UCB SciLibs IM service discontinued

Beginning with the Spring 2012 semester, the UCB Science Libraries will no longer be offering the UCB SciLibs chat reference service. Users can instead use 24/7 Ask a Librarian for immediate reference help anytime, day or night.

Many of our users may already be familiar with 24/7 Ask a Librarian, a popular chat reference service provided by the UC Libraries. During the 2010-2011 school year, UC Berkeley students asked over 4,000 questions using this service and immediately got the research help they needed online.

Over the next week or two users will notice that our UCBSciLibs Ask Us chat widget will be replaced by the 24/7 Ask a Librarian widget.


Science Libraries IM reference service unavailable 10/21

The UCB Science Libraries IM reference service will be unavailable on Friday, October 21st. This popular service is normally available Monday-Friday from 1pm-5pm; the service will resume regular hours on Monday, October 24th.

Immediate chat reference help will still be available through the collaborative 24/7 Ask a Librarian service. For questions about a specific science library on campus, call or email the library directly.


Engineering Library reopens

The Engineering Library is now open!

Our newly reconfigured space includes five group study rooms with white boards and monitors for presentations, new study tables and chairs, more lounge seating, and a spacious new public computer area. Study rooms are currently first come first serve, but will be on a reservation system starting on Monday, August 29th.

Come visit, get a free Engineering Library pen, and let us know what you think of the new space!


Frost & Sullivan market research reports

Are you developing a new technology and want to know whether it’s marketable? Or maybe you’re just interested in getting to know the latest news in your industry?

Frost & Sullivan is the latest addition to the UC Berkeley Libraries’ extensive market research resources collection! Frost & Sullivan produces market research reports that examine the US as well as international and global markets. Find in-depth reports by searching by keyword or technology, or browse by industry.

Industries covered include Energy & Power Systems, Healthcare, Environment & Building Technologies, Information & Communication Technologies, and more.


XBRL Challenge

Do you code?
Do you know anything about accounting and finance?
You could win $20,000 in a competition!

It’s the XBRL Challenge — a contest that seeks to uncover the first generation of open source analytic tools that will mine financial data in ways never before possible. A $20,000 grand prize will be awarded to the company, team or individual developer who submits the most inventive and useful application leveraging XBRL-formatted data from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) EDGAR database.

Every publicly traded U.S. company is now required to tag financial data according to a XML-based business reporting standard known as eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL). To date, almost 1,800 companies have filed financial statement data with the SEC in XBRL format. XBRL is expected to help usher in a new generation of tools that can be used by investors, analysts, businesses, regulators, watchdogs, economists, and academics to gain insight that is currently out of reach or prohibitively expensive to acquire.

How can I participate?

XBRL US will accept submissions through January 31, 2012, with final judging and awarding of prizes – including the $20,000 grand prize – on February 29, 2012.

Learn more and enter the contest on the XBRL Challenge page on Facebook at http://xbrl.us/challengefb or by visiting http://xbrl.us/challenge. Updates will be shared on Facebook and on Twitter at @XBRLUS using the hashtag #XBRLCHALLENGE.

Consider partnering – Engineering/IT and accounting/finance is a powerful combination – sure to create the best app. And you can find a partner in your own institution. If entering the contest is still not for you, pass it on in your networks and circles – you might help someone win the competition.

To help with development, participants will be given tools and support from XBRL US, including access to a database of XBRL financial fundamentals from all public companies and technical documentation on how to work with XBRL data. Entrants will also have access to XBRL expertise through a series of in-person and webinar meetings to help in working with the XBRL data.

Register Now!
Register and join XBRL for a special online briefing Wednesday, August 3 from 1 – 2 PM EDT.
All final submissions must be received by January 31, 2012.


Help improve the library website

The UC Berkeley Library is trying to get a better understanding of how our patrons use our website (http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/) and we need your help! We are looking for any current UC Berkeley students or faculty who would like to sit down with a Library staff member and show us how you use our site. Whether you use our site everyday, intermittently, or have never used it we’re interested in speaking with you.

In exchange for about an hour of your time we’ll give you a $10 gift certificate to the FSM Cafe in Moffitt Library. We will record the session, but all recordings and data collected will only be used internally for website redesign purposes. If you are interested in helping us please email Matthew Prutsman at mprutsma@library.berkeley.edu by Thursday, July 21.


Copy cards expire June 30 (update)

Update: The library has negotiated a contract extension that will extend the use of Equitrac cards through August 31, 2011 (not June 30 as previously announced). Please see our new blog post on Equitrac copy cards extended through August 31

As part of a transition in vendors for the library’s copying and computer printing services, the Equitrac “copy cards” that have been in use for several years will be honored only until June 30, 2011. Any unused value on the Equitrac cards will be lost after that date. Refunds of unused value will not be available.

For anyone purchasing or adding value to an Equitrac card between now and June 30, we recommend getting only the value that can be reasonably used during that time.

Another option is to use a Cal 1 Card. Currently, this can be done on designated copiers and printers on the second floor of Doe Library, the entrance level of Moffitt Library, and the Bioscience & Natural Resources Library.

Starting July 1, the Cal 1 Card will be used for copying and printing throughout the libraries. For those not affiliated with UC Berkeley, we are developing a “guest card”.

This change is part of a larger transition in which the UC San Francisco Documents, Media & Mail office, in partnership with the UC Library, is managing the copy centers in the Moffitt Library and the Bioscience & Natural Resources Library, and expanding the services available. For more information, see:

» Copying, Printing and Scanning, Self-Service
» Copying, Full-Service
» UCSF Documents, Media & Mail


Kresge Engineering Library – Closed for summer

The Kresge Engineering Library is temporarily closed for renovations and will re-open August 18th at 9 am.

Library staff will be available for help via email or phone. More information about the closure and how to contact Engineering Library staff can be found on Engineering Library News.

Nearby campus libraries that can also provide assistance include (hours listed are for Summer 2011):


Engineering Library pick-up location

Beginning on May 2nd, the Engineering Library will no longer be a pick up location option in OskiCat. When requesting materials, please use one of the other available pick up locations. If you already have materials ready to pick up at Engineering, you should collect them as soon as possible.

The suspension of the Engineering Library as a pick up location is due to the temporary closure of the Engineering Library from May 13th to August 17th.