B O O K Lavoir O P1000968 E r

Sunday, November 25, 2007

#23 Is this really the end, or just the beginning

It's definitely just a beginning for me. I feel like I have dipped my toes into a new river, I've hardly touched the surface, I"m quite overwhelmed by what's "out there", but I'm confident now that none of it is beyond my reach, I just have to be open to learning.
I have discovered that a lot of these technology tools are pretty simple to use, thanks to a lot of behind the scenes hard work and handy interfaces.
I think the most important thing I've learned is how quickly it can all get away from you, I really hope I keep my finger on the pulse from now on. I don't have to be a technophile, but its fun to be a part of the communities online and to be able to do all the fabulous things I now can do, like blog and add graphics, rss feeds, audio, video, widgets. Thanks for the push in the right direction!

Sunday, November 18, 2007

#22 Audiobooks (or "The end is in sight ")

I'm listening to the "Rime of the ancient mariner" by Coleridge (with a female american accent!). I'm not sure that our older patron are going to come by downloading eBooks, so I don't think we should dig a mass grave for our talking books just yet. However for the more technically adept this is a fabulous tool. I'm going to get my teenagers onto and see if it sparks more interest in their English homework. AT 15, having a poem read to you is far more enticing that reading it yourself especially if it's on the net.

#21 Podcasts, Smodcasts!

I'm mighty impressed with myself. I had a look at http://podcastalley.com and found the 'Library Geeks' podcast. I clicked on "If you want to see the RSS or XML file, click here." When I clicked on the link I was given the option to embed a widget through http://www.springwidgets.com/. It was too easy.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

# 20 You Tube

I have seen You tube before, its great for pieces of nostalgia, like theme songs and visuals to old TV shows. I love this mum singing all the cliches mums say to the William Tell Overture.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W95Y8hNQiH8
But back to work, You tube has fabulous possibilities for accessing video of conferences, speeches, anything really, which can be used an information resources. It also acts as public information annoucement as seen in this Sesame St video ("Don't eat cookies in the library") http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJlkplvYdgA

#19 Discovering Web 2.0 tools

I looked up social networking, which seems very relevant to library use, in the sense of providing a community space. Facebook.com is called a social utility tool. I have been using it for a few weeks now and have been amazed by getting in touch and touching base (in a highly superficial way) with people I hardly ever see, even old school friends.

#16 Online Productivity apps

Mission completed!

Welcome



This is ZoHo writer. It looks pretty friendly. I like the look the the Notebook app too. Lets see if I can successfully publish to my Blog.

#15 On Library 2.0 & Web 2.0 ...

I like Michael Stephens’ “Into a new world of librarianship” (although there’s some reading homework there for me). I think his point about the library is human is so valid. That’s a great drawcard in a world that is increasingly automated, and no, not all users want interaction at a face-to-face level but the 2.0 technologies allow us to meet users where they are, but still maintain that social interaction. Chip Nilges talks about collecting user intelligence, which has been done to great effect by some libraries, especially in regards to reader development, reader’s exchanging reviews, online book clubs/blogs etc.
Library 2.0 to me is about using the technologies to enhance library services and to draw users in to an active library community where the boundaries between "expert/user" are made irrelevant. It gets back to information/knowledge sharing.

#14 Getting not-so-technical with Technorati

This was totally overwhelming, again I’m going to have to go back and revisit this, can you tell I am frantically cramming to get through these activities! I did a directory search and got 759 blogs about Learning 2.0 and 510 results for "Learning 2.0 " exact match. I’m not sure why but the exact match search retrieved more library posts by relevance than the directory search. As I said I’m going to have to play around more to get a good sense of what is going on here, or maybe that’s way too ambitious for me!I’m looking at the Top 100 Blogs to get some inspiration for my own to see if I can jazz it up a bit.

13. Del.icio.us

I can see how this would be useful for bookmarking pages when browsing for a reason on a particular topic. My bookmarks get so excessive they become hard to find, whereas if they were tagged with subject headings, well, it would be a beautiful thing. I'm going to attempt to create one of my own.

12. Rollyo

I created a rollyo search of book sites (called Books about...), I think I need to have a better play around with it, what I really want is for it to run a search for books about books to help add to my collection and discover ones I haven’t read yet.

11. Library Thing

This is fun, I decided to choose books about books or bookshops or libraries for my collection. This looks like a fun site to explore at greater length.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

#16 and 17 Wikis

Yay! Finally something I know about. I did a research paper on Wikipedia as part of my Masters and I was really impressed by the level of accuracy and more importantly currency of the pages. Of course there's always problems with the more controversial pages getting locked out because people cannot agree, and more obscure areas may escape the mass editing that the more popular pages enjoy. However I was really impressed with how quickly spam and obscenities got removed, which meant the system of mass editing was working. Its not britannica, but its much more fun!