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

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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

 

ThankYou

What it’s all about

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I know I’m preaching to the choir with this one, but it made my day so I thought I’d share.

As we’ve said before, games can bring people together.  This is beautiful.

The Beauty of Halo

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Head on over to Just a Bald Man… to read his excellent post “THE BEAUTY OF HALO”

For those parents who believe that video games have no redeeming educational value, I simply ask you to sit down and watch your child for a while – not just once for a few minutes, but over a period of time. If we take the time to really pay attention – to put down our iPhones, step away from the TV, lay aside our book – and really watch them, we can see some amazing things. Some of those things are obvious. The can learn about history, art, music, adventure, and a wide array of other things that virtually all parent views as “beneficial learning.”

More on violent video game U.S. Supreme Court case

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Quote: Where do you stop? What about violent books, violent movies?

Retro gaming display at Piscataway Public Library

Retro Gaming is Fun for the Whole Family

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Retro gaming display at Piscataway Public Library

Retro Gaming events are great for public libraries. This program is fun, loud, and active. It presents an opportunity for everyone to connect through a shared interest. Mom is showing kids the Atari 2600 she played in the late 70s, teens are showing dad their favorites games on by-gone consoles. Everyone is interacting, engaging, and learning. Nostalgia abounds!

And a simple display can accomplish much of the same magic. Identify people in your community who have retro consoles or games and provide a secure area for them to display their treasures in the library. Between the consoles and controllers and games and artwork, these displays are highly engaging, and the conversations that result are priceless.

Public libraries are about connecting people and ideas, and the opportunities presented by retro gaming are endless.

Simple & Easy Shared Library Ideas (via Infolink)

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Mary Martin, director of the Long Hill Public Library in NJ recently did a poll on the listserv for Infolink, one of our regional library cooperatives in NJ, and the results were so good I had to share them with you 8bitlibrary.com readers! Hope you can pass these ideas on as well!

NJ has a truly great library community.

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Simple & easy shared library ideas – August 2010

Ways to Engage Patrons
Front Desk Raffle
Run a fun contest at the circ desk every few months (e.g. get a quote from a book, display it and have patrons guess origin of quote. Those who guess correctly are entered into a drawing to win something simple (a gift card to Starbucks, DD, etc)

Raffle Ticket Inside Book
Variation of above, but put a “raffle” ticket inside books so people will be surprised when they find the ticket. (Bestsellers, hot movers, etc). The raffle ticket could even ask people for their opinion of the book.

Summer storytime

Does your town have a pool or a lake? There’s no law that says storytime must always be offered at the library. One library does a special storytime at the pool during the summer.

Book Bingo for the Whole Family

“Join us to play Bingo and win a book! All ages welcome, parents and grandparents too! No registration required.” All you need is some refreshments and some books as prizes (they use donated books so there is no cost aside from the refreshments). This has been very popular – the library who ran this had over 70 people in July.

Adult Summer Reading Program
A librarian writes: Based on this year’s water theme, we expended to the elements in general. We asked people to read a book or watch a DVD concerning the elements. We provided a list of suggestions to get them going. For each title, they fill out an entry slip for a drawing. We’ll do a drawing for some mugs at the end of August.

Teen summer reading program
At Long Hill we run both a teen and an adult summer reading program. For each book the patron reads or listens to, they fill out a raffle ticket. We draw winners weekly, and they win either a mug or a book (we use donated books as prizes). At the end of the summer we have one grand prize teen winner and one grand prize adult winner, each win a $25 gift card to Borders. We also offer the option for the patron to review the book, and we post their reviews on our library blog.

Storytime for Grownups

Because why should kids have all the fun?

Blind Date with a Book

In late January/early February, wrap up some books in brown paper, decorate with Valentine’s Day theme and encourage patrons to choose one to take home. Long Hill did this last year, it was fun and patrons enjoyed the opportunity to check out a book they might not otherwise have chosen.

Happy Holidays from the Library Staff!

Engage the staff by asking them to recommend holiday or winter themed books or DVDs. Then create a bookmark with their recommendations and give it out to library patrons.

Sharing Our Knowledge w/ Patrons
Staff Picks/May We Recommend?
Display backlist titles or staff picks that people may not have had a chance to read, at the front desk. You’d be surprised at how the staff picks fly off the desk. One caveat: pick books that are in good shape with interesting cover art. They are more likely to catch patrons’ interest.

If You Like cards in the stacks near popular authors

“If you like James Patterson you might also like….” these have been very popular at our library, I am happy to share the cards with anyone who wants to use and/or modify them.

