Library Bytegeist

Library podcast by the Metropolitan New York Library Council

This podcast is a collection of audio stories fro…

  • 6 minutes 7 seconds
    #18 Presenting Preserve This Podcast!
    Enjoy this clip from a new podcast that Library Bytegeist host and producer, Molly Schwartz, has been working on! It's called Preserve This Podcast. You can find more information on our website, at www.preservethispodcast.org. Episode 18 transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1xVS-XXlEx3kggw9artPMjSDhkPQpSKpjURDi_Xut8hk/edit “The Podsucker” is a machine that Jason Scott built in his basement 15 years ago. Jason was trying to capture all the podcasts -- before they disappear. Preserve This Podcast is a series about how podcasts are disappearing. And what podcasters can do to save them. Follow along with our podcast preservation exercises by downloading the zine at [preservethispodcast.org][1]. - More about Jason Scott's podcast archiving work on [his website: ASCII by Jason Scott][2] - More about Dave Winer's RSS work on [his website: RSS on the desktop, 15 years later][3] - [Download/print our zine][4] from our website to prepare for Episode 1, coming out March 21st! [1]: http://preservethispodcast.org/#zine [2]: http://ascii.textfiles.com/archives/844 [3]: http://scripting.com/2017/03/30/rssOnTheDesktop15YearsLater.html [4]: http://preservethispodcast.org/#zine
    23 April 2019, 4:24 pm
  • 31 minutes 19 seconds
    #17 At Home in the Library
    This episode of Library Bytegeist is all about New York’s public libraries and the people who inhabit them. In a city that has a reputation for being inhospitable, many people have found a makeshift home away from home in the library. Leila Goldstein reports a story about the live-in custodians and their families who used to have apartments in NYPL. Noam Osband reports a story about Brooklyn Public Library's experiments with new furniture to make library spaces more flexible. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1cOp_s5z2S2vS0aFYVjsvn6U5p30QT_ByyDjX2WcQkxA/edit?usp=sharing Hosted and Produced by Molly Schwartz Reported features by Leila Goldstein and Noam Osband Audio Mastering by Dalton Harts Music and Soundtracks: Opening track: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald from the YouTube Audio Library “Rarified” by Podington Bear from www.soundofpicture.com "Magical Dirt" by Sir Cubworth from the YouTube Audio Library Closing track: "Red Hair, Blue Sky" by Monplaisir from the Free Music Archive Tools used to record this podcast: The audio booth at METRO: bit.ly/MetroAudio RE20 microphone: www.electrovoice.com/product.php?id=91 oTranscribe: otranscribe.com/ Reaper: www.reaper.fm/ Izotope: www.izotope.com/en/products/repai…plug-in-pack.html
    13 September 2018, 7:58 pm
  • 39 minutes 19 seconds
    #16 Collectors, Keepers, and a Kitchen Sister
    This episode of Library Bytegeist is all about collectors and keepers. The people who go through life gathering and capturing and saving things. First up, we have a short story by Sarah Esocoff about Collector’s Night in NYC (minute 2:38 - 9:56). Then, we have an interview Nikki Silva, one half of a radio duo known as the Kitchen Sisters (minute 10:40 - 38:18). The Kitchen Sisters have produced hundreds of stories for NPR and other public radio programs. In this interview, Nikki breaks down how she and Davia Nelson find and use archival audio, and how they became accidental archivists in the process. The Kitchen Sisters are launching a new series called “The Keepers,” and they’re looking for stories about archivists, librarians, and curators. You can call The Keepers Hotline at 415-496-9049 and listen to their work on their podcast, "The Kitchen Sisters Present," part of Radiotopia's collective of independent producers. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ejXGbKPEMWnAAIYF_-JuCWZlDpGkalbcg1yIkQX4RcE/edit?usp=sharing Hosted and Produced by Molly Schwartz Audio Mastering by Dalton Harts Music and Soundtracks: Opening track: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald from the YouTube Audio Library “Letter to Louie" by Mrs. B, a home recording from the Kitchen Sisters “The Road Ranger” by The Kitchen Sisters for NPR: http://www.kitchensisters.org/stories/early-work/ "The Legend of Ernest Morgan" by The Kitchen Sisters for NPR: https://soundcloud.com/kitchensisters/the-legend-of-ernest-morgan "An Unexpected Kitchen: The George Foreman Grill" by The Kitchen Sisters on "The Kitchen Sisters Present" podcast, part of Radiotopia: