Posts tagged wo0t

Save the Date: National Library Unconference Day ’11

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What?

When?

  • Save the date: May 2nd, 2011, 1pm EST. More info to follow this month.

Where?

  • At your library for a staff development day. Or an unconference for a regional library cooperative. Maybe something hosted at a state library? Or hosted by your state or regional library association. A great place to hold an uncon for National Library Unconference Day ’11 is at an LIS school. It’s totally up to you!

Why?

Who?

We’ll be streaming a free keynote session to all participating librarians, libraries and library organizations. Our confirmed speakers so far include:

How?

  • Soon enough, we’ll have a link up for you to sign up your unconference to receive the FREE keynote lightning talks webinar. For now, mark your calendars, organize your group, and get ready to change the world. Once you sign up, we’re imaging you’d use a computer + a projector to screen the keynote to your local participants, then you’d get to your individual unconference. We’ll have a constant digital conversation on Twitter via hashtag #libuncon. And we’re hoping people share what they learned and accomplished via blog posts and youtube videos!

MARK THOSE CALENDARS NOW, and #makeithappen! signed, JP & the 8bitlibrary.com team.

National Gaming Day ’10 / HELP!

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Via http://ngd.ala.org!

#NGD10

We’re happy to announce that libraries can now register for National Gaming Day 2010, which will take place on Saturday, November 13.

Registering will also get your location on the national map we’ll be promoting to both the public and the press. Does your library plan to participate in the national Rock Band and/or Super Smash Bros. Brawl tournaments? Be sure to register so we can work with you ahead of time to get everything in place and tested.

National Gaming Day needs your help!!!

Please visit this link for the full post. Help us help the gaming-in-libraries cause!

Hi, Everyone –

I’m happy to say that we have more international libraries signing up for National Gaming Day this year. Unfortunately, we can’t ship the free donation to them, but they still want to participate (hooray for international libraries!).

Right now, a foreign services librarian with the State Department named Elenita is working with libraries worldwide that are partnering with U.S. embassies. She’s asking for our help to give them ideas for games they can play on NGD (Saturday, November 13).

“I would like to suggest free games that they can find on the Internet to play on NGD. Do you know any paper-based games, such as crossword puzzles or word games for them to try? Anything that is low-tech or no-tech based is preferable. Many participants are learning English as a foreign language.”

Does anyone have suggestions to help with this? TIA!

HAPPY GAMING, 8BITLIBRARIANS.


The 8bitlibrary.com Retro Gaming Festival

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On September 11th, 2010, the East Coast’s contingent of the 8bitlibrary.com Crew will be hosting our first ever Retro Gaming Festival at the Kennedy Branch of the Piscataway NJ Public Library.

While we are still in the planning stages, we will sure to be having nostalgic game demos from some of our favorite video game consoles of all time, high-score competitions, discussions (including 8bitlibrary‘s own RedheadFangirl speaking on being a girl gamer from the 80s-today), D&D and Magic the Gathering Tournies, and “modern classics” like Guitar Hero 1.

What would you like to see at an event like that? Have you run a similar event and would like to share your favorite stories? Are you interested in making the trek out to Central Jersey and attending the event? Leave a comment in the box!

(and for out-of-towners serious about coming to the event, let’s work together on travel & housing arragements to hopefully make it possible for you)

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?!

8bitlibrary around town

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Hey all, wanted to share some updates with you about what our contributors are doing in libraries and beyond:

  • Justin Hoenke was on Good Day Maine last week promoting the new Portland ME Public Library’s Teen library program. You can watch the video here.
  • JP Porcaro just wrote an article for School Library Journal titled The Pokemon Generation which you you can read in its entirety here.
  • Craig Anderson‘s 8bitlibrary.com article titled Why Nobody Plays Second Life has lead to a two-part guest post on the Library Journal “Games, Gamers & Gaming” blog. You can read Nobody Plays Second Life (part one) and Nobody Plays Second Life (part two) at those respective links.
  • Today is 8bitlibrary.com contributor, 2010 Library Journal Mover & Shaker and creator of #andypoll Andy Woodworth‘s birthday. Happy Birthday, dude!
  • We’d like to welcome some new contributors: Eli Neiburger, author of Gamers…in the Library?! The Why, What, and How of Videogame Tournaments for All Ages, High School Librarian Buffy Hamilton, of the Unquiet Library, Brandon Robbins, who has already posted lots of great video game reviews here on the 8bitlibrary, Harvard University librarian Tom Bruno (aka @oodja on twitter), and Stevens Institute of Technology librarian Valerie Forrestal. Welcome to everyone and glad to have you aboard.
  • RedheadFangirl Laverne Mann got to meet graphic novel superstar writers the Luna Brothers. How cool is that?!

