8BitLibrarian JP Porcaro

8bitlibrary.com is now located at 8bitlibrary.com

0

HEY 8BITLIBRARIANS,

So, you are reading this on the OLD 8bitlibrary.com. 8bitlibrary.com no longer redirects here (to blog.8bitlibrary.com). Here’s JP’s “farewell” post to the blog…but first, some nostalgia…

In 2009, JP Porcaro and Justin Hoenke met for drinks and found out they were both ALA Emerging Leaders for the upcoming year. Our bromance continued with daily IM chats until Justin one day said:

Let’s start a librarygarden of gaming.

So, we did. We really started taking off and getting hits when Justin made a joke on twitter:

Let’s all get library tattoos.

And I was like, YEA LET’S DO IT. And that’s how this whole thing happened…Justin & I would brainstorm crazy ideas, and if they were just crazy enough to work, i’d #makeithappen. So we started Project Brand Yourself a Librarian, librarians shared it like crazy, and a bunch of librarians got tattoos.

So from the very start, within weeks, we strayed from the original “library garden of gaming” idea.

We came up with other crazy ideas and made them happen:

We also had lots of fabulous contributors, almost all the top names in the field of “gaming in libraries” either wrote for us or were considered part of the team.

And then we shifted from crazy ideas to more traditional ones:

In our heyday, we were getting about 4000 clicks a day (which is BIG for library blogs), and alexa.com had us listed as one of the highest trafficked library blogs. The only blogs that were getting higher traffic at the time were the ‘official’ ones; the LJ, SLJ and some of ALA ones…

Lots of success here in a short period of time, maybe moreso than any other library blog. So why did we let blog.8bitlibrary.com “die”?

  • All of our contributors are doing other things.

We all got busy. 8bitlibrary lead us to publication deals, speaking gigs, new jobs, and new leadership opportunities. Now that GameRT exists, we have a more formal place to do our gaming-in-libraries work.

  • Blogging is boring.

We should have figured out from day 1 that blogging was not what we were about. We were a successful BRAND, but never a good BLOG. All of the successes I listed had more to do with 8bitlibrary as a brand, and less to do with blog.8bitlibrary.com.

  • WordPress sucks.

The blog was constantly marred by slow load times, login problems for contributors, and errors on the user and contributor end. Anyone who was a frequent contributor knows what I mean when i say “500 Internal Server Error”

  • We have better places to “publish”

Blogging is NOT publishing. We’ll get some game reviews actually published via GameRT hopefully soon!

SO WHERE DOES THAT LEAVE 8BITLIBRARY?!

When Justin posted this on the new 8bitlibrary.com, people FREAKED out (they though we were killing everything, the facebook page, the twitter, the tumblr (which is now the main site) and the blog) and I had to write this.

Where we’re left without the blog is where we always belonged: as the party people of librarianship. So we’re still gonna do all the stuff we used to do, like ALA DANCE PARTY, Project Brand Yourself a Librarian, and all the Think Tanks and subsequent parties…but we won’t have to worry about keeping up this illusion that we’re a “professional” library blog.

We’re still here.

#partyhard and #makeithappen,

JP

 

obligatory #ala11 post

3

lemme start by plugging a few events:

The Emerging Leaders poster sessions. Justin & I mentored a fabulous team this year and they are presenting a poster session on Video Game Collection Development. [rsvp on facebook] [add to your conference schedule]

ALAplay 2011 will be a fun event cosponsored by LITA, the Games and Gaming Member Interest Group, and the Comic Book and Graphic Novel Member Interest Group. [rsvp on facebook] [add to your conference schedule]

8bitlibrary.com‘s ALA DANCE PARTY 2011. Get down, make love. #partyhard. [rsvp on facebook] [add to your conference schedule]

ALA Facebook After Hours Social. Good times in the French Quarter. [rsvp on facebook]

Emerging Leaders Summit. A few 8bitlibrary.com contributors are speaking. [rsvp on facebook] [add to your conference schedule]

YALSA’s Pecha Kecha: Teens and Technology. JP aka me is speaking and I need people to cheer me on so I can present it again at the ALA Virtual Conference. [add to your conference schedule]

