jdupuis

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John Dupuis

I'm a science librarian at the Steacie Science & Engineering Library at York University in Toronto.  My collections and liaison areas include engineering, computer science, earth and space science, information technology, science and technology studies and the Natural Science program.

Posts by this author

For your reading and collection development pleasure. It's been so long since I last did one of these listings, I actually have another one coming up in a day or so. Good Faith Collaboration: The Culture of Wikipedia by Joseph Michael Reagle Jr. (ISBN-13: 978-0262014472) Wikipedia, the online…
Canadian horror/dark fantasy writer Kelley Armstrong has a nice list of 10 favourite horror novels in a recent issue of the Globe and Mail. Here it is: The Shining by Stephen King The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris The Turn of The Screw by Henry James The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty…
A second Halloween-related post, with the happy day coming up this weekend. My "give a scary book" post came on Monday. Anyways, a recent post on Horrornews.net really resonated with me: Growing up as a horror fan. Mostly because I too grew up a huge horror fan, mostly watching cheesy old Hammer…
A week or two ago, in a comment on the Blogging Groups and Ethics post, I lamented that I always seem to be reading the same librarianish blogs, not mixing it up too much. I wished that we might have a blogging community to assemble around, or at least a good aggregator. Well, Bora Zivkovic…
Slice and Scan After Launching Search and Discovery, Who Is Mission Control? The smart scholar's publication-venue heuristics; or, how to use open access to advance your career Piracy trumps obscurity again Open to All: Preserving Library Values in a Digital World Proposing a Taxonomy of Social…
You know, there just aren't enough useless holiday excuses to give books to people. Giving books as presents has to be one of my all-time favourite things to do in life -- especially the opportunity to give books to my family! So, it seems that Neil Gaiman has a really, really good idea. I…
As I mentioned a few days ago, the kind librarians of Brock University in St. Catherines, ON invited me to give a talk as part of their Open Access Week suite of events. I've included my slides for the presentation below. There was a small but engaged group of mostly librarians that turned up.…
Ah, The Cronk News. Always good for a laugh at academia's expense! I like this one from a few weeks ago, an amusing take on the whole town vs. gown issue: Townies Make Preemptive Strike On College Town/Gown relations in Norwich, CT deteriorated in record time this year when students returned to…
Ok, not a bar, more like an information literacy class. I thought I'd bring to everyone's attention a presentation by two of my York University Libraries colleaques, web librarian William Denton and instruction librarian Adam Taves. It was at Access in Winnipeg a week or so ago: After Launching…
The False Security of Technology? What Might We Be Missing? Reading Instrumentally Why blogging still matters Outsourcing Plus (Partnering to provide more online ed choices) Long Road to Open Access The Down-side of Technology? On Class Time Wikimedia: Power, Leadership, and Movement Roles Gaming…
The kind librarians at Brock University in St. Catherines, Ontario have invited me to help them celebrate Open Access Week! Their rather impressive lineup of OA Week events (and I'm not just saying this because I'm involved, believe me) is here. My part is a talk I'm giving on Wednesday: Wednesday…
It's Open Access Week this week and as part of the celebrations I thought I highlight a recent declaration by the Open Bibliographic Working Group on the Principles for Open Bibliographic Data. It's an incredible idea, one that I support completely -- the aim is to make bibliographic data open,…
A really interesting article on Tor.com from this past August by Ryan Britt, A Fondness for Antiques: The Future of Books According to Science Fiction. In the past few years, media pundits and tech experts have been abuzz with variations on the question: "what is the future of the book?" Luckily,…
The latest Cites & Insights (v10i11) is out and in it Walt Crawford explores some of the recent developments in the blogging landscape in a section called The Zeitgeist: Blogging Groups and Ethics. It's a very good overview and analysis of what's going on both in the science and librarian…
