• he/him

Coder, pun perpetrator
Grumpiness elemental
Hyperbole abuser


Tools programmer
Writer-wannabe
Did translations once upon a time
I contain multitudes


(TurfsterNTE off Twitter)


Trans rights
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Be excellent to each other


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dog
@dog

I was talking to Aura about cool cavernous archives and libraries for reasons, and it reminded me of the stacks at the City of Toronto Archives where I worked for a summer in school. A lot of archives have dense offsite storage, but Toronto's special in that the storage is onsite. So you just look out the window from the top floor and you get this: three storeys of boxes, and a forklift. Sometimes you even get little things outside boxes - I have vivid memories of seeing an entire diorama, out of its box, visible hanging out on a third storey shelf where no one can touch it. If you want something from the archives, someone goes out with the forklift to get it for you.

Of course, this means that there could be forklift certified archivists. As a mere grad student, I wasn't one of them. When I needed something from the stacks for the work I was doing, I had to get someone else to go out and get it for me.

(The reasons being, of course,)

SpoilerFirmament chapter 2 in Fallen London

(Photo by Rrburke under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.)


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in reply to @dog's post:

I was lucky enough to get a job as a casual worker the year McGill's McLennan library upgraded its rare books & special collections floor with a new climate control system and compact shelving. Every single book was wrapped in paper and bubble wrap and stored in the gym, then moved back once the construction was complete. The librarians even showed off some cool stuff to us, like their copy of Salvador Dali's illustrated (and autographed) edition of Alice In Wonderland!

Even though I know orderpicker lifts have safety harnesses for the operator and the lift is counterbalanced, I was always nervous when I saw the operators working at max height at one of the places I contracted at.

Also, I find it interesting how the fire-suppression system was integrated into the shelving units.

Not that fire prevention’s ever unimportant, but I feel like it’s especially important to incorporate it right into the shelves if you’ve got one of a kind documents.