 

OK

 

every library blogger insists on giving you advice on what to pack and what not to forget for #ala11. these posts all say the general same things:

  • don’t forget comfortable shoes
  • be sure to pack enough business cards
  • don’t forget to eat

We feel these are usually short-sighted and/or boring suggestions. here’s some more important ones:

  1. MAKE IT HAPPEN. aka #makeithappen
  2. AVOID INCEPTION BY SLEEPING BEFORE YOU GET ON YOUR FLIGHTS!! This will also help protect you from extractors. Don’t drink anything on the plane in order to avoid extractors from sedating you en route.
  3. PARTY REALLY HARD EVERY NIGHT. Rest during the conference sessions. Sleep when you get home from the conference.
  4. GET AS MANY CONFERENCE RIBBONS AS POSSIBLE AND MAKE A CONFERENCE SASH OUT OF THEM. It’ll be a fabulous accessory for your many Supermarket Sweep-style exhibit hall runs.
  5. BUY A ROUND OF DRINKS FOR 8BITLIBRARY.COM CONTRIBUTORS. Toast to the Nyan Cat.
  6. START YOUR MORNING WITH A RED BULL AND A BUMPING JAM BY LUDACRIS. Because access to books should be Ludaversal.
164884_1674863545861_1065621929_31886183_8336766_n

Emerging Leaders present best practices for video game collection development

2

Emerging Leaders present best practices for video game collection development

Are you thinking about starting a video game collection for your library? Are you wondering how to take your video game collection to the next level? Join the 2011 ALA Emerging Leaders Team G for a poster presentation on video game collection development at the ALA Annual Conference on Friday, June 24, 2011 from 3:00pm – 4:00pm in Conference Center Room 271-273.

Team G, comprised of Erik Bobilin, Abby Johnson, Kate Kosturski, Jonathan Lu, and Nicole Pagowsky, will present information on issues and best practices when developing a video game collection, including Circulation & Access, Selection & Purchasing, Weeding, and an ideal MARC record. The team surveyed public, academic, and school libraries across the United States and Canada and spoke with experts in the field to find out what innovative ideas might change what we know about video game collections in libraries.

ALA’s Emerging Leaders program allows new professionals to gain experience and create personal networks within the American Library Association by working with a group on an assigned project.

For more information, check out the team’s website: http://bit.ly/libvideogames

 

JP and I had the opportunity to work with the awesome Team G over the past six months on this program.  They’ve done some amazing work with this project that I hope you all will check out if you’re going to be at ALA 2011.

Why you should participate in #libuncon & Planning an Unconference, by Michelle Boule

0

So our great friend Michelle Boule, who is no doubt the library world’s leader in “unconferencing”, has shared with me a bunch of valuable information for librarians planning on organizing and/or participating in National Library Unconference Day ’11.

Michelle’s FYI stats: Michelle Boule is a Geek Librarian living in Houston, TX. Michelle was recently a Social Sciences Librarian at the University of Houston. She now spends her time writing and consulting while trying to care for her growing brood of children* and large dogs. In 2008, she was named a Library Journal Mover and Shaker. Michelle has created online learning environments, taught in-person classes, presented on a wide variety of technology and training subjects, shelved books, read books, written articles, organized unconferences, and participated in subversive activities in an effort to save the world. She has a booki coming out in the Fall on entitled Mob Rule Learning: camps, unconferences, and trashing the talking head from Information Today, Inc..  Michelle can be found online at A Wandering Eyre, http://wanderingeyre.com.

Let’s start with her post on Why You Should Participate in National Library Unconference Day ’11.

And here’s her prezi titled Planning an Unconference.

 

I’m getting really excited for Unconference Day!!! Our kick-off set of lightning talks (by library greats like Eli Neiburger, Jaime Hammond, and Michael Stephens) will be offered free courtesy of the ALA Learning Round Table. And even if you can’t organize an unconference of your own, we’ll have a full-day live chat unconference at tinychat.com/8bitlibrary, a twitter unconference via hashtag #libuncon, and you can still check out the free lightning talks at 1 pm EDT. May 2nd, 2011, be there, #makeithappen – JP

*everyone say YAY to Michelle for recently adding another child to her clan!!!! I got to see the pictures and the baby is so beautifulllll.

