Friday 3 May 2013

May 3, 2013 Chautauqua


From the Editor's Computer 

      By the time you read this, I’ll have celebrated a milestone birthday.  However, it doesn’t really feel like much of a milestone in the sense of an achievement such as earning my Master degree or celebrating the 11th anniversary of the Chautauqua. I didn’t have to take a class or learn anything special.  All I had to do to accomplish this was to wake up each morning and keep breathing throughout the day!  Additionally, it is just a number, and not a number that I happen to feel.  In fact, I feel a good decade younger (not a decade older as my younger sister may try to convince you is so).

   On the other hand, I do have another special milestone coming up shortly.  May 12, 2013 will mark my 15th anniversary of employment at the Alix Public Library.  Since I was never (never say never) ever going to work in Alix, and was not even supposed to be hired for this job, marking 15 years is a major accomplishment!

   A lot has changed in those mere 15 years.  We went from no computers to staff and public access computers which connected to the internet via dial-up then fibre, then wi-fi.  From card catalogues to online catalogues.  From print books to eBooks.  From books on cassette tapes to books on CDs, MP3s, and now eAudiobooks.  From VHS to DVDs and Blue-Ray.  Just to name a few of the innovations.

   Daily processes too have changed.  For example, requesting a book required looking through the monstrous tomes of books in print.  Then we had to fill out a form in triplicate.  If the item existed in the Parkland System, a copy of the request would be sent to a library.  If they had it on the shelf, and were willing to lend it, it was sent out.  If not, their refusal was returned to Parkland and the next library would be contacted. The entire process could take months! Now, a quick search of the online catalogue will instantly tell you which library has the item and how many people are waiting for it.  A few keystrokes are all that is required to request the item, with arrival times measured in days and weeks.

   While doom-and-gloomers will tell you that libraries are passé, rest assured there will always be a need to connect people with information.

Beth

Read the complete issue of The Chautauqua here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nMnqiQ14LdhCWSorMAot76x7fdh9iI7U/view?usp=sharing

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