Friday, October 26, 2007

Week 6, #14

One of the best articles I have read so far in these 23 Things is Rick Anderson's "Away from Icebergs." He makes powerful points with very few words and strong illustrations. It is true that we are struggling with the "remnants of a bygone age." Because we serve a clientele that includes older people that cannot, either physically or mentally, keep up with a continually changing technology, it becomes increasingly harder to make good choices of what and how much to acquire in which format. He states that there has been a significant drop in circulation at his library. At least at my branch, this has not happened yet; on the contrary it has increased. A valid point that Mr. Anderson makes is that libraries have no longer a monopoly on information access. This competition of other sources is what must keep us on our toes.

However, the IDEAL LIBRARY where I would wish to work is Dr. Wendy Schultz Lib 4.0.: "But Library 4.0 will add a new mode, knowledge spa: meditation, relaxation, immersion in a luxury of ideas and thought. In companies, this may take the form of retreat space for thought leaders, considered an investment in innovation; in public libraries, the luxurious details will require private partners as sponsors providing the sensory treats. Library 4.0 revives the old image of a country house library, and renovates it: from a retreat, a sanctuary, a pampered experience with information—subtle thoughts, fine words, exquisite brandy, smooth coffee, aromatic cigar, smell of leather, rustle of pages—to the dream economy’s library, the LIBRARY: a WiFREE space, a retreat from technohustle, with comfortable chairs, quiet, good light, coffee and single malt. You know, the library.
I’ll meet you there."

Source: "Infinite Sources" by Dr. Wendy Schultz

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Week 6, # 14

Technorati is definitely for people who make blogging a part of their daily lives. Entries included "Granularity of Education," Topography of Formality," and "Live Streaming from the Moodle Moot." On the Top Searches I was surprised to find Library 2.0 was there right above Harry Potter.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Week 6, #13

I enjoyed getting more familiarized with Delicious. It introduced me to new websites such as Fodor's Travel Guide , Biblio Travel. and Webrary which lists books by genre , characters, etc. I noticed that creating characters seems to be very popular, something which I was only introduced to when I had to make one for the 23 Things. Planet M&M, which falls into this category, had been saved by 386 people! Biblio Travel might be enjoyed specially by armchair travellers or people who are travelling to a place. After choosing a country there are subdivisions of cities which can also be clicked on. The entries include one helpful line which includes author, year, time period and genre, so one would very easily choose the most appealing ones. This is followed by a brief synopsis of the book. Our own HCPL Delicious site is very well done and very useful for librarians. I can tell that many of the entries are there as a result of being asked for, or looking for the answers.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Week 5, # 12

Elf is something I really don't need. I did set up an account to comply with this "Thing" but this is not useful for me at all. This is a good example of how our modern world creates "needs" you don't even have. I do perfectly well with the receipts I get when I check out OR by checking my account online from time to time. I also did not like disclosing my library card and pin #. The good thing is that when this assignment is over I can delete my account.

Week 5, # 11

I went to Library Thing, created an account and added 5 books. This was the easiest exercise so far. It was also fun and interesting, especially reading comments by others. The list is very attractively displayed and automatically adds the picture of the bookcover. I will keep going back to Library Thing when I have time to see what are all the features it offers.
www.librarything.com

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Week 4, #9

Of the different newsfeeds that I looked at I found Technorati too high tech with too much computer jargon. It was very cluttered and I did not stay there. Syndic8 was much more friendly and easy to find the information. Topix was also easy to use and my favority feature was the voting polls in which I participated and some of the results were very surprising. It was interesting to see that this one began by defauting to a city which is a different way of approaching a subject. When I looked at Feedster and put in my subject it said "The web site or resource your attempting to access is restricted . . .compliance with CIPA" etc.

Week 4, #8

Yesterday I created a blogline and added 10 newsfeeds, one of them being iHCPL. I am behind 1 week because we have been very short staffed due to two employees being ill , vacation and off days. If you are new to all this it takes a lot more than 1 hour to accomplish the tasks.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Week 3, #7 - iHCPL Public


This is my photo after I reshaped it using Pixer. I re-sized it and cropped it. It took 2 days to do this because Pixer was having "difficulties"
that day, Tuesday, October 2; when it allowed you to look at the picture (after many tries) the picture would stay up for about 20 seconds and then disappear. I was finally able to use it successfully on Wednesday without too much trouble.

Monday, October 1, 2007

I looked at the colorpicker mashup and found it very clever. All these applications seem to be for individuals who want to spend a lot of time at their computers. You must really be very interested and keep up with it if you are going to get use out of it.