Help patrons find their way around Nonfiction with shelf end cards that include not only the Dewey numbers but the subject patrons will find within that Dewey range – e.g 910.202 – 940.54 Geography, Travel, Ancient History or 600 – 618.24 Nutrition & diets, health & medicine

Recent Returns cart
In front of the circ desk, we have a cart where we put recently returned new books. We deliberately put the cart next to the book drop at the desk, because right after people drop off their old set of books is when they’re looking for new stuff to read. It cuts down on shelving, gives people a smaller section of books to browse.

“Bestsellers You Haven’t Read Yet”
Create a new section right next to New Fiction (or even use a folding bookcase or cart in front of the circ desk) with colorful books by big authors (Grisham, Roberts, Patterson, Picoult etc). You could even do a variation on the theme and do a “Best Books You Haven’t Heard Of” or a “Staff Picks” section. Assign someone to keep the display fresh and replenish it when necessary.

Get those oversized books circulating!
A librarian writes: “One thing we do is combine our browsing shelf with two lower shelves, and we choose a selection of oversized books there. Our oversized books tend not to go out as much as the other books, mainly because they are shelved separately. By showcasing them, not only do they go out, but people will go to the oversize shelves more than before.”

Oversized art books
One library I visited has a special set of shelving near the circ desk where they display oversized art books. As soon as they created this special section, the circulation of this type of book skyrocketed.

Summer Reading Lists
Make sure you have printouts of the local schools’ summer reading lists (both required, and recommended), and put them in binders. It may also be nice to post links to the reading lists on your library’s web site. We didn’t have the K – grade 5 recommended reading lists printed out until one of our staff members mentioned that she was getting a lot of requests for them. So I talked to the elementary school librarian and got the lists, then printed them & posted on our website.

Creative use of volunteers
Reading Buddies (teen volunteers)
Teen volunteers come in to read to little kids. Great all year round but especially during the summer when you have all those teens who want to volunteer

Computer Tutors (adult volunteers with computer skills)
Adult volunteers who have computer skills come to the library once a week at a set time, and help whoever comes in with their questions. It’s been very successful at Westwood Library and they’ve gotten great feedback from their patrons.
Another library described a similar program, PC Tutoring. They offer one-on-one computer tutoring to patrons twice a month, on several PC basics.

Better Communication with Patrons
Ask patrons for help in maintaining your collection
Patrons complaining about DVDs, audio CDs not working properly? You can create a simple slip asking patrons “Help us keep our collection in good repair” and including checkmarks where they can indicate what is wrong with the item. Then train staff to look for those checkmarks when an item is returned. And clean/repair item before it is reshelved.

Ask for what you need in your answering machine message
At Long Hill, we noticed that when people left messages for us at the front desk they usually failed to give us the info we needed (e.g. if it was a renewal) or they would be crystal clear in their message up until they told us their last name, which always ended up sounding like “Blarfengar.” So we changed our answering message to say “We’re sorry we missed your call. Please leave a message with your name, and please spell out your last name for us. Provide your phone number and your request. We’ll return your call as soon as we can.” This friendly message that clearly tells them what info we needed from them. It has cut down on the head-scratching we were doing when we checked our messages.

“You don’t have enough mysteries.”
One librarian writes: I met an elderly gentleman at a community event. He told me he stopped using our library because we didn’t have many mysteries. When I asked him for more details I learned that he thought the only mysteries we owned were on the New Book shelves. So now we have a sign on our New Mysteries shelves that says “We have over 7,500 mystery novels and many others available from other libraries at no charge…”

Cheap Advertising/Marketing
Use printable business cards to advertise services. For instance, if you want to promote Reference USA you can print business cards and hand them out to business patrons for them to file in their wallet, where they might actually have a chance of finding it when they need it.

Contact your local newspaper and find out if they have “community blogs.” Long Hill’s local newspaper encouraged us to start a blog with them. We use it to promote library events and what is interesting is that the newspaper staff read our blog, so occasionally they will print an article in the paper about the library even though we didn’t send them a press release – they just take the info from our blog.

At Long Hill we get BookPage book review magazine (for patrons) and we subscribe to the NextReads database (providing 21+ book related email newsletters people can sign up for.) When BookPage comes we put a sticker on it saying “Like what you read here? Sign up for NextReads for even more great recommendations.” To increase use of NextReads newsletters we also created easy sign up sheets and put them all around the library (including in our New Book binder) to encourage people to sign up. (We also use NextReads for our monthly children’s events email newsletter.)

Tax Forms
As you know the State of New Jersey stopped providing tax forms and instructional booklets this year. One of Long Hill’s staff members suggested we print out a couple copies of the instructional booklet, put them in binders and allow patrons to check them out for 7 days. This was a great way for us to serve the patrons

Easy Technology Tools
A librarian writes “We are a small library and only have 4 public Internet computers. We also have a large number of latchkey kids. This summer we decided to implement separate adult and juvenile usage times. Adults get their time on the computers from 10:30 to 12:30 and kids get their time from 2 to 4. Now we don’t have adults complaining about the noisy kids at the computers with them, and can guarantee that kids won’t be bothered by adults during their designated time period.”

