DEPARTMENTS
Looking for Space
By Lauree Padgett
Tunesmith Paul Simon had it right: "April, come she
will." Not that she doesn't take her dear, sweet time,
mind you. But she gets here. And with April comes one
of my favorite holidays. While not a big seller for
Hallmark, for me, April 1 (aka April Fools' Day) rates
right up there with Christmas, Easter, and the NCAA
men's basketball final. (Well, OK. The latter's not
an official holiday, but it should be.)
April 1, you see, gives me permissionnay, an invitationto
have a little fun with my friends and co-workers. Over
the years, I've pulled off some pretty good jokes.
In college, I told the alumni office secretary that
a power failure had wiped out all her computer records.
Once, after discovering a co-worker had a habit of
leaving his keys in his unlocked car, I had an accomplice
move it so that when he went to lunch, it was gone.
For the last several years, I've targeted one person:
the head of production here at Information Today, Inc.
But it's her own fault, really. Each year, she announces
to one and all, "Lauree will not get me this year." She
even tells new employees not to talk to me on April
1. Honestly! So, of course, if she's insisting that
there's just no way I'm going to trick her, I have
to take the challenge, don't I? But don't fear, dear
readers. I would never lead you astray. The articles
I'm highlighting from Computers in Libraries, The
CyberSkeptic's Guide, and Searcher will
be worth your while. And that's no foolin'!
Homeland Bound
To tweak another old folk tune: "Where has all the
government information gone, long-time passing? Where
has all the government information gone, long time
ago?" Well, believe it or not, all of it isn't under
lock and key. According to Linda Zellmer ("How Homeland
Security Affects Spatial Information, Computers
in Libraries, April 2004), since 9/11, much of
the spatial information (place names, maps, aerial
photos) that had been previously available on government
Web sites has been taken off.
Zellmer notes, "Interestingly, most of the spatial
data that has been withdrawn by government agencies
is available from other agencies or the private sector." Here's
an example: While the Department of Transportation's
Office of Pipeline Safety removed the National Pipeline
Mapping System from its site after 9/11, pipeline,
refinery, and energy production and transmission data
can be obtained through PennWell, an energy and petroleum
information marketing company.
The article provides a history of security-versus-access
issues that stems back to the Cold War era. As a member
of the Federal Geographic Data Committee's Homeland
Security Working Group (you gotta love government names),
Zellmer can give details you might not learn elsewhere.
She discusses why so much data that was once freely
available has been put on red alert, whether these
drastic measures are accomplishing their goal (the
story of a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reporter
will make you wonder), and how to track down the spatial
info you need.
Yesterday Once More
One day, I woke up with the Carpenters' song "Merry
Christmas, Darling" going through my head. I had no
idea why. Then, while reading the newspaper, I discovered
it was Karen Carpenter's birthday. Eerie, huh? Something
that Genie Tyburski finds unsettling is mismatched
pieces of information that may add up to a client's
lack of integrity. In "Lies, Damned Lies, and the Internet
Archive" (The CyberSkeptic's Guide, April 2004),
the woman behind The Virtual Chase service highlights
how you can find archival information on the Web, even
when you have to go "way back" for it.
The slogan for the Information Archive (http://www.archive.org),
which was founded in 1996, could be "more than 30 billion
Web pages stored." While it was always "open for business" for
researchers, Tyburski notes that "the collection did
not become readily accessible until the introduction
of the Wayback Machine in 2001." Through the Wayback
Machine (http://www.archive.org/web/web.php), searchers
can find archived pages by their Web URLs. Archived
documents can be displayed along with any pages that
are linked from it.
This all sounds simple, right? Well, yes and no.
If you haven't used the Internet Archive or Wayback
Machine ("Thank you, Mister Know-It-All!" Sorry, I
just had to do that for all the Rocky and Bullwinkle
fans out there!), let Tyburski show you the ins and
outs, such as how to use Recall Search, a beta version
of a keyword search feature. She'll also give you a
heads-up about problems you may encounter along the
way back!
Audit Be Me
Ulla de Stricker knows her stuff when it comes to
information audits ("Hunches and Lunches: Using the
Information Audit to Understand Information Culture," Searcher,
April 2004). She says, "[T]he information audit is
about as fundamental a tool as there can be when it
comes to planning and managing information operations
of all kinds." She also knows why information audits
often hit a wallan information culture wall that
prevents recommendations stemming from the audit from
being carried out.
In the article, de Stricker looks at ways to find
subtle hints of the encroaching culture wall and suggests
ways in which the culture can be included as part of
the information audit. This means adding a third dimension
to the audit that goes beyond finding out who does
what and how with information objects as well as how
this information gets passed along and by whom. de
Stricker emphasizes a need to include the "belief" audit
into overall planning exercises. Through the belief
audit, the convictions of the company's leaders and
knowledge workers are probed in accordance with how
ROI is connected with information systems, tools, and
practices.
If your information audit focus groups are less than
focused, and you feel that you're at an impasse, let
de Stricker show you the ropes. She'll help you scale
the information culture wall so that you can not only
get the recommendations that will move your organization
along, but put them into action.
To Sleep, Perchance to Plot
My column's done, and there's no Duke game to watch,
so it's off to bed for me. And as I wait to fall asleep,
I think I'll work a little more on this year's April
Fools' joke. And believe me, my friend won't know what
hit her!
Lauree Padgett is Information
Today, Inc.'s manager of editorial services. Her e-mail
address is lpadgett@infotoday.com.
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