STEM Education Has Little to Do With Flowers When an imploring librarian is not enough Investments in the Term Economy Reference Management with the iPad Reference Management meets Web 2.0 Library mobile apps vs web apps - Some analysis Conversing in a Cyberspace Community: The Growth of HPS (…
Ah, The Onion. I haven't used them in a while for my Friday Fun and it was feeling like it was way overdue. As usual, classic stuff: Historians Admit To Inventing Ancient Greeks: A group of leading historians held a press conference Monday at the National Geographic Society to announce they had "…
This graphic novel series is simply amazing. It's some of the best graphic pure storytelling I've come across in a very long time -- I just can't recommend it enough. The story is perfectly paced: slow when it needs to be but mostly taut and exciting, pulling you from episode to episode like a…
The Genius of the Tinkerer: The secret to innovation is combining odds and ends A Call for Open Textbooks Self-archiving diary by Peter Suber So what does a science librarian DO? Book Futures: A Crowdsourced Thought Experiment Frontiers, F1000, PLoS One, Mendeley et al., brace yourselves Social…
This year's Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing took place this past week in Atlanta, GA. I thought I'd gather together some small part of the blog posts I've been seeing floating around the Internets on this wonderful event. Opening Session of Grace Hopper Conference - 2010 Dancing…
Ebooks Don't Cannibalize Print, People Do The Why, When, Where, How of publishing data Libraries Make it Personal Make The Revolution (Anil Dash on social media & social movements) Searching For Better Research Habits Digitizing the Personal Library Good Freely Available Textbooks on Machine…
You can always tell it's Nobel season -- because that's when the Ig Nobel prizes are announced! The 2010 laureates have been announced. Here are some "highlights:" ENGINEERING PRIZE: Karina Acevedo-Whitehouse and Agnes Rocha-Gosselin of the Zoological Society of London, UK, and Diane Gendron of…
Your Hate Mail Will be Graded: A Decade of Whatever, 1998-2008 is a collection of John Scalzi's favourite posts from the first decade of his blog's existence. And it's quite a collection too -- of course one that is best taken in short doses, one or two posts per day over a longish period of time…
A photo tour of the Large Hadron Collider Does Every Question Matter? An American In Paris Says Au Revoir To His Laptop U of Calgary Library Video Game Collection rocks Twitter! and Video game centre installed on campus Accessibility isn't a "feature": Responding to a drive-by comment A…
I'm a life-long fan of science fiction, mostly as a reader but occasionally as a book reviewer. Way back, when dinosaurs walked the earth, I even took a couple of science fiction literature classes. And, as readers of this blog well know, I love nothing better than a good list of books. So…
It's time for the annual Mocking of the Thomson Reuters session. They're at it again. Can the winners of the Nobel Prize be correctly predicted? Since 1989, Thomson Reuters has developed a list of likely winners in medicine, chemistry, physics, and economics. Those chosen are named Thomson…
Almost Halfway There: an Analysis of the Open Access Behaviors of Academic Librarians The eReaders Bill of Rights (the Kobo Perspective) Plagiarism and essay mills Do Students Listen to Others' Views? Bad at Math? Visualizing the Science Blogosphere (and Open-Sourcing It) Writing: Find the Time or…
Having started my working life as a software developer, I know a bit about epic bugs. Let's just say I've had my share and leave it at that. At very least, I can say I never caused any vehicles to crash or any companies to fail. So, from ComputerWorld, Epic failures: 11 infamous software bugs.…
12 Rules for New (Academic) Administrators The Facebook Reckoning Kickin' it old-school: The rise of the mature student In the context of web context: How to check out any Web page Value of Academic Libraries Report SIMCITY by Neil Gaiman On open data and disruptive innovation Data mash-ups and…
I know I'm sure as hell having a hard time keeping up with all the comings and goings. If anything, the impression is probably that the lights are practically out and we're all singing Old Lang Syne. This, of course, is far from the case. The lights are still on, we're most of us blogging away.…
From this day forward, Scott Rosenberg is an honorary librarian. One of the things that librarians talk about a lot is how to evaluate a random web page -- what signs and signals to look for that will give the unsuspecting student a clue as to whether or not they might want to use a particular web…