Saturday, May 3, 2008

Week 8 - Mashups

Well, it's hard to believe this course is over and how many new things I've learned and am now using on a regular basis. Mashups are the icing on the cake! I created a couple of my own and it is making my work so much easier, now. I have one that searches many books-related sites so I now can get details about specific books from a variety of sources, including accurate availability information, tables of contents, and publishing information. Another mashup searches multiple sites for institutional publications. I'm still working to refine this, but, in the long run I think this will simplify things for me.

Thanks for doing this class. I know there have been frustrations from some participants, particularly in the ability to access resources from the workplace. But, I'm not sure how many of us would have taken the time to really look at these tools without this incentive.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Week 7 - Podcasts and Online Hosted Video

Well, this was a disappointing week for me. Everything needed to be done at home, and even then, some things didn't work as planned. I have already been subscribing to podcasts, so this wasn't new for me., but I knew nothing about Podcast Alley or podcast.net. They were both a little overwhelming, but I'm glad to know they exist. I was unable to get Odeo to work from work or home.

YouTube has lots of interesting things on it - I've been on that site before, but it's getting more and more difficult to find the "good stuff" when there's so much duplication as well as "uninteresting" material posted.

I decided to create my own video and post it to my facebook account. But, it was 2 minutes and 1 second, which made it 1 second too long to post. I then tried to post a YouTube video to my blog, as a separate page element. But, it didn't seem to allow for a URL. When I typed in the keywords of the YouTube video, it found 4 separate versions, and posted all four. I was unable to delete 3 of them. So, I found another video and added that. The only way I was able to post my own video (from my camera), was to post it as a blog entry. It seems like there should have been a better way... Also, when I showed my husband the YouTube video I posted, he asked if it violated copyright, since it's a video of a live performance. Well, whose responsible for that? The person who posted to YouTube, or me?

So, all in all, I have more questions than answers this week. But, YouTube is blocked at work, as is most audio streaming - at least for now. So, I think I don't have to worry about this technology at this time.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Week 6 - Flickr


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Originally uploaded by ad158
I am writing this within flickr, and, hopefully, it will post to my blog, along with a picture of Snow in April. Until this assignment, I had been sharing pictures through Kodak's Easy Share site, which came with my Kodak camera. But, I think this will be better, and easier to manage. I see lots of possibilities for personal use. Not sure about professional use - at least not yet.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Week 5 - Web Office Tools

I'm going to see if I can write my post in googledocs and post it to my blog. This is an experiment based on the optional exercise. [Note: this didn't work - I had to cut/paste to get this here...]

This week happens to be a week I've had the least amount of time to devote to this class, which is too bad, because I see lots of potential for this product. I had not even heard of googledocs before, so, this week was totally new and I love the concept. How many times have you read committee meeting minutes and you read the section that has to do with something you said, and you think, "Boy, did they get this wrong - this isn't what I said at all." Well, with googledocs, drafts of minutes could be posted for all participants to see and edit prior to it becoming the official documentation. This would save so many future hassles with amending minutes, revised copies, etc...

I don't do much with spreadsheets or slides, so, I devoted less time to this, and haven't had the chance to really compare googledocs to the other web office products, yet, but, hope to be able to spend some weekend time looking through this and looking at more features of the google products.

Is this the future of all software products? I think not in its current format - but, it's getting closer. I found the "comparison" feature cumbersome. I'd like a better way to see what others have done to my document - maybe colors, or fonts, or something other than lots of crossed-out lines. Bryan suggested you need a constant internet connection. While I don't know if this is true, this would be a shortcoming if if is true, although I suppose one could work off-line and then upload a document into googledocs from another product, such as Word. But, this, of course, means you have to buy more programs...