Digital frame
You can get a cheap digital frame and put pictures from library events on it. Long Hill has this at our front desk. The kids especially are mesmerized by this – they look for themselves and their friends in the pictures.

JP’s foursquare adventure

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So at the Computers in Libraries 2010 conference, there was a contest to see who could end up as the “Mayor” of the exhibit hall on foursquare. (I won, but never got the TBA prize, lol)

Foursquare, if you are unaware, is a service that uses your cell phone to “locate” where you are. You use it to “check in” at the venue you are at, and can then see what others are doing, what type of events / stores / restaurants / etc. are in the area, and where your friends are at and what they are up to.

But let’s be honest (and this is where 8bitlibrary.com comes in), that idea is NO FUN. Why would anyone want waste their time telling people where they are? Foursquare makes the idea fun by turning your (sometimes mundane) everyday life’s travels into a game: you compete to be the “Mayor” of locations that you frequent and you can earn “badges” (like an Xbox achievement or a PS3 trophy) based on when/where/with who/how many times/etc you check-in at certain places.

What does this mean for libraries?

Being able to answer the question “what does X mean for libraries” can only be answered by first understanding X. So me, my brother, his baby are going to hit up all 5 boroughs of NYC tomorrow, trying to acquire as many badges as possible (and, in the process, experiencing NYC like I wouldn’t have experienced it before, despite living literally right over the Hudson).

Here’s the plan:

Start by taking the ferry from Hoboken to Manhattan. Boom, one badge down. Also, the Cake Boss is taped in a Hoboken bakery, and there is this mysterious badge we might be able to unlock by stopping in: We have to hit up all 5 boroughs in order to get , so we’re gonna start by taking the subway north. We’ll also be able to unlock when we are far enough north. Unfortunately, I missed out on at least 5 NYC badges by only a week because there were a few for checking in at last week’s Internet Week New York 2010. Still going to try to find some of those venues to get the badges :) specifically While we are the Bronx, we will try to hit up a few playgrounds since we will have my bro’s baby with us. If we can hit 10 playgrounds, we earn. Even if we don’t get it this day, we will both get that badge eventually. And speaking of “we’ll get them eventually” badges, you only need 5 Starbucks checks-ins to get. If you spend enough time checking in at Starbucks and become mayor, they give you $1-off discounts. If we don’t find 5 Starbucks in 1 day in NYC, we might as well give up because we fail at life. There are areas of NYC that have so many Starbucks, some are on opposite sides of the same street. Moving forward, Sunday is a few World Cup games, so we will make our way to at least 2 of them. We’ll get  no matter what, and we should be able to achieve by the end of the tournament, if not by the end of the day. Also, if by the end of the day we end up at LaGuardia airport and take a flight to South Africa, I’ll end up with and we’ll both get when we arrive! Assuming we stay in NYC, though, I’m sure we will be able to find a Bravo-rated clothes store to earn and there’s enough Zagat-rated restaurants that we will definitely earn. In our travels, we will be searching for the mysterious badge, which no one is quite sure how to earn. It’s possible that we can get it by checking in at Liberty State Park when we are back in Jersey City. I’ll let you know how that turns out. Not sure how many Apple Stores we’ll come across, but if we find 3, we get . We’re also likely to find 3 places with a photobooth for , and we’ll be closer to checking in to 20 pizza shops for. I’ve checked into art galleries in Chicago, so I think I’m close to the 10 check-ins I need for . I’m also close to checking in to 10 movie theaters for .

There’s even more badges we can earn that day, and you might be asking yourself, “How the heck are you going to get all these places in a day?” Well, we are using Ferris Bueller’s Day Off as our inspiration: he was able to hit up the whole town of Chicago in a day, and he was only in high school. Along those lines, there’s 4 badges you can earn by hitting up specific sets of locations in Chicago; those badges are no doubt inspired by him as well!

So when the adventure is over, I think I’ll really have some insight to answer the question: What does foursquare mean for libraries?!

DSi XL

Grown up gaming w/ DSi XL

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The new Nintendo DSi XL dropped on Sunday, March 28.

  • Larger screen size than the DSi, 93% larger than the DS lite
  • Two locking viewing angles
  • Speakers are louder and clearer
  • Longer stylus comes with system, also includes pen type stylus
  • DSIware games included, Brain Age Express Arts & Letters; Math
  • Top is glossy with a matte bottom
  • Larger size, weight seems same
  • Buttons all identical to DSi

Nintendo is hoping to gain an older gaming market with this system.   The larger screen size makes it easier to see, and the look and pen makes it seem less juvenile.  Sharing gaming experience could be better with this larger model.

