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Rescooped by Karen du Toit from What interests a web & tech geek MedLib? DIGICMB onto The Information Professional |
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Yes, it’s already that transitional time when our current year ends and another begins, and today and tomorrow are quickly changing hands. Rather than look back at significant trends of the past 366 days (2012 was a leap year, remember? Via Ana Cristina Pratas
Karen du Toit's insight:
A compilation of interviews about what will be the top 20 tech trends > including smartphones, cars, apps, data ecology and faces vs interfaces!
Very interesting!
Jeff Domansky's curator insight,
December 13, 2012 2:05 PM
Here's a fun-to-read set of funny, fabulous predictions from designers around world. Delete the scoop?
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"OCLC Releases Survey Findings About Library/Librarian Priorities, Initiatives in Germany, Netherlands, and UK"
Germany
The Netherlands
For United Kingdom, see here: http://listrends.blogspot.fr/2012/08/oclc-releases-survey-findings-about.html
Via Trudy Raymakers Delete the scoop?
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by AUDREY WATTERS: "...the year’s major ed-tech developments. I’ve identified the 10 trends that I think have been 2012’s most interesting and important. I’ll string out the posts that cover these over the next 6 weeks — and not just because it’s time for the obligatory-end-of-year-wrap-up-crap posts that we bloggers churn out throughout the month of December. I find the reflection is useful (although time-consuming), and it’s a good process for me to go through all the news and all my writing to assess what’s innovative and what’s hype and what's changed and why." Delete the scoop?
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We are talking about reference and how it is changing in UPLIFT this week: August 15 at the Utah State Library & August 17 2012 in Ephraim, at the Karen A. Hunstman Library on the Snow College campus.
Reference and Services Trends in Public Libraries, 2012:
- Traditional reference work is less relevant to the needs of users Delete the scoop?
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This sounds similar to what the University of Chicago has done. The library of the future better have a big budget.