Thursday, December 10, 2020

Throwback Technology Thursdays: the Yellow Pages!


Next in our Throwback Technology series: the Yellow Pages!

But before we get into that exciting item from the past (also the present?), we need to answer the question posed last week:  what is this mystery item?



Now, we did not get a lot of guesses.  Some thought it might be some sort of electric curling device (for the Canadian sport, not your hair).  Maybe like those air hockey games?  Nope, not even close.  Much closer was the guess: "Degaussing - bulk recording tape eraser - essentially a giant magnet."  Now we're getting somewhere.

Yes, this item is a book magnetizer, which would be run along the spine of a book in which a thin magnetic strip had been glued.  Pressing the button activated the magnet, and made the book able to set off an alarm at the library's entrance if someone removed it without checking it out at the circulation desk.  At the desk there would be a large block magnet that would remove the magnetism from the book when you ran the spine along it (sadly, we appear to not have saved either of the ones we had).  The magnetizer would then be used as books were returned to get them ready and secure for the shelves.  You could have a whole cart full of books ready to shelve, and then run the magnetizer along each spine.

We used this magnetic process until we moved on to something else that I am not at liberty to describe.  I will just say "AI and lasers" and leave it to your imagination.

So, the Yellow Pages!  The pages above are inside the Yellow Pages book, but are actually white ("the business white pages").  The Yellow Pages were an alphabetical and subject organized list of businesses and organizations in a community.  This is the 2013-14 Middletown/Lebanon/Springboro Yellow Pages, and apparently the last one we decided to keep.  I chose that page because it points out why so many businesses would start their names with AAA or AAAAA so that they were listed in the front of the book.


This is the subject organized section of the book, more yellow, and lots of ads that businesses could buy to stand out from the basic listing of name, address, and phone number.

Your local phone provider would create the Yellow Pages for your quick reference when ordering pizza or finding a podiatrist or calling your local library.  They are still made, and, at least in my neighborhood sit on the sidewalks and driveways until they get wet and soggy, and then perhaps get tossed in the garbage or recycling bins.  But back in the day, when we had no Internet, this was the way to know your community and find stuff!  And of course, the Yellow Pages was the cousin to the Phone Book, which had white pages, and listed all of the residential telephone listings.  I recall when I was growing up that the two books were combined (white pages in the front and yellow pages in the back).  

It's interesting to think back to this time, and see how important such an organized list of names and  numbers would be.  You could call the operator to find a number if you knew someone's name, but if you weren't sure of your options, the Yellow Pages was key.  Likewise with people:  you might have all of your friends numbers memorized or in a small address book you carried, but tracking down the number of someone you just met (or were hoping to meet) would be hard without the phone book.

So, I think about these older ways of organizing, which I think are disappearing, if not from the world, at least from common understanding.  I think, for instance, that many of the students who come to our library don't know that most books have a handy alphabetical list of terms in the back called an index which can help you jump to the right spot to learn about a topic.  With e-books and keyword searching, these grow less important, but having a list of terms or an organization scheme really helps you track things down (like pizza).

If you'd like to see the Yellow Pages up close, stop by the library.   More throwback technology  is coming at you next week!

Thursday, December 03, 2020

Throwback Technology Thursdays: a Mystery Item!


Next in our Throwback Technology series: a Mystery Item!

Well, we are back from our Thanksgiving break with an item for you to identify.  What is this thing in the image above?

It must use electricity . . . 

It's something you can hold in your hand, using a handle on the top . . . 

What is it, though, and why would it be in a library?

Just to note, the toll free number is no longer in service (at least for this device).

Post your thoughts in the comments, and I'll reveal the answer next week.

A bonus image and item for this week is one I mentioned briefly in our Throwback Technology Thursday for October 8 on the Palm Pilot.  It's my old Sony Clie PDA (personal digital assistant) with the included stylus.  It kept me well organized and able to take notes in meetings long before people thought I was playing games on my phone (I'm still just taking notes, mostly). 



If you'd like to see the Clie or the Mystery Item up close, stop by the library.   More throwback technology (and the big reveal) is coming at you next week!

Join us Online! January's Middletown Book for Discussion: The Memory Police

 


The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, January 19.  Our title is Yoko Ogawa's The Memory Police.  Here is a brief summary of this memorable mystery (or mysterious memory):

"On an unnamed island off an unnamed coast, things are disappearing. First, animals and flowers. Then objects--ribbons,bells, photographs. Then, body parts. Most of the island's inhabitants fail to notice these changes, while those few imbued with the power to recall the lost objects live in fear of the mysterious 'memory police,' who are committed to ensuring that the disappeared remain forgotten. When a young novelist realizes that more than her career is in danger, she hides her editor beneath her floorboards, and together, as fear and loss close in around them, they cling to literature as the last way of preserving the past."  

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, and Bookshop.org has links to purchase the title from independent booksellers.
Our group is always finding interesting titles to share, and we look forward to the new things you'll bring to the table.  On December 1st, the members of the group also shared these titles to add to your reading/viewing lists:
  • Jeff Sommers shared an interview with the author of our December book:  A Conversation with Erik Larson on The Splendid and the Vile with Amor Towles (who, coincidentally, is the author of our April 2018 book, A Gentleman in Moscow)
  • In the Heart of the Sea: the tragedy of the whaleship Essex, Nathaniel Philbrick
  • In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden, Kathleen Cambor
  • Band of Brothers, Stephen Ambrose
  • David McCullough (various titles)
  • The Good War and Hard Times, both by Studs Terkel
  • "This Happy Breed" and "In Which We Serve" (films based on Noel Coward plays)
  • Tana French, The Searcher
  • Hillbilly Elegy (book and Netflix film)
  • Ordinary Grace, William Krueger
  • Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams
  • London was ours : diaries and memories of the London Blitz, Amy Helen Ball and Wartime Women: A Mass Observation Anthology, Dorothy Sheridan (not books we discussed, but ones that might answer a question we considered where to find the person on the street's experience of the Blitz)
We will meet at 12 pm on the 19th in Zoom at 

You may also join by calling +1 301 715 8592
 
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


"Forgotten Island" by localben is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0  

Tuesday, December 01, 2020

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

If you've been thinking about reading a book, we have many 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 November 2020! We added 147 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 ten titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying: 

  • The boundless sea : a human history of the oceans / David Abulafia
  • The nine lives of Pakistan : dispatches from a precarious state / Declan Walsh
  • Leave only footprints : my Acadia-to-Zion journey through every national park / Conor Knighton
  • The kidnapping club : Wall Street, slavery, and resistance on the eve of the Civil War / Jonathan Daniel Wells
  • 57 scientifically-proven survival foods to stockpile : How to maximize your health with everyday shelf-stable grocery store foods, bulk foods, and superfoods / Damian Brindle
  • Culture warlords : my journey into the dark web of white supremacy / Talia Lavin
  • Lean semesters : how higher education reproduces inequity / Sekile M. Nzinga
  • Uncanny bodies : superhero comics and disability / edited by Scott T. Smith and José Alaniz
  • Sea wife / Amity Gaige
  • The alignment problem : machine learning and human values / Brian Christian

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!