Nintendo DS

Last weekend I made a trip to the Unclaimed Baggage store in Scottsboro, Alabama. They gather up all the stuff people leave in their, well, unclaimed baggage at airports and sell it rather substantially discounted off of list price. Flickr pictures are here.

The big find of the trip for me was my Nintendo DS. It has some scratches on the outside, and is missing a couple of unimportant accessories, but the discount made up for it.

After a week of playing with it on and off, I’m extremely impressed. I know I’m a bit late on the bandwagon for the system, but I still feel it is worth talking about. I only own three DS games, and two of them are extremely innovative. This is largely due to the touch screen. The lower of the two screens is manipulated via a stylus, and this new method of control really revolutionizes gameplay.

Super Mario 64 DS is a remake of the Nintendo 64 Mario game with a few extra features. I never really liked the original, so wasn’t surprised when this one underwhelmed me as well. Thankfully, the new mini-games make extensive use of the touch pad and are worth a play. This game came with the system or I wouldn’t own it.

Meteos, my next purchase, instantly claimed hours of my life. The game is a twist on the old “blocks falling from the sky” puzzle style that Tetris made famous. This time you manipulate the blocks directly on the lower screen with the stylus. The gameplay feels more immediate somehow, really putting you in the middle of the action.

Today I celebrated my first paycheck by purchasing Kirby’s Canvas Curse. Unlike Meteos, which has an option to play via control pad, Kirby can only be moved around via the touch pad. The player has to draw paths for him to follow, and tap the little pink dude to nudge him along the way.

Neither of these games would be particularly remarkable, or even playable, if controlled via a standard control pad and buttons.

As a bonus, the DS is backwards compatible with Game Boy Advance games. I scooped up the original Super Mario Brothers game very cheaply. This back catalog is a big plus. And to top it all off, the system is wireless-capable. I don’t know anybody else to play against right now, but this fall’s highly anticipated DS Mario Kart game promises to be enabled for free internet play. Sign me up!

The Playstation Portable may hold the ‘sexy’ spot in the handheld gaming market, but the DS delivers a unique and fun gaming experience at more than $100 less. Kudos to Nintendo for trying something different.

As a disclaimer, Nintendo does have a high nostalgia value for me. I grew up on their consoles, and their consoles alone. It almost feels like coming home again 🙂

Magical Time Travel

One of the strangest aspects of moving for me has been that of changing time zones. There’s tons of little things that you just don’t think about being different.

-My free phone minutes start an hour after my brother’s do back east
-The Today Show is tape-delayed by an hour
-Evening news and late night TV are not delayed, so now I keep forgetting what time they’re on
-When watching commercials, the second time in the “Tonight at 10/9c” statements

OK, so maybe most apply to television. But it still takes some getting used to.

P.S. I finally got around to updating the clock and ‘Welcome’ box, for those reading not via the RSS feed.

Best Job Ever

Driving home from work today, I was in a bit of a funk. The general tone of news today had me understandably depressed.

A little later on, there was a knock at my door. I answered it to find a young girl, maybe ten years old. She was selling items for her school, in one of those timeless catalog promotions. As I halfheartedly glanced through the pages, she noticed that I was still dressed in my khakis, nice shoes, and a button down shirt.

Girl: “Gee, you look like you have a pretty good job.”
Me: “I’m a librarian over at the University. Just started a few days ago, actually.”
Girl: “Wow! That has to be the best job ever!”

I smiled, and bought something. This girl is going to grow up to be one heck of a saleswoman.

How I got a job

Recently Beatrice pointed out that I should write about my job-getting experience.

Out of paranoia and superstition, I didn’t say much about the process as it was ongoing over the last month or so. But now the coast is a little clearer.

I started looking at jobs seriously in late May. The ALA career placement center was what kicked me into gear – particularly the knowledge that many employers would be interviewing at ALA in Chicago. So I signed up there, posted my resume, and began browsing/contacting the attending employers listed.

Before I get into details: I can’t say enough good things about the career placement web site and conference system! The site was reliable and very easy to navigate (though getting to it in the first place, buried in the ALA pages, can be tricky). The physical presence in Chicago was the same way.

I also have to mention my favorite listing in the system: Librarian for the CIA! From the job description: “Opportunities for international travel are available.”

Before my jump into the ALA system, I had sent out a few resumes to employers as I can across intriguing opportunities. Never heard back from any of them. Being still months removed from graduation, I wasn’t too surprised. Going into ALA I expected to run into more of the same. Boy, was I mistaken! I heard back from every single employer I contacted on the career placement web site. A number of them asked me to stop by their booths at the conference for a chat. One employer, Broward County Public of Florida, even scheduled me for an interview in advance. When I arrived in Chicago and checked my e-mail, I had three more messages waiting for me! In total, I had 5 invited ‘chats’ and 2 interviews scheduled before the conference even started!

The Broward interview even resulted in a job offer on the spot. While they look like a wonderful (and expanding!) system, and I can’t deny a life on the beach has a certain appeal, I ultimately felt they weren’t a good match for me. But I know a number of others accepted at the conference, including a classmate of mine.

The problem is that I don’t want to be solely a librarian. My bachelors is in Computer Information Science, and I really want to do ‘techie stuff’ in a library environment with some traditional duties thrown in. Broward, like most other public systems, relies on a separate county department for most of their IT work. They do have an entirely digital branch that intrigued me, but the offered job was not for there.

