03.28.08

Stealing our history

Posted in Ethics, Libraries tagged , , , at 1:56 am by informationenterprises

Working in the fields of Information and Records (in all its varieties and forms) Management, we are in a unique position. We have the capability of learning a great deal about the organisations where we work, and the people we work with. We can learn about the trials, tribulations and many of the issues facing the organisation and the steps they are taking to counter the problems. And we have access to things few others will ever have the access or privilege to see. As a librarian I have been through some of the best libraries in the world, and have seen items such as the original drawings and notes made by Darwin. It is a sense of pride and honour to know that we are custodians of these unique pieces of work, ensuring their survival long after we have departed this planet we call home.

But what happens when some people use their position for personal gain?

To view the complete newsletter, please visit -
Issue 66 – March 2008 – Stealing our history.

03.12.08

Loan of the century

Posted in Libraries tagged at 12:16 am by informationenterprises

A library book was returned more than a century late.

A Finnish library-goer apparently thought ‘better late than never’ and quietly returned a book on loan for more than 100 years to a library in Vantaa, in southern Finland.

The library had long since lost track of the loan but welcomed back to its collections the bound copy of a 1902 volume of Vartija, an active religious monthly periodical at the time.

“We are unclear when exactly it was borrowed and who returned it. There weren’t any documents with it,” librarian Minna Saastamoinen told Reuters.

“There is an old note attached to the book which says there is a fine of 10 pennies a week for late returns,” she added.

The library sticker inside the cover, and the old-fashioned handwriting on it, showed the book was last officially loaned out at the beginning of the last century, she said.

Finland is known for a comprehensive library network with more than 900 libraries for its 5.3 million inhabitants. In 2006, each Finn on average visited a library 11 times and borrowed nearly 20 books.

The periodical was borrowed such a long time ago that the Korso branch of the Vantaa library, where the tome was finally handed in, did not even exist when the book was borrowed. Original report here

03.05.08

The digital library, museum and archive for Europe

Posted in Archives, Digitial Libraries, Libraries tagged at 12:59 am by informationenterprises

Europeana, has launched a demo to show ideas of its functionality. The main site won’t be operating until at least November 2008, but the concept is fascinating.

Colour Code your library

Posted in Libraries tagged , at 12:15 am by informationenterprises

It had to happen didn’t it. Not content with DDC or UDC to classify your book collection – now you can colour code your library too….. more