Libraries could potentially have gaming with DSi XLs, perhaps attracting a different age crowd.  E-books are rumored to be released by DSIware– could be a player in the ebook market for libraries to be aware of.

Price point is $20 more than the DSi.   Comes in either Bronze or Burgundy color

If you have a DSi, you might wanna wait for the upgrades in the next version (DS2)…

Nintendo DSi XL game system

Nintendo DSi XL compared to DS Lite

Cnet review

A pretty diverse group, chillen at the Gaming Station

Open “Gaming Stations” in the Library

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Hey all,

Justin has really been killing it on here with his great posts on gaming programs, and I felt inspired to share an experience of my own.

In 2005, in my previous job as head of a public library children’s department, I had the opportunity to try out something that I suggest every public library at least try for a month, if not implement permanently. If you own a console, take out/open your TV, turn on the TV&console, and let your library users play the games all day. Whenever you are open.

A pretty diverse group, chillen at the Gaming Station

The concept is simple: you allow books to be read and checked out all day. You allow your computers to be used all day. Same goes with other media; newspapers, magazines, etc… Your library spent a small but good amount of money on the console and the games, let your library users play with them! It doesn’t only have to be for programs. Similarly, open gaming doesn’t mean that you still won’t get a chance to run programs!

My experiences were very positive. I had multiple age groups constantly collaborating and sharing information in a way that is unique to the gaming medium. Users who would have in other circumstances had no reason to even speak to each other at the library are now sharing tips and becoming friends (oh, and hopefully talking trash on each other, :-p).

Open gaming also fosters a new way for libraries to include multiple age groups in activities. Public libraries traditionally segregate people based on age (“Children’s Room”, “Teen Room”, “Adult/Reference room”, in NJ we have a growing amount of libraries with “Senior Rooms” thanks to the work of Allen Kleiman et al.). I don’t think that there is anything wrong with age segregation in libraries; it HAS worked and CONTINUES to work for libraries. But there’s also nothing wrong with mixing everyone together, and in my experience with open gaming, this is THE BEST WAY to get every age group engaging / sharing information & experiences together.

In an open gaming situation (vs a set-times-for-gaming situation), I’ve found that parents/teens/seniors who otherwise wouldn’t  have picked up a game are now having fun “playing” with kids/teens/parents/grandparents/babies. It’s really an amazing, unique-to-libraries experience to see a two-year-old kid playing video games with their grandparent and an 8-year-old kid they’ve never met. Where else could you see that same 8-year-old become friends with a 15-year-old? Or a 20-something couple walk in the library for a book and end up sharing a really good time with a bunch of teenagers they’ve never met before? And in a school library situation, you’ll see teachers and students engaging in a way they’ve probably never engaged before, and students will build friendships with students they may have never even met before.

Libraries aren’t only about information, they are also about valuable human experiences, and gaming is the best of both worlds: a modern information media as well as an all-ages platform for fun  interaction.

You’ll notice I didn’t go over any “problems” you may run in to. It’s 2010 now and the idea of open gaming probably isn’t as “new” as it was in 2005, so I think it’ll probably be easier for you to try something like this in your library. There’s always 1,000,000 reasons not to do something; don’t let those reasons stop you from trying this. Let me know your experiences if you do this in your school / library!

Video Games at the Library on Tour

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One way to get the word out about gaming in libraries is to take your program out on the road.  Hearing about gaming is one thing, but users will start to see just how important gaming can be in literacy and libraries once they get their hands on the games themselves.

I saw some kind of magic happen when I took my game night program out on the road in the Summer of 2008.  Sure, we had the hardcore gamers that just wanted to play coming to the program.  But something else happened as well.  I saw older folks getting really excited about sharing the experience.  I had never seen this before.  I thought the cut off age for anyone to like video games was 30.  Boy I was wrong.

While it may not be the most exciting video in the world, I really think this video sums up what I was trying to accomplish with this program.  Gaming is for all ages to share and enjoy.  The experience is what counts.  Getting people together to have a positive experience like this does two thing.  It gets them understand that gaming is a good thing and it also shows the value of the library.

Here’s how I approached the program: Think of yourself as a traveling rock band.  Pack up the van with your gear, gather some bandmates, and head out onto the road for an exciting (yet tiring) week of gaming with your library patrons.  At the end of the week, not only will you have more library users interested in gaming but you’ll finally understand exactly what Bob Seger was talking about in “Turn The Page“.

(a brief glimpse into Game Night on Tour from the Cape May County Library)

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