[Web4lib] Repost: Cites & Insights 9:5 available

Walt Crawford waltcrawford at gmail.com
Wed Mar 18 21:35:30 EDT 2009


Sorry for the miserable state of the previous post. Maybe this one will be
better:

*Cites & Insights* 9:5, April 2009 <http://citesandinsights.info/civ9i5.pdf>,
is now available.

The 32-page issue is PDF as usual, with HTML versions (such as they are) for
each essay available via the links below.

The issue includes:
Making it Work Perspective: Thinking about Blogging:
1<http://citesandinsights.info/v9i5a.htm>

Do comments make a blog a blog? Is the “blogosphere” imploding? Have
conversations moved elsewhere? And some offhand notes about blogs as a
median medium, in an “interesting sweet spot in a casual media hierarchy of
length, thought and formality.”

Perspective: Writing about Reading 2<http://citesandinsights.info/v9i5b.htm>

Ignoring the Death of Serious Reading, which is as specious as the Death of
Blogs, the Death of Print Media and even (in my opinion) the Sudden Death of
Newspapers, we look at some other reading-related topics: Aliteracy and
Online and Print Reading. A third topic somehow moved over into…

Library Access to Scholarship <http://citesandinsights.info/v9i5c.htm>

*The Death of Journals (Film at 11). *That’s the overall title, and no, I
don’t believe journals are nearing sudden death either…but the topics this
time around *do *relate to journals: Are print journals obsolete? Should
professional journals evolve into blogs?

Net Media: Beyond Wikipedia <http://citesandinsights.info/v9i5d.htm>

It’s not about Wikipedia–or maybe it’s (indirectly) all about Wikipedia.
After some questions as to why so many people seem to love monopolies so
much, there’s a bunch of Knol knotes and some catching up with
Citizendium–and a few brief notes on Wikia (which is not Wikipedia).

And that’s it for April.


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