<< February 2010 | April 2010 >>
- Larger Threat Is Seen in Google Case [The New York Times]
- Libraries dealing with homeless try new approaches; San Francisco hires a social worker [Los Angeles Times]
- University library sees demand for Kindles soar [eCampus News]
- 'Future library' goes on display in Abu Dhabi [The National]
- Magazines Team Up to Tout 'Power of Print' [The Wall Street Journal]
- A closer look at Apple's iPad and iBooks [The Baltimore Sun]
- Library of humans [Macleans]
- Universities protest against government wi-fi plans [BBC News]
- The Jobs Of Yesteryear: Obsolete Occupations [NPR]
- Is the internet making us stupid? [TechRadar]
- E-textbooks: The New Best-sellers [Knowledge]
- Pondering Good Faith in Publishing [The New York Times]
- Behavior Changes Linked to March Madness [Duke University]
- No Ink, No Paper: What's The Value Of An E-Book? [Morning Edition]
- Texas Conservatives Seek Deeper Stamp on Texts [The New York Times]
- Data, data everywhere [The Economist]
- Baldacci Hopes Enhanced E-Book Will Put Focus on Content, Not Price [Publishers Weekly]
- How today’s college students use Wikipedia for course-related research [First Monday]
- Try to Remember to Forget [Urbanite]
- Amazon Threatens Publishers as Apple Looms [The New York Times]
- Thriller writer John Grisham ends holdout on e-books [The Washington Post]
- Book returned to South Yorkshire library 45 years on [BBC News]
- Texts Without Context [The New York Times]
- Google, China showdown marks a turning point for the West, Beijing [The Washington Post]
- Decision on Google library likely to change publishing indelibly [The Seattle Times]
- In New Serial Thriller, Everyone's Hands Are Bloody [All Things Considered]
- The 2010 Census: Will your answers stay private? [The Christian Science Monitor]
- How we'll get a gigabit to US hospitals, libraries, colleges [Ars Technica]
- Cappuccinos in your local library? It's all just froth [Telegraph]
- Odd title prize for crochet book [BBC News]
- In post-Google China, censorship is unfazed [CNET News]
These links are not updated for accuracy; older links may be dead.