#makeithappen means taking action.

2

What does #makeithappen mean? Taking action.

Action is something that you do.

Doing is different than saying. We can write, talk, make statements, chat, dish, diss, blog at blog.8bitlibrary.com or any other blog…but it’s never a substitute for action.

In librarianship specifically, I hear lots of talk. Some of it is negative complaining about the state of things. Some of it is positive ideas about how we should move forward.

Neither of those are #makeithappen. #makeithappen is saying “I want today to be Teen Library Day in my town”, then calling the mayor, and getting it officially on the books as [Insert Town Here] Teen Library Day. #makeithappen is not just THINKING outside the box, but DOING outside the box. Like having librarians influence global gaming discussions that otherwise would have been completely out of the realm of libraries. Or having local professional athletes chill in the library.

Talking about something is a stepping stone to action, but in the end, no amount of blog posts here or anywhere will amount to #mih. However, we want this blog to be the #makeithappen blog, a place to show off pictures and videos or things people have #mih’d all over the country, to provide inspiration to all in their own efforts to #makeithappen. Have you made something great happen in your library? Please email me so you can show the world; I can be reached at jp at porcaro dot info

#makeithappen never gives up, ever.

#makeithappen is professional AND personal. In many ways, it is personal first: envision what you want in your life, and then stop imagining and #mih, because the reality is so much better than the fantasy.

#makeithappen is climbing 10,000 mountains before breakfast.

An 8bitlibrary.com contributor linked me to this a few days ago. I know it is harsh, but climbing 10,000 mountians is way harsher than any web comic:

The secret to #mih: work really really hard.

 

And although we define “make it happen” in twitter-hashtag form, we all agree that nobody can #makeithappen on twitter. The real work that needs to be done is through toil and sweat and hard work, even in the library.

#makeithappen is saying “Hey, let’s help people develop video game collections”, starting up a website about it, and becoming the most influential web resource for video-games-in-libraries.

Failure, of course, is a big part of #makeithappen as well. Video Games can be a great example of this: you toil through failure after failure, repeating the same tasks you fail at, sometimes failing at the same thing for hours or days. And then you win. You fail until you win. And #makeithappen is not stopping, because once you’ve jumped one hurdle of failure, you’ve got 100s more to jump. This is why video games are the perfect fit for the #makeithappen philosophy: keep pushing through failure until you win, because luck won’t get you anywhere, experience will, and the only way to gain experience is through failure, not success.

#makeithappen is also about priorities: like, knowing when to stop writing about it, because you have to go to work to DO SOMETHING. Which I am about to do.

8bitlibrary.com‘s own JP Porcaro (me) & Justin Hoenke, as well as our friends/colleagues/movers&shakers Ed Garcia and Jaime Hammond will be speaking on “Make It Happen in libraries” at the New England Library Association Conference in October 2011. Please come out and share the #mih mojo with us.

The Sexiest Librarian Interview Of All Time

2

YO, Wisconsin, 8bitlibrary stands w/ you!

1

YO, Wisconsin, 8bitlibrary stands w/ you. And we’re wondering, is there anything we can do to help?

Also, we’re particularly interested in what libraries & librarians’ roles are in the events. Let us know! Librarians from all over the country & the world are ready to help you guys, so, speak up.

 

 

WE ARE TEAM ROCK8

1

></a></p>
<div id=

National Library Unconference Day 2011 w0ot

1

Library Crisis

Why are there still libraries?

9

The post goes downhill after this photo...

in Office Hours: Heretical Thoughts, Mr. Michael Stephens had a conversation with a coworker that went like this:

I asked the question I always ask when I’m talking to someone who hires new librarians*: “What other skills and competencies should a new librarian have?”

His response? “I want risk-takers…innovators…creatives….I don’t want someone who’s afraid to make a move or make a decision without getting permission.”

This post is a risk because it challenges the most basic core belief librarians have. Mr. Stephens asked us “What are your heretical thoughts about libraries” and here’s my heretical response:

Why are there still libraries?

