Saturday, June 29, 2013

ALA2013 Day 1

Today officially kicked off the ALA 2013 conference.  I began the day at the Class of 2k13 debut authors.  The program was hosted by Veronica Roth (Divergent, Insurgent and Oct 2013's Allegiant).  The line up was:

Caela Carter
Cristin Terrill
Debra Driza
Demitria Lunetta
Geoffrey Girard
Jennifer McGowan
K.A. Barson
Kate Karyus Quinn
Liesl Shurtliff
Lydia Kang
Mindy McGinnis
Nicole McInnes
Polly Holyoke, Panel Coordinator, The Class of 2k13
Stephanie Kuehn
Tamera Wissinger
Tara Sullivan

A trivia game followed with each of the debut authors hosting a table; to the winners (not me) were "super" grab bags.
It was a fun program and it looks like it will be a good year for YA fiction.


The next program I attended was Intellectual Freedom 101 hosted by the Office of Intellectual freedom and then the General Opening Session.

At this point the Exhibitor Hall opened  and there was a flash flood of Librarians being swept down the aisles, grabbing what they could as they poured down the aisles,

More details and pics to come.

Michael

Thursday, June 27, 2013

ALA2013 warm-up day

Today was the first full day in Chicago.  The weather was great and even had a few minutes of nice cool rain early in the morning.

Today's goals were to get my conference badge, scope out the convention center and begin to "nest".

The first two tasks were accomplished.  The third is under way.  I've got a couple of days worth of food from the local store.  With a small fridge in the hotel room, this is a great cost saving measure as restaurants, room service and snack machines get expensive for a conference that lasts 4-5 days.  One of the few benefits of being diabetic is getting a higher priority for a hotel fridge for the room.

As an added bonus, the 9 story Harold Washington Library was right across the street from the store.  Topped with a skylight garden and gargoyles at the top, this is an impressive building.

The first floor houses their Popular Collection and Information desk.

The second floor is the 18,000 sq.ft. Thomas Hughes Children's Library.  A quick look around shows that the space clearly is designed for children; my opinion is that a children's space should look appealing to children.  This is true of this space.  Kudos to the Chicago Public Library System.

The third floor contains the computer commons, the newspapers/periodicals and my favorite part, the new Maker Space.  According to an employee, this is set to open in about a month but as a conference attendee I was able to join the group that was touring the space.  There were about half a dozen laptops, a laser etching machine and several  3-D printers working away.  The coolest part was the laptop hooked up to a Microsoft Kinect sensor that, after taking a picture of someone, was able to send the image directly to the 3-D printer to create a bust of the person.  Uber-cool!

Unfortunately, at this stage, my blood sugar took a major drop and I had to leave.  I think the 13 hours it took to get from AZ to IL yesterday and today's humidity combined with the four miles I walked in 3 hours was a bit too much.  Like a dope I left my sugar boosters in the fridge at the hotel.  D'oh!

No worries though.  The store across the street supplied me with what I needed and I was able to down some orange juice and stock up on a couple days of supplies.  I returned to the hotel with plans to check out the rest of the library before leaving town.

I have pictures to upload including some shots with Flat Stanley.  My new phone isn't playing nice with the computer right now but I'll get them up soon.

Time to catch some zzzzz's.  The conference kicks off with sessions tomorrow.

Michael



Wednesday, June 19, 2013

We did it!

Thanks to everyone who donated, tweeted, cross-posted and spread the word in any way!

I reached my funding goal for the "Please help get me to ALA Annual 2013" crowdfunding campaign with a couple days to spare on cofundedu

I'm just so excited to be at ALA this year and that there was such an outpouring of support for this new project.

If you are a library staff member who wants to get to a conference but you or your library don't have the funds, start a campaign!



Michael