http://www.kitchensisters.org/fugitivewaves/george-foreman/ "Tennessee Williams: The Pennyland Recordings" by The Kitchen Sisters on "The Kitchen Sisters Present" podcast, part of Radiotopia: https://soundcloud.com/fugitivewaves/tennessee-williams-the-pennyland-recordings "First Day of School, 1960, New Orleans" by The Kitchen Sisters on "The Kitchen Sisters Present" podcast, part of Radiotopia: http://www.kitchensisters.org/present/first-day-of-school-1960-new-orleans/ The Keepers, a new Kitchen Sisters series coming to NPR’s Morning Edition, June 2018: http://www.kitchensisters.org/keepers/ Closing track: "A Gentleman" by Podington Bear from the Free Music Archive Tools used to record this podcast: The audio booth at METRO: bit.ly/MetroAudio RE20 microphone: www.electrovoice.com/product.php?id=91 oTranscribe: otranscribe.com/ Reaper: www.reaper.fm/ Izotope: www.izotope.com/en/products/repai…plug-in-pack.html
    10 July 2018, 2:46 pm
  • 22 minutes 8 seconds
    #15 Classifying Books, Classifying People
    The Dewey Decimal System is the most popular library classification system in the world. It was created by a man, named Melvil Dewey, in the late 1870's. And Dewey's system of classifying knowledge reflects his worldview as a white man living in the late 19th century. In this episode of Library Bytegeist, we break down the Dewey Decimal System and talk frankly about the power and pitfalls of classifying. We'll visit the Bard High School Early College in Queens to find out about how students there are planning to rebel from the Dewey Decimal System, and talk to Greg Cotton (Cornell College), Barbara Fister (Gustavus Adolphus College), and Dorothy Berry (Umbra Search Project). Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1cnCgQFM3HYqN_EnZ8SV5TwP_-czrYtZAoqwKUDUC3dk/edit?usp=sharing Hosted and Produced by Molly Schwartz Editing help from the Metropolitan New York Library Council staff and Peter Balonon-Rosen Audio Mastering by Dalton Harts Music and Soundtracks: Opening track: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald from the YouTube Audio Library “Library Ambiance” by morosopher from freesound.org “Bookshelf, findbooks.wav” by Ryding from freesound.org "The Music Room" by WMRhapsodies from the Free Music Archive Closing track: "Red Hair, Blue Sky" by Monplaisir from the Free Music Archive Tools used to record this podcast: The audio booth at METRO: bit.ly/MetroAudio RE20 microphone: https://www.electrovoice.com/product.php?id=91 AT8035 shotgun microphone: https://www.audio-technica.com/cms/wired_mics/0576da91f00c03db/ Zoom H5 recorder: https://www.zoom-na.com/products/field-video-recording/field-recording/zoom-h5-handy-recorder oTranscribe: http://otranscribe.com/ Reaper: www.reaper.fm/ Izotope: www.izotope.com/en/products/repai…plug-in-pack.html
    3 May 2018, 4:53 pm
  • 11 minutes 46 seconds
    #14 Bye bye Bytegeist ... a year in review!
    One year ago today, we post the first episode of Library Bytegeist. Molly Schwartz, METRO’s Studio Manager who also hosts and produces LB, decided to take the 14th episode to put together a kind of “year in review.” It’s a look back at the year gone by, including audio snippets from past episodes, a short history of how the podcast came into being, and a reflection on all of the changes that METRO has been through in the past year. And there are also a couple of announcements about what’s in store for the future of LB … so listen away and stay tuned! Audio Mastering by Dalton Harts Music and Soundtracks: “Wendy Critical Reader // Walter Scott // ASMR Page Turning” by ~tingleheads~ from YouTube Opening track: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald from the YouTube Audio Library "Rodeo Show" by The Green Orbs from the YouTube Audio Library “Electric car start-up and drive away” by evsecrets from freesound.org “Car_Start_Drive_1.wav” by Duesenbert from freesound.org “Typing” by yugi16dm from freesound.org "Transmography” by X________X" from the Free Music Archive “A Gentleman” by Podington Bear from the Free Music Archive Including clips from the following Library Bytegeist episodes: #1 Meet the METRO Fellows (Katie Martinez, Karen Hwang, Molly Schwartz) #3 Talking Smart Cities with the New School's Shannon Mattern (Shannon Mattern) #4 Talking Pop-up Media Migration with the XFR Collective’s Rachel Mattson (Rachel Mattson) #5 Talking Love Letters in the Digital Age with AMNH's Iris Lee (Iris Lee) #6 Talking Privacy with Librarians (Chuck McAndrew) #8 In the Library with the Paintbrush: artist residencies (Ben Vershbow) #11 Talking Internet Filters in Public Libraries with Westchester Library System's Rob Caluori (Rob Caluori) Tools used to record this podcast: Blue Yeti microphone: www.bluemic.com/products/yeti/ Transcribe: transcribe.wreally.com/app Reaper: www.reaper.fm/ Izotope: www.izotope.com/en/products/repai…plug-in-pack.html
