Meredith Farkas is a faculty librarian at Portland Community College in Oregon. From 2007-2021, she wrote the monthly column “Technology in Practice” for American Libraries. Meredith was honored in 2014 with the ACRL Instruction Section Innovation Award, in 2008 and 2011 with the WISE Excellence in Online Education Award and in 2009 with the LITA/Library Hi Tech award for Outstanding Communication in Library and Information Technology. She has been writing the blog Information Wants to be Free since 2004.
There's been a whole lot of hubbub about those crazy articles on Forbes.com about wives being compared to whores and the appeal to Forbes' male readers to not marry a…
Remember way back when I was talking about wanting to do some sort of a free online educational extravaganza? Well, the wheels have been turning behind the scenes, but I…
While we're on the subject of wikis, here are some wiki-related links I've found recently that I thought you might want to know about: LIS753wiki - Even though they got…
Karen Coombs beat me to the punch with an excellent post on a Web4Lib comment I had noticed recently as well: "I am repeatedly impressed by how often, when librarians…
I must apologize for not writing much lately. I really believed that when I finished my book I would have lots and lots of spare time, but then the speaking…
I got an interesting question from a reader that I really wanted to open up to the community on my blog rather than pretending that I'm knowledgeable enough to answer…
Brion Vibber is the CTO of the Wikimedia Foundation. OMG, there is a serious lack of women in this room! This talk was about improvements in the pipeline for MediaWiki,…
Our talk today went really well! Considering who we were up against (Yochai Benkler!!!), I was surprised and pleased that we had a pretty decent crowd at the talk. Update:…
Can I tell you how nice it is to have free wireless EVERYWHERE at this conference? Not only that, but the seats are comfortable, and the desks or armrests have…
Considering that I have initiated many MediaWiki projects of my own, I was very excited about hearing from other folks who have experienced the highs and lows of running a…
Sins of omission? An exploratory evaluation of Wikipedia's topical coverage Alex Halavais & Derek Lackaff Looking at authority/authoritativeness of wikipedia articles. Accuracy is obviously an issue, but authority is more…
Our Movement: Past, Present, Future Jimmy first showed the "Wikiality" clip, which I highly recommend you check out for a laugh. Fundamental Mission statement: imagine a world in which every…
I haven't been able to blog as much as I'd like to lately. Between trying to get a million things done at work before the students come back -- wasn't…
I Want you ... to Drop DOPA! Originally uploaded by davidking. I haven't written much about DOPA (Deleting Online Predators Act), though I certainly made my opinions about social networking…
The other day, I got an e-mail from a reader of my blog: "You mentioned in one of your more recent posts that you've learned what works and what doesn't…
A few weeks ago, I finished a chapter I was writing (not for my book -- another one) on the topic of technology in LIS Education. I think Rachel asked…
Here are some links for those of you who are attending (or have attended, depending on when you look at this) my SirsiDynix talk today. If you have any additional…