There are few opportunities to be both a librarian and a techie. And most of those that exist are for those with more experience than I. So while my heart has always been in public libraries, I had to turn my search elsewhere.

Academic libraries were the answer. A number of them have their own internal IT/systems/YourWordOfChoice staff to handle technology issues. I spoke with a rep from the University of Alabama in Huntsville in Chicago, and really enjoyed it. More of a casual chat than a traditional interview, really. After that, I scheduled a phone interview with the three-person search committee. This too went well, and I was soon flying down to meet everyone and have a final interview. Despite some shenanigans in flight delays and cancellations, I managed to somehow make it to Huntsville.

I spent a day meeting just about the entire staff of the library, and really liked what I saw. I particularly appreciated the lack of traditional interview questions – the staff was more interested in getting to know me as a person and talking casually about my background, than in obvious-answer questions like “How would you handle a busy reference desk?”. But best of all, they were looking for someone to be a hybrid tech/nontech librarian! As I was the final interviewee, again I was offered a job on the spot after the committe had a chance to discuss me.

And the rest, as they say, is history.

Oh, and another thing. Not that I’m planning on leaving my new job anytime soon, but Huntsville does have opportunities. Sirsi’s headquarters is there, and there’s a large number of high-tech companies around that must have information centers of some kind.

To be honest, my story isn’t typical. Very few of my friends here have jobs coming out of school. I think the fact that I was extremely flexible in location helped me a lot – I’m not tied down by any real commitments to one area yet. Particularly if you try to stay in the city you got your library degree in, the market is going to be swamped. That’s just the way it is. If you look more broadly, competition drops off a bit.

Here’s some other tips that helped me:
-Network. Meeting people at Computer in Libraries in DC, and through blogs and the web, led through a long chain of events to my job offers. And I’m not even very good at it!
-Get involved. At all my interviews and chats, employers were impressed to hear that I’d attended other professional events and had a bit of practical experience in libraries.
-Create an online presence. Not everyone I passed my resume out to followed the link to Hidden Peanuts, but some did. And it was a great topic for interview discussion. Even if its just a simple static web page, get something out there with your name on it. Start controlling your Google identity!
-Be flexible. I want to emphasize this one again. Not everyone can be, but don’t arbitrarily limit yourself to one area.

This post kind of balooned out of control, so I’ll cut myself off. I’d be happy to discuss it further through e-mail if anybody is interested.

Pittsburgh Oddities

As I prepare to leave Pittsburgh, I got thinking about the little idiosyncrasies that give any city its personality. Here’s a few for da burgh:

-The Third Fifth Bank is on Seventh Ave.
-When you ride the bus towards the city, you pay when you get on. When you ride away from the city, you pay when you get off. The best explination for this I’ve heard is that “maybe it gets the bums out of downtown”.
-“Yinz.” Think of it like “y’all”.
-Vacuum cleaners are “sweepers”, and sprinkles are “jimmies”. (I could write a whole other entry on the local lingo)
-No, there is no straight road between points A and B.
-Unlike most decently sized cities, nobody lives downtown. The extended city neighborhoods are where the action is.

I may add more later as they come to me.

2005: A Year (almost) in Pictures – 6 months later

Today marks the six month point in my epic quest to take a picture every day this year. I started on January 16th, the idea unfortunately coming to me a little late to get the whole calendar year in.

I’m rather impressed that I’ve managed to take one every day so far, though admittedly they were often uploaded in batches, a few days’ worth at a time. Some are boring, others are quite good. But my aptitude with my camera has definitely improved, and I like to think the shots have as well.

You can see the whole colleciton here, but these are a few of my favorites thus far. Click for larger versions and descriptions:

1/22:
01/22/05

2/4:
02/04/05

4/30:
04/30/05

5/22:
05/22/05

5/24:
05/24/05

7/10:
07/10/05

Buy a Slurpee, get a song

07/12/05
In celebration of the Slurpee’s 40th birthday, 7-11 is giving away iTunes songs with a purchase! Just buy a 32 ounce slurpee, and the code for a free song is printed near the bottom of the cup.

The slurpee costs just $1.39, so if you redeem the song then the slurpee is really just costing you $.40. Not a bad deal on these hot summer days.

I was confused at first as to how I should redeem my song – the code is a bit hard to spot. So look close!

I’m not sure how much longer this will go on for, so take advantage while you can. There’s also a contest of some kind going on, you can win more songs and such at www.Slurpee.com.

Look Out Below!

07/06/05

I got my new fridge today! Only ten and a half months after requesting one. The delivery men decided they didn’t want to carry the old back down the stairs, so… off the balcony it went! Very cathartic.

P.S.

I need to add a number eleven to my list of ten things I learned at ALA:

I am truly excited about being a librarian.

I can say without hyperbole that going into this field is the best decision I’ve ever made. I won’t make as much money as I would in the IT sector, but I get to actually meet and help real human beings – on a minute to minute basis. I get to make their lives just a little bit easier. And I get to love what I’ll do!

I haven’t always been quite so excited. But once I started blogging, once I started making connections outside the classroom I quickly reached critical mass.

So thank you Mom and Dad, and Dr. Birmingham, and the whole staff at the Fairport Public Library. Thank you to everyone who ever encouraged me towards signing up for my MLS, and didn’t respond with a blank look and “You need a degree to do that?”

OK, so maybe I didn’t learn this just at ALA. But it sure was reaffirmed. I met and re-met so many wonderful people, and I can’t wait to join you all as a full colleague.