    15 November 2017, 6:14 pm
  • 12 minutes 43 seconds
    #13 Talking GitHub with Dinah Handel and Ethan Gates
    GitHub is a great tool for collaborating and providing access to content -- which makes it a great tool for libraries and archives! Dinah Handel (NYPL) and Ethan Gates (NYU) taught an introductory GitHub workshop at METRO on August 2, 2017. This is a supplementary episode about what they covered in their workshop. Audio Mastering by Dalton Harts Related Links: METRO's website on GitHub: https://github.com/mnylc/mnylc.github.io XFR Collective: https://xfrcollective.wordpress.com/ Mango: Git Completely Decentralised: https://medium.com/@alexberegszaszi/mango-git-completely-decentralised-7aef8bcbcfe6 Music and Soundtracks: Opening and closing tracks: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald from the YouTube Audio Library “All the Colors in the World” by Podington Bear from the Free Music Archive Tools used to record this podcast: Blue Yeti microphone: www.bluemic.com/products/yeti/ Transcribe: transcribe.wreally.com/app Reaper: www.reaper.fm/ Izotope Rx Plugins: https://www.izotope.com/en/products/repair-and-edit/rx.html
    5 September 2017, 2:52 pm
  • 21 minutes 2 seconds
    #12 Talking Project Code with NYPL’s Brandy McNeil
    Brandy McNeil is the Associate Director for Technology Education at the New York Public Library. Over 100,000 New Yorkers come through their TechConnect classes in 89 branch libraries across Manhattan, the Bronx, and Staten Island. We talk to Brandy about how she has expanded the program to include advanced computer programming classes as part of Project Code, and how these classes changed the life of Vera Zago, who quit her job to become a full-stack engineer. CORRECTION: The woman who donated her first paycheck back to NYPL had participate in TechConnect's office classes, not Project Code. Rough Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ieQNc3EEGGjxfTtE_eEmUA2fXjlv-R7tWlrZgZe-0fw/edit?usp=sharing Audio Mastering by Dalton Harts Further Reading: “Library has site stuff: Coding classes at New York Public Library draw thousands, and 73% of the students are women” by Erica Perason in New York Daily News, June 8, 2015: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/coding-classes-nypl-draw-thousands-article-1.2250962 “Tech Diversity: Coding Boot Camps Bringing Higher Percentages Of Women, Minorities Into Tech, Study Finds” by Salvador Rodriguez in International Business Times, October 26, 2015: http://www.ibtimes.com/tech-diversity-coding-boot-camps-bringing-higher-percentages-women-minorities-tech-2155530 “Code (or, How You Can Write Something Differently),” by Friedrich Kittler: https://monoskop.org/images/6/6e/Kittler_Friedrich_2008_Code_or_How_You_Can_Write_Something_Differently.pdf Music and Soundtracks: Opening track: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald from the YouTube Audio Library “Filaments” by Podington Bear from the Free Music Archive “Gravy” by Podington Bear from the Free Music Archive ""Epiphany" choir vst chords" by daalvinz from freesound.org “Gears Spinning” by Podington Bear from the Free Music Archive “Across the River” by Podington Bear from the Free Music Archive “All the Colors in the World” by Podington Bear from the Free Music Archive Tools used to record this podcast: Blue Yeti microphone: www.bluemic.com/products/yeti/ Transcribe: https://transcribe.wreally.com/app Reaper: https://www.reaper.fm/ Izotope: https://www.izotope.com/en/products/repai%E2%80%A6plug-in-pack.html
    27 July 2017, 3:12 pm
  • 21 minutes 37 seconds
    #11 Talking Internet Filters in Public Libraries with Westchester Library System's Rob Caluori
