Thursday, August 20, 2009

Sears--Taxonomy--Not Safe for Work

Screenshots from Sears.com, showing unauthorized headings. The first one could be placeholder text, but the second one suggests to me someone is being let go and is taking out on the subject headings...

Click to see a larger image, and check out the breadcrumb trail.





Update: It was apparently done by changing the URL, which includes the category. A good tech lesson their. But I couldn't get it to work. Maybe it still works for the second one because it's cached.

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Monday, August 17, 2009

Glowy magic, wolves and damsels in distress

Sci-fi/fantasy publisher Orbit has compiled a chart of 2008 Fantasy Cover Elements, charting the prevalence of unicorns and swords, elves and "glowy magic" (a big winner).

I'm disappointed in the minimalist "damsels in distress." As a boy with a good collection of Conan novels, I feel that fantasy covers are all about occasions to show impossibly good-looking women in clothing of dubious practicality. I'm betting, if tallied, chainmail brassieres might well beat out glowy magic.

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Saturday, June 06, 2009

How to start a dance party



A good illustration for social efforts of every kind.

Hat-tip: Ze Frank, David Weinberger

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Thursday, May 21, 2009

New Kindle model released

Friday, February 06, 2009

Facebook in reality

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

How books are made

From the Digital Marketing Team at Macmillan, who rock.

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Sunday, December 21, 2008

Thriller, with book carts

National Library of Australia staff Christmas party does Thriller...



Excellent.

Hat tip: Kathryn Greenhill, with more library Thriller videos.

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Sunday, November 23, 2008

LCSH for "Yo mama"

A recent dust-up on AUTOCAT revolved around a librarian tour to Cuba for the "Havana Book Fair." This "fully escorted" tour involved the opportunity to "get an unprecedented look into issues of freedom of expression directly from Cuban intellectuals, writers, librarians, publishers and curators," with a rum-and-coke event at a local Committee for the Defense of the Revolution, who, besides keeping files on everyone in the neighborhood, "ensure[s] that detailed electoral information is provided on all candidates, and every vote diligently counted."*

As you may guess, a number of posters (myself included) criticized the post. Others objected to our criticism, and a small-bore kerfuffle ensued.

It was interjected, with clever use of Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH):
"... before this detours into a "Cuba $x Foreign relations $z United States" (and vice-versa) discussion, please remember that Autocat is primarily a discussion group for cataloging, authority work, etc."
Off-list, I suggested to someone that we could continue the argue entirely in LCSH, suggesting the (invalid) heading:

Cuba, Communist -- Propaganda -- Aimed at librarians!

Which was met with the (also invalid):

United States -- Imperialistic policies -- Social aspects

Touché.

That got me thinking, if LCSH is a language (of sorts), how good is it for that most important role of languages—conveying insults?

The answer is—just great! Although LCSH lacks the term "jerk" or "dumbass" (except "Dumbasses (music group)"), it is still a rich field for insult, innuendo and invective. Consider, for example, hurling the following at an opponent:

Donkeys -- Genealogy
Dill weed -- Specimen

Sometimes the main heading themselves provide good insults, for example, to accuse someone of verbal diarrhea one need only employ:

Anal language -- Case studies**

But it's useful to take full advantage of the free floating form subdivisions. To tell someone they had descended to the depths of idiocy, I suggest

Stupidity -- Bathymetric maps

Can anyone come up with the ultimate LCSH put-down?


*The passage goes on to note, that, "Voting booth and ballot integrity" in this one-party state is "entrusted to primary level students on voting days." What a neat solution!
**Apparently this heading is only supposed to be used on the Anal people, of Southeast Manipur. Pity.

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Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Humor break, I think.

McSweeney's: E-mail Addresses It Would Be Really Annoying to Give Out Over the Phone.

Altay, Abby and I are in tears. Others are not. There's some deep personality thing here.

Ah, McSweeney's lists. My friend Kevin Shay penned Pirate Riddles for Sophisticates. You have to be in the right mood for this stuff.

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