Hope everyone has a fun week! JP

Follow 8bitlibrary.com on RSS, Twitter, and Facebook!

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Just wanted to let our readers know that we have a twitter, @8bitlibrary!

Almost all of the content on our twitter is independent of the stuff you will get when you subscribe to our RSS or fan us on Facebook. While 8bitlibrary.com is all about gaming and new-media advocacy for schools & libraries, @8bitlibrary will keep librarians and educators updated on the latest breaking new stories from the video game community. We follow all the hot video game sources so you don’t have to.

So, be sure to subscribe/follow/fan, and thanks for your continued support! You all have made this little blog the hottest new edulib source around!

rockband2360

Review: Rock Band 2 (360)

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What? The Rock Band franchise was created by Harmonix, the same development team that created Karaoke Revolution and a little franchise called Guitar Hero. Rock Band was their successful attempt to merge those two music game concepts, and Rock Band 2 is (as of writing) the BEST music game for any console


Why? Between the 84 songs on the disk, the 20 free downloadable songs, the ability to import songs from Rock Band 1 and Lego Rock Band, over 1,000 songs available as DLC, and the Rock Band Network (with the possibility for a gigantic increase in song availability), I’ve got 100s of songs to choose from on my hard drive. Two players play controllers shaped like guitars, one player plays a drum controller (just like you’d play regular drums), and one player gets to sing along. My kids and my parents play. When I have parties, we play. I play alone. I can play with my friends online. I compete in score competitions online (and can view my leaderboard scores from a web browser). This is the game that librarians play at gaming sessions in conferences. This is one of the best games for library programs. If you purchase it for a collection, it will be loaned constantly.

Who? It’s hard to find a game that you can say is for everyone. Wii Sports is one of those. This is the other one. Because of the GIGANTIC library of songs, you are bound to find a song you like. Because of the scalable levels of difficulty, anyone can pick it up and jam. And probably the most important dimension of this game, the one that brings it from a great party game to the BEST party game, is the microphone. You don’t need to ever have played a video game before to jump right into the Rock Band 2 experience, you just need to be able to sing karaoke. Also, because the game scales up to VERY difficult, hardcore gamers can really get depth and playability out of this title (which is usually a choice that has to be made: good party game or good hardcore game? this one is both).

Rock Band 2 is the game I’ve spent the most time playing since I purchased my 360. It is fun, challenging, and the songs are “great jam”. And just when you think you’ve gotten bored with the game, they release more songs. Besides all the game content, there is an information community built around the game over at rockband.com. You can link your in-game band to your rockband.com profile, link your profile to your facebook account, and you are immediately involved in the Rock Band community. Librarians could take a tip from them and how successful they are at building communities around non-traditional media forms.

Not only should you buy this game for your library, you should buy it for yourself.

5 games every library should own 2010

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JP & Justin’s  “5 games every library should own” (2010 edition!).

Obviously there are many variables that go into developing a game collection. Just as it would be hard to put together a “5 DVDs every library should own” (mostly because you feel bad about everything left OFF the list), this is our opinion on how you should spend those first library gaming dollars.

Also, this only applies to current-gen systems. As we expand the blog, expect more in-depth coverage of gaming genres and such…

Wii: New Super Mario Bros, Rock Band 2 (or Band Hero), Wii Sports Resort, Super Smash Bros Brawl, Mario Kart Wii. [Wii Play is a runner-up because it comes with a Wii remote]

Xbox 360: Rock Band 2, Halo 3, Super Street Fighter IV (or Marvel vs Capcom 2 on Live Arcade), Scene It!, Turtles in Time (Live Arcade).

PS3: LittleBigPlanet, Rock Band 2, Street Fighter IV, Soul Caliber IV, Tekken 6.

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