to hear from you about individual items you would like us to buy, or types of items we should be on the look out for, or general subject areas we should build up in the collection.

Thank you for all of your suggestions and requests!  If you have a suggestion of something to order, please use our "Tell GHL to Buy It" form, email Amy Carmichael (carmicae@miamioh.edu), or drop by the library with your request. And pass your general suggestions or comments about the collection to us in those same ways.

Thanks again for keeping our collection vibrant and your information needs met!