    Public libraries are important access points to the internet. But sometimes people use library computers to engage in activities that are controversial activities for public spaces, like watching pornography. We sat down with Rob Caluori, the Director of Information Technology for the Westchester Library System, to talk about the techniques libraries use to provide open, secure, and safe access to the internet. Audio Mastering by Dalton Harts Further Reading: American Council of the Blind v. Boorstin: http://www.leagle.com/decision/19861455644FSupp811_11311.xml "Braille Playboy Under Fire" by Lloyd Grove, July 19, 1985 https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1985/07/19/braille-playboy-under-fire/3683a16a-8a3d-471b-8d6c-c0a7e2e72cc5/?utm_term=.6b9a53bc5562 FAQs on E-Rate Program for Schools and Libraries: https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/universal-service-program-schools-and-libraries-e-rate Music and Soundtracks: Opening track: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald from the YouTube Audio Library "Rodeo Show" by The Green Orbs from the YouTube Audio Library "TasmanianPower" by Isaac Ionescu from freesound.org “A Gentleman” by Podington Bear from the Free Music Archive Tools used to record this podcast: Blue Yeti microphone: www.bluemic.com/products/yeti/ Transcribe: transcribe.wreally.com/app Reaper: www.reaper.fm/ Izotope: www.izotope.com/en/products/repai…plug-in-pack.html
    5 July 2017, 3:11 pm
  • 7 minutes 55 seconds
    #10 Talking Libraries in the EU with Ilona Kish
    Ilona Kish is the program director of Reading & Writing Foundation in Brussels, Belgium. She stopped by METRO's offices on June 21, 2017 to give a talk about the initiatives she has led to harmonize library lobbying efforts in the EU. We had a quick chat about some of the topics she covered, including the importance of getting MEPs into the library and some of her favorite libraries in Europe. ools used to record this podcast: Blue Yeti microphone: www.bluemic.com/products/yeti/ Transcribe: transcribe.wreally.com/app Reaper: www.reaper.fm/ Izotope: www.izotope.com/en/products/repai…plug-in-pack.html Music and Soundtracks: Opening track: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald Closing track from the Free Music Archive: "All the Colors in the World" by Podington Bear http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Podington_Bear/Indie_Folk/All_The_Colors_In_The_World
    22 June 2017, 9:18 pm
  • 29 minutes 56 seconds
    #9 Talking Mesh Networks with Raul Enriquez and Mario Peart [LIVE RECORDING]
    In this live recording at BRIC Media Arts for the Public Access / Open Networks exhibit, Molly was joined by the New America Foundation's Raul Enriquez and Gowanus Digital Steward Mario Peart to talk about the community-run mesh wifi networks they are setting up around Brooklyn to build resilient communities. Links: New America Foundation's RISE:NYC initiative: https://www.newamerica.org/resilient-communities/flexible-future-ready-networks/rise-nyc/ Public Access / Open Networks exhibit at BRIC: https://www.bricartsmedia.org/art-exhibitions/public-accessopen-networks Music and Soundtracks: Opening and closing track: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald Recorded live by BRIC staff
    30 May 2017, 9:05 pm
  • 22 minutes 46 seconds
    #8 In the Library with the Paintbrush: artist residencies
    Data artist Jer Thorp has a dream of putting an artist in every library. In this episode we explore the benefits and challenges of hosting artist residencies in libraries through open conversations with Jer Thorp, Ben Vershbow, Jenny Odell, Steve Keene, Trent Miller, and Laura Damon-Moore about the artist residencies that have been hosted at NYPL, Brooklyn Public Library, and Madison Public Library. Audio Mastering by Dalton Harts Links “An Artist in Every Library” by Jer Thorp: https://medium.com/@blprnt/an-artist-in-every-library-c0df05bf3c9 “Art at the Edge of Tomorrow” by Jer Thorp: https://medium.com/@blprnt/art-at-the-edge-of-tomorrow-b78ad9302abe “Peripheral Landscapes: The Art of Maps: A conversation with artist Jenny Odell and geospatial librarian Matt Knutzen” https://www.nypl.org/events/programs/2015/05/01/peripheral-landscapes-art-maps?hspace=299647 “Brooklyn Public Library Names Steve Keene as Artist-in-Residence for NYC Debut:” https://www.bklynlibrary.org/media/press/brooklyn-public-library-names-steve-keene-artist-residence-nyc-debut The Bubbler at Madison Public: http://madisonbubbler.org/ Library As Incubator Project: http://www.libraryasincubatorproject.org/ Music and Soundtracks: Opening and closing track: “Magic” by Otis MacDonald “Simple Complex” by Uncle Bibby “Act One Tenebrous Brothers” by Kevin Macleod Tools used to record this podcast: Blue Yeti microphone: www.bluemic.com/products/yeti/ Transcribe: transcribe.wreally.com/app Reaper: www.reaper.fm/ Izotope: www.izotope.com/en/products/repai…plug-in-pack.html
    26 May 2017, 12:53 pm
  • More Episodes? Get the App
© MoonFM 2024. All rights reserved.