Podcasts
On occasion, the Libraries produces audio and media files which are made available online as well as via podcasting. This is where a podder application can automatically download files for listening or viewing at your convenience (read more about podcasting).
If you subscribe to the RSS feed in your podder application (example iPodder, iPodderX, and jPodder), you will be able to download new content as soon as they are made available here. With a news reader/aggregator, you will only receive the text and link. You can also directly activate the media files using the links provided and can be played using WinAmp or RealPlayer. The files can also be saved on your computer or downloaded to portable listening
devices such as Apple's iPod, Creative's Zen, and Rio's Carbon.
Portable audio players are available at the Libraries' Learning Commons for lending to faculty, students, and staff.
2006.05.10: I. T. Littleton Seminar, May 10, 2006
105m:25s / 98.8mb
Siva Vaidhyanathan, assistant professor of culture and communication at New York University, presented a talk entitled "'Google's not a Library!': Why Quality Matters in the Google Book Search Debate."
2005.05.07: I. T. Littleton Seminar, April 13, 2005
45m:03s / 42.2mb
Blaise Cronin, dean of the School of Library and Information Science and Rudy Professor of Information Science at Indiana University in Bloomington delivered a talk on "Who Dunnit? Agency, Attribution, and Authority in an Age of Hyperauthorship." The annual I. T. Littleton Seminars are funded by an endowment established in 1987 to honor former library director Littleton upon his retirement from NC State.
2005.04.18: Human Rights in Literature and the Media, March 29, 2005
49m:59s / 20.6mb
This is an annual public reading of fiction, poetry, essays, speeches, music, and short news pieces in recognition of Human Rights Week. This year's event was hosted by Suzanne Weiner, Head, Collection Management, NCSU Libraries and sponsored by the NCSU Libraries and the Library Diversity Committee.
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