<< October 2010 | December 2010 >>
- Amazon to Allow Lending of Kindle E-Books [ABC News]
- Wait! You Can’t Retire Without Sharing That with Us [American Libraries]
- Censorship at its Finest [For the Love of YA]
- Redefining the library in the age of Google and Wikipedia [International Business Times]
- Inside the Google Books Algorithm [The Atlantic]
- Wikipedia Teams Up With Academia [All Things Considered]
- On Productivity [The School of Life]
- The RIAA's latest victory over Jammie Thomas-Rasset [Los Angeles Times]
- The cook and the thieves: a win for internet IP [The Sydney Morning Herald]
- Color Comes to E Ink Screens [The New York Times]
- “U.S. News & World Report” Goes Digital-Only [Mashable]
- Truth Be Told: How College Students Evaluate and Use Information in the Digital Age [Project Information Literacy]
- Amazon.com removes controversial book but controversies may return [Marketplace]
- Libraries reinvent themselves as they struggle to remain relevant in the digital age [Chicago Tribune]
- Will Your Local Library Lend E-Books? (Or Can They?) [ReadWriteWeb]
- James Frey’s Fiction Factory [New York Magazine]
- The Shadow Scholar [The Chronicle of Higher Education]
- In Jordan, a bookstore devoted to forbidden titles [Los Angeles Times]
- Digital Keys for Unlocking the Humanities’ Riches [The New York Times]
- As Textbooks Go Digital, Campus Bookstores May Go Bookless [The Chronicle of Higher Education]
- France to return South Korea royal books on lease [Reuters]
- A News Corp. Newspaper, but Not in Print [The New York Times]
- Bookend to a Presidency [The Wall Street Journal]
- The Visibility and Invisibility of Librarians [Library Journal]
- Palin’s Publisher and Gawker Settle Case [The New York Times]
- Testing Enhanced E-Books [The Wall Street Journal]
- U.S. seizes sites linked to copyright infringement [CNET News]
- A Bully Finds a Pulpit on the Web [The New York Times]
- Bibliophiles turn to online stores for best buys [Business Standard]
- U.S. Weighs Legal Options in Wikileaks Release [CBS News]
These links are not updated for accuracy; older links may be dead.
This service is run by John Hubbard (write to me).At latitude 60 degrees south you can sail the entire way around the world.