Archive for the 'Reading' Category

Shelfari, LibraryThing and other Library Managers

I hold books as sacred, and have walls full of them. There is a never-ending pile of books by the bed. I’m not a book snob though, I read a large variety of genres and topics. I can only go to the used bookstore because I read through them too fast. I sometimes bring home duplicate copies of books since I cannot keep track of them anymore.

I have long wanted to get my library online in some form. I have explored a variety of options, none of which fit. A few days ago I saw that Amazon purchased AbeBooks and now Shelfari. This piqued my interest since Shelfari is an obvious tie-in with the Kindle. So, I decided to take some time to try to nail things down.

Delicious Library 2 just came out, it’s iSight camera barcode scanner works well. It has good web upload and export features, even accommodating an iPod or iPhone. It can manage many kinds of things besides books like music, electronics, etc. That sounds good for the insurance records I have been worrying about.

I also discovered the online library managers Shelfari and LibraryThing, and to a lesser extent the other 38 or so competitors. Shelfari looked good on the surface and seemed to be very user friendly. LibraryThing seemed kind of archaic and stodgy.

I gathered an armload of books, created an account on Shelfari and started adding them. Things went really easy, and with 6 books in my library I set about trying to integrate Shelfari with my website.

I found a convoluted widget management system based on Flash and obfuscated Javascript. CSS stylesheets are hidden and options are extremely limited. A single reference to managing the widget’s CSS (but no stylesheet) and outdated documentation make things worse. The widgets are heavy on the eye-candy, light on functionality, with a maximum exposure of the Shelfari brand. It took an hour with a CSS inspector to implement a clean, non-branded sidebar widget in Wordpress.

I googled about the differences between Shelfari and LibraryThing. Shelfari owns all user-submitted content while LibraryThing is open.

I decided to give LibraryThing a try. Upon creating an account there, I was presented with too much content and too many options. This is not a site for the faint-hearted. I added some books and was impressed at how much more powerful the interface was. In Shelfari, I kept losing the “add a book” page when I checked for a different edition. LibraryThing never lost the “add a book” context. +1 for LibraryThing.

I then dug out some less popular one books to really put these sites through their paces. A food guide from Taipei in Taiwanese with only an ISBN number recognizable, a 1964 copy of “Waves and Beaches”, a 1958 copy of “The Ghost of Follonsbee’s Folly” should present a challenge.

Shelfari found all of the modern books, but had trouble with the older ones. It listed multiple and inaccurate listings with almost no details. It was impossible to select the correct edition from all of the duplicates.

LibraryThing looked up the Library of Congress card numbers, let me choose the correct edition, and let me choose from user-contributed covers! The only book that both sites couldn’t locate was the food guide from Taipei. anobii had it listed.

Shelfari is free, has ads, is heavy on the eye-candy and light on the functionality. Shelfari owns all content you put into the system. LibraryThing is free up to 200 books, is $25 for life, has no ads, a less pretty interface and is powerful. LibraryThing uses the “Common Knowledge License”.

The Shelfari target market is a MySpace profile or hosted blog, rather than someone with their own website.

LibraryThing would benefit by turning off or trimming back many of the initial displays on a user’s default page. It’s overwhelming.

In terms of social interaction, LibraryThing has a mapping feature to find local members and group interaction. Shelfari is “social linking” oriented, but members do not interact as fully as on LibraryThing.

So, I will be researching LibraryThing more and working on integrating it with my website. I’m not sure about Delicious Library 2, since it is missing the social and book recommendation aspect of the online sites.

The Wisdom of Crowds

The world exists despite itself. So do large corporations. And crowds.

online fiction: the unrequited

lets continue the theme of sex, angst and alcohol. there is a common element in many social circles. the inaccessible woman at the center of a social tornado. chaos all around, calm at the center. everyone wants her, no one can get close. i was with one of these for a bit. somehow they use you up and move on without you noticing. only good memories come to mind. the pain was a small price. she never did slow down long enough to talk.

this is a short story awarded “top 10 online stories of 2003″. its well worth a read:

the unrequited

online fiction: aeroplane city

online fiction. two words that inspire. they inspire every crackpot in the world to put a few words after each other and publish a “story”. 3-line run-on sentences filled with adjectives. genre becomes mush. plot dies. and, they cannot put the story on a readable website.

except for a few. “the dangerman trilogy” is one of the best out there. no one knows about it. its only linked to from a handful of places.

this is sci-corp noir. the writing style is spare and refined. the dialogue tight. dalton, the main character, is the strongest part of the story. he is solid, hard-boiled and well defined. the environment is unique. with more development and content it would equal mieville. the technical toys are minimal, they should be expanded and integrated into the environment. like every online work, it does need an editor to help smooth a few rough spots. there is no reason this work should not eventually be published in book form.

the author seems to relish obscurity. he isnt going to hurry anything along. the first volume of the trilogy has been published online for years. we are waiting on the next two. i talked to him on the phone a bit. he said he will release them when the time is right. when they are complete.

sit down. relax. click here the dangerman trilogy and enjoy…

berlin noir

this book is actually a trilogy combined into a single volume. berlin noir is the classic example of an author producing a masterpiece and all of his other stuff being mediocre crap. the story takes place in berlin with an amazing grasp of the period that will attract any wwii/nazi history geek. more appealing is the hardboiled violence and grim, dark noir. if you like ellroy or chandler, you will like this.