It’s an honest question. Times are tough. Most libraries are taxpayer-funded. Library advocacy is centered around convincing people that there is value in libraries. What other career field do we know of that is SO FOCUSED on merely justifying the existence of their jobs?  I mean,

WHY DO WE EVEN NEED LIBRARIES?

So I’m watching all those NBC comedies on Thursday night, and the show “Community” starts with this exchange. Two dudes talking about a librarian:

Troy: Why does being a librarian make her EVEN HOTTER?!

Abed: They’re keepers of knowledge. She holds the answers to all of our questions, like “Will you marry me?” and “Why are there still libraries?”…Hey, maybe if we’re too loud, she’ll “shh” us.

Then the character named Abed yells BOOKS as loud as he can to get some attention. That’s the library’s brand, after all: quiet shushing places full of books. Borders book stores just declared bankruptcy. Maybe that’s the destiny of anything with “book” in the brand? And at least Borders didn’t have things like this:

So let’s say you are watching that show with someone who’s not a librarian, and they laugh at Abed’s question. Then they ask the honest question “why DO we need libraries?“. What do you say?

Kanye West on books...

Let’s be honest: are libraries really worth saving when that funding could go to teachers or firemen? At some point, should we let libraries die?

So let’s say after you watch that show, you are watching another show that very same night on that very same network sitting next to the very same person, and the first scene in that next show starts with someone getting an overdue fine notice for a book. Should you be embarrassed, especially if your name on facebook is Librarian JP ?

Again, this is our brand: libraries are for overdue fines. And everyone reading this who’s a librarian could probably think of half-a-dozen library staff that they currently work with who are upholding this brand. Everyone reading this who’s a librarian could think of half-a-dozen library staff that they currently work with who are only barely less-nasty than the staff of the DMV or Post Office.

I mean, really, what are we advocating for?

  • Are we advocating for libraries or simply for our own jobs? Sure you could point to all these book authors who seem like library champions, but…
  • …are they advocating for libraries because it’ll sell more of their books?
  • Is it some human right, like the right to food and water and shelter and health care, that people are able to rent out the latest James Patterson novel? What the heck is the point of 8bitlibrary and all this gaming-in-libraries silliness?!
  • You could say “access to information” is a basic human right, but do you really need this gigantic expensive library infrastructure to do what is being done for free on the internet? Have a municipality or school just put a bunch of computers in a public place for people who can’t afford internet access, and that digital divide / access to info problem is solved.

On a weekly (and sometimes daily) basis, I get a twitter DM or a facebook message or an email from someone asking me: ZOMG JP PLEASE PASS THIS ON IF WE DON’T GET THIS FUNDING LIBRARIES WILL DIE. For awhile you feel like you are fighting a good fight by passing this stuff on.

Then there’s another capwiz to pass on.

And then another.

And then it’s quiet for a week and then another crisis. It’s like, in boxing, after you get knocked down SO MANY TIMES you get a TKO. When do librarians throw in the towel? Should we ever?

Or, is EVERYBODY ELSE wrong, and libraries are in the right? I’ve seen the library ‘value’ calculators and if they helped, we wouldn’t be in perpetual crisis. I’ve seen a saveXXstatelibrary.com for practically every state in the USA. Doesn’t their mere existence prove that they aren’t working? Here in my home state, our state librarian praised the fact that we only had a 43% cut to state library funding (which sent every library in the state library into chaos). While I do feel like those at the very top in my state were the ones who failed (and are praising their own failure) that “funding battle”, that situation raised a larger question in my mind:

Is this what I signed up?

Is advocacy itself the problem?

I just turned 29 years old last month, which means I’m young enough to jump ship in my career and leave librarianship behind. So do I stay and try to make things better? What really needs to change to make things better? Is this the solution?:

Maybe?

All I can do right now is hope that there are a few people out there who are feeling the same way and will hopefully be able to help us make some changes. And there ARE people like that out there, I think? I have friends trying to break out of the library echo chamber together. But what else? What’s next? What are the answers?

*...my contract runs out on June 30 2011, ask him if he'll hire me?
Go to Top