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Thursday, July 06, 2006

The Book is Dead - Long Live the Book (and the casebook you rode in on)

Here is a link to an article on one person's view of books in the future...
http://www.buzzmachine.com/index.php/2006/05/19/the-book-is-dead-long-live-the-book/

And then someone's analysis on the applicability to casebooks:

http://caliopolis.classcaster.org/blog/legal_education/2006/05/24/casebookdead

Used book study

Here is a 42 page study on the used book market --- College textbooks in Science, Economics, etc.

http://gsbwww.uchicago.edu/fac/austan.goolsbee/research/texts.pdf

Used-Book Market Shows Huge Growth

http://bookstoretourism.blogspot.com/2006/03/1st-comprehensive-study-of-used-book.html

1st Comprehensive Study of Used-Book Market Shows Huge Growth
Used-book sales make up close to 10 percent of total consumer spending on books and are continuing to grow, according to a just-released report by the Book Industry Study Group.The first in-depth study of the entire used-book market showed that sales of used books in the U.S. topped $2.2 billion in 2004, a jump of 33 percent from 2003 with more than 111 million copies sold. According to BISG, the study includes data provided by all of the major online used-book retailers, with data from more than 500 other booksellers and more than 2000 book buyers.Not surprisingly, a principal analyst for the study concluded that "Used books are now a factor in the business equation for publishers and booksellers," and that the Internet has played a key role in this development.Two thirds of booksellers who participated in the study said that used-book sales do not affect sales of new copies.BISG is the industry's leading trade association for policy, standards and research.

XML Help?

I wrote a program that takes an XML file into memory using Minidom. Ifound out that the XML document is 10gb.I clearly need SAX or something else?Any suggestions on what that something else is? Is it hard to convertthe code from DOM to SAX?.

My code is finally working!

AJAX Wrapper enhanced

AJAX Wrapper enhanced
After creating a simple leak free defensive AJAX wrapper, and tweaking a bit to more effectively handle leaks, I found out that under certain (really uncommon, infrequent and abnormal) situations the object can still leak a little bit of memory.So I decided to attach an onunload handler to the constructor and get rid of the leaks for good.In addition, I enhanced the object further. It will be available to the rest of the world when I release the new version of sardalya. But for you lucky guys out there, I'm pasting entire code below./** XHRequest ----- **/function XHRequest(){ this._fields=[]; this._values=[]; this._initialized=false; this.init(); }_this=XHRequest.prototype;_this.removeAllFields=function(){ this._fields.length=0; this._values.length=0;};_this.addField=function(strField,strValue){ this._fields.push(strField); this._values.push(TextFormatter.escape(strValue));};_this.post=function(strURL,_blnSync){ if(!this._xhr) { return; } if(!_blnSync) { _blnSync=false; } var uq=this._generateURL(strURL); this._xhr.open("POST",uq.url,!_blnSync); this._setRequestHeaders(); this._xhr.setRequestHeader("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded");

Law Dog of the Week??

http://lawdawglib.blogspot.com/

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Zoe Is Law Dog of the Week
This week's SIU Law Dog is Zoe, who belongs to 3L Jim and Melanie Stivers. Zoe likes to play frisbee, and she knows how to stay cool. See more photos of Zoe by clicking on her picture in the Gallery of SIU Law Dogs.
For information on submitting your dog photo, go to Law Dog of the Week. We will feature each SIU law dog whose photo is submitted. To see photos of all previous Law Dogs of the week, visit our Gallery of SIU Law Dogs, which you can find under Related Links in the sidebar.
posted by Diane Murley at 7/02/2006 05:25:00 AM. Permanent link to this item. 0 comments

Legal Publishing in 2006

Interesting post about our Academic segment and West in general...

http://outofthejungle.blogspot.com/2006/01/legal-publishing-in-2006.html

Legal Publishing in 2006
I just had a very interesting conversation with Kent McKeever at Columbia's law school library. I give him huge credit for a lot of insight in the current state of law publishing. He pointed out that MBAs are running the various Thomson umbrella companies and, I suppose all the remaining publishing and vendor companies as well. They don't necessarily know boo about law books or practicing law or libraries. They are, unfortunately for us all, learning on the job. The upper level management sets performance standards that the mid-managers and sales folks have to meet. They may not understand that, though Yale and Harvard seem wealthy, that 1) they are outliers and 2) they certainly are not going to touch their endowments to buy books. The rest of us don't have big endowments and certainly can't touch what little we have to buy books, either. We have a regular operating budget that has to stretch to accommodate the huge price increases that have been seen each year since the monopolies were authorized. They are killing the goose that laid their golden eggs in two ways. They are devouring the library budgets in larger bites by shifting the prices so that single purchases or subscriptions cost more. And they are making their own divisions compete against each other, including making print compete on an unfair playing field against electronic. This will destroy their own brand name, and I am particularly thinking of West, here, although the same charge can probably be levelled agains other vendor/publishers as well.The single purchase/bigger bite issue means that they will not be able to sell as many different products to any single library. It many mean that no other vendor or publisher will be able to get their product on our shelf, which may be their thinking, but they won't be able to get any other products on our shelves, either. I have had to cancel a number of products that I used to carry, in order to protect my core collection. I am sure I am not the only librarian in this fix. The publishers have not gained any more money from me; they have reduced the number of products they are selling me!The unfair playing field between electronic and print: This was something that Kent said he had been told in a private conversation. Evidently, at West, until very, very recently, the print products have borne the entire cost of the editorial staff that produce the materials. Then the electronic products get the same text, without having to contribute to the editorial overhead in their accounting for profitability. Wow! So Westlaw looks fabulously profitable, and every one of those individual West-produced databases looks golden, if you don't factor in the overhead for the editorial work that underlies the text. According to Kent, they are just now coming to think about making the electronic guys pay their share. There seems to be an internecine war going on over it.You can see how the print would be forced to the brink of extinction in a bookkeeping war like that! I had not known about this. I did know that the individual divisions within Thomson/West were competing. Perhaps this works well to have two brands of diapers that compete against each other. I am not sure that the same factors bear in the publishing world. You have a much smaller market for these books and databases. And each potential customer has a very limited budget to spend. There is not, as the publishers seem to envision it, a bottomless purse of money at universities. We have a very real limit on what we can spend, and my choice is driven by what my students and faculty need most. So, when push comes to shove, I have to choose the core legal materials that our Legal Practice Skills faculty choose to teach about, and the materials that support the rest of our curriculum , and my faculty's research interests. Period. The MBAs need to learn fast, or we are going to lose our legal publishing industry in spite of betting that letting Thomson take it over would save it!

West Begins Podcasting...

As you know, my many podcasts are heard far and wide. It looks like West has begun their own version of "Bloomcasting"

http://betweenlawyers.corante.com/archives/2006/05/22/westcast.php