Very interesting concepts and I've enjoyed playing with this. One additional problem I encountered is that some colleagues invited me to share their documents, but, my work email and my googledocs email aren't the same, and I couldn't figure out how to get into their documents, even though I was invited. Again, because I didn't have much time this week, perhaps I would have figured it out with more time, but, for now, that didn't work well.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Week 4 - Del.icio.us

I have had a del.icio.us account since before this class started. I like having all my favorites handy, no matter what computer I am working at. I am still a bit uncomfortable using it, though, and haven't totally figured out the best way to navigate around the site - like how to combine 2 tags, or how to only see sites if they have been updated since I last visited. Del.icio.us is partially blocked at work, so it's hard to evaluate its potential professional use when I can't really use it when I'm working. (I can open my account, but I can't tag anything new.) I also don't have tons of sites tagged, yet, so I still find myself pulling down the "favorites" from within my browser more often than opening del.icio.us and looking at how I organized things, and then opening what I need. As a cataloger at heart, though, I actually am looking forward to that "rainy day" when I can totally organize everything I have and systematically tag, link to new items, and evaluate how others have tagged similar sites.


I tried looking at other people's links, in order to populate my site, but wasn't overwhelmed with what I was finding. I'm not sure I see potential library applications (for our users) yet, but certainly see using this as a way to personally become better educated and to find relevant sites about personal or professional topics of interest, or to help find resources to better answer a reference question.


I am thrilled to finally be able to spend the time to learn these 2.0 tools. I am glad this course has given me the opportunity to do this.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Week 3 -Social Networking

I'm happy the Social Networking instructions were posted early - that way I was able to start this at home on the weekend, which was good, as I'm pretty sure facebook is blocked at work.

I signed up for a facebook account, invited some friends (and I think I invited some people I didn't mean to include, also - won't they be surprised!) and did some looking around. I thought it was fun, but didn't really see how this was going to be work related until I tried the UAB catalog search, the PubMed search and the WorldCat search. WOW Now I see some potential for people who want to connect to the Library from within their facebook accounts! While I'm not sure (yet) what needs to be done on the Library's end to be an "application" - I could see "announcing" new books, faculty publications, and general library news. I also signed up to be part of my workplace's community. Not sure what will happen since this is blocked at work, and I sure hope I don't "get in any trouble."

Next I signed up for LinkedIn. This seemed much more "professional" to me and I felt this was a more appropriate site to investigate, from a personal standpoint. My college-aged daughter feels strongly that facebook should have remained a "college-protected" environment, and I tend to agree with her - or at least I want to support her by not "invading" her "private" space. That being said, though, our users will include people who rely heavily on facebook, and if this is where they want to communicate with us, we need to be poised to do this. Although I found many more "friends" with facebook accounts than with LinkedIn accounts. I saw more potential in communicating with other librarians and professionals from within LinkedIn than from within facebook. But, to optimally use this site, it appears you need to upgrade your membership, for a "small fee." Doubt I'll do that - so LinkedIn is probably out, for now.

I found some myspace pages to be interesting, but, think that this site is not as popular as it used to be. I have a gut feeling that our users, if asked to pick one type of access they would want us to pursue, would pick facebook....

One of the questions I know we're supposed to answer is "How can social networking be used by MLA to connect members?" Well, I think MLA could be a facebook application and MLA members could add this application to their profiles. I also think they could easily be set up as a group within LinkedIn, but, my growing concern, now, is how to keep up with everything that I'm now creating and learning? There's the blog, and the wiki, and now facebook and LinkedIn, and we're only at the beginning of Week 3! How many things can we keep adding and keep doing them well? I think this will be a major challenge. I don't think, as libraries, we want to create a bunch of new access methods and then let them slide, or not stay current, relevant and meaningful to our users.

An observation - it's been 5 days since I wrote the above post. Other than the library "friends" I connected with as part of the assignment, I have found few other friends in either facebook or LinkedIn. The ones I did find still have not responded to me, which leads me to believe that perhaps these tools are not being used as much as they once were, or they aren't being used as much for professional, non-social functions. While I found exposure to these sites to be worthwhile, I'm not sure how often I will "check in" to see what's going on - at least for now...