I knew earlier this week that I’d be blogging today so, when I work up, my mind was in composition mode. I was so busy thinking about what I would write that the empty plastic water bottle went into the sink rather than the trash and a fork went into the oatmeal. NPR did straighten out my attention for a while when they discussed new information that is being found regarding Emmett Till’s murder. In the grand scheme of things, his brutal murder didn’t occur that long ago. It was during our modern times when information could be easily recorded and distributed. Records from the trial disappeared ages ago and those who witnessed the courtroom scenes are still being sought after to find out what happened in that room. I remember my time down there in the Delta, visiting those historic sites and meeting people who were there then. I’d love to take students down there. One real difference in being an academic library rather than a school librarian is a diminished access to students.
I have to wonder that if things from that time could disappear so easily, now secure is our information today when we’re encouraged to place our images, music and writings in cloud space that it owned by someone else. We argue debate whether to plan new purchases for print books or ebooks as if personal comfort is the key factor. Who owns those ebooks and journal articles (even after we think we’ve purchased them) and how accessible ebooks will be as platforms change over time are things we really need to question. Granted, ebooks do provide greater accessibility to information for those with reading difficulties.
GoogleReader is gone. Other RSS aggregators disappeared as folk turned to GoogleReader and now, it’s disappearing. Soon, iGoogle, a Google homepage that also serves as an aggregator will be gone, too. iGoogle is very similar to MyYahoo, which still functions. I’ve decided to use Feedly to gather my RSS feeds and I’m finding it a bit clunky and it seems I’ve lost some of my favorite blogs. I need to spend some time finding them again, tweaking the site and creating a display that makes sense to me. At the same time, I’m still wondering about WordPress and blogging. Is there future limited? Well, in this day and age, it certainly is, but just how limited and, what next?
Maybe I’d feel better about the lifespan of WordPress if they sold out to Facebook or Amazon. By the way, today is the last day to get a free LibraryThing account if you’re disappointed in the GoodReads takeover. My LibraryThing account is so old that I don’t remember either the username or password! Something else to add to the ‘to do’ list!
The space between ebooks, Google and Amazon has me wondering about the data, both my personal data and that which becomes available to me, these giants access. As Marc Aronson states “There are obviously privacy concerns here, concerns about how we are seeing reading (though reading has been collective at other times in its history, indeed one debate among historians of reading is exactly when reading shifted from being primarily oral to primarily silent), and concerns about overvaluing the now.”
Yet and still, basic Internet access remains a critical issue. To the rescue is Connect2Create, a campaign to get major Internet companies to provide discount service, equipment and training to low income families in need. Mindshift writes “The program offers low-cost devices and Internet service, as well as access to digital literacy training programs around the country, hoping to give access to the estimated 100 million Americans who have no broadband connection at home and another 62 million who don’t use the Internet at all.”
Tarie recently share information on the Bangkok Book Awards: ” Each shortlist includes at least one book by a Thai author and one book by an international author, books set in different parts of Thailand, and at least one book in translation from Thai. You can check out the picture book shortlist here.“
From Debbie Reese “Minnesota Public Radio has a story up today that showcases how Heid Erdrich is using video format for her poetry. The video they have up is STUNNING!”
I visit Anali’s First Amendment for things like this single serving cheesecake (I gain weight just from her yummy photos!) but I end up finding this opportunity to teach writing in Ghana. I would so love to do that, even more than the cheesecake!
I’ll be posting April’s new releases by authors of color this week! One book I’ve previously missed is Justin Scott Parr’s Sage Carrington, 8th Grade Science Slueth. Such a cute book!
I hear we’re expecting a snow and rain mix tomorrow. I really hope this slow to warm spring means fewer and milder spring storms.
I hope you enjoy your week ahead!
Filed under: Sunday Reads Tagged: delta, Emmett Till, nip, sunday morning reads, technology

I don’t know what it all means or what’s going to happen, either, but I’m so glad you’re thinking about it. I think too many people take their modern technological conveniences for granted and never think about the implications of posting *that* Facebook status, buying *that* thing from Amazon, searching *that* term on Google. Goodness, the other day I Googled “backpacking packs,” clicked onto a random online shopping site, and the next day ads for backpacks started appearing on my Facebook page! It’s creepy how much the Intranetz can know about you even if you are cautious.
I’m still finding it hard to believe that Google Reader is going the way of the dinosaur. I wish I knew the reasoning behind their getting rid of it. It’s not like Google+, which legitimately no one uses and yet they’re still keeping around like a parasitic twin dragging at their ankles.
Hi Steph Su,
Google claims the numbers on Reader are dropping. I thought it was interested that they dropped it way quicker than iGoogle. Who uses that? I do wonder if I got too comfortable with rss, WordPress and Reader that I stopped paying attention. I’ve recently noticed lots of blogs in Tumblr. Feedly does way more than Reader and does a lot of that connecting you mentioned. I’ve been doing some Tweeting for IBLN and Feedly somehow connected to that account for the short amount of time I was logged in and I cannot disconnect. I think Feedly is more like a ‘playlist tool’ (see Jocye Valenza http://www.feedly.com/home#subscription/feed/http://blog.schoollibraryjournal.com/neverendingsearch/feed/) and I don’t want all that! I did try shifting to Google+. It’s good for curating information, I can see educators or other groups using it, but I’m not really interested in that at all. Do you have gmail? The ads match the content of your mail!