Sunday, August 23, 2009

Thing #23

I've done it: completed the 23 Things!--a little late, but because of my vacation I was really busy the week leading up to the 15th. But it was a great exercise and I'm glad to have taken the journey.

If someone asked me to think of somthing we could do right now with web 2.0, I would recommend a class on Technorati and del.icio.us. I think these are great tools for people to find out a ton of information about anything they're interested in and offer a good way to keep track of websites they stumble upon. Maybe an introduction to Library Thing and other sites for organizing and sharing information about books. All of these offer people an easy way to begin using real web 2.0 capabilties that could lead to NCL developing a web 2.0 constituency: facebook friends, followers on Twitter, or even a Second Life community.

Second Life

At first I thought I would not be very interested in Second Life, and I think that's still true for me personally. I took the tutorial the Univ of Md put together for creating an account, an avatar, going through the basic moves, and so on, because the link to the tutorial in Learning 2.0 required signing into a You Tube account. I still wasn't interested for myself, but this nine-minute tutorial ended with showing students how to show their power point presentations in Second Life. How cool! Escriber Island--where this takes place--is a place in SL that is used for teaching and a lot of schools use it.

In checking out a few of the library links, I found that the Cleveland Public Library--motto: The Peoples' University--has established three islands (which is property you can design and own in SL), the latest showcasing their collection of chess sets, where you can play life-size chess with your avatar. They also have concerts and other events your avatar can attend and participate in on their islands. I did tag and bookmark their site in our NCL2 account in del.icio.us. For the feint of heart, you can just click here.

It's all fun, but unless you can build a constituency in SL, it's probably time not very well spent by your IT people. I can see how teachers can use it to engage their students in a skill building activity they would perhaps not do with such gusto in real life. A little more difficult for libraries. Many a mini-survey to see how many SL'ers are out there in our community? Probably more than we think. (Thing #22)

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Facebook and LinkedIn

Yea! I have a facebook and linkedin account. The former I created after attending Laurie's class, the latter some time earlier. I find that I visit facebook more often than linked in. It's fun: the people I'm connected to are people who are part of my current life, although I've been cautious about looking for people beyond the ones I already know. Whereas linked in seems better for finding colleagues and creating professional relationships. (Thing #21) Now on to Second Life and I've done the 23 Things!

Award WInners

I was pleased to see that I was familiar with most of the award winners--and even the runnes up--on the SEOmoz.org website. Some I use, many I learned about discovering the 23 Things. The one I chose to visit was lulu, an on-demand book publishing site. There are easy-to-follow instructions to create your book, a sales site, and forums for sharing experiences with other self-made book publishers. I took a look at the photo books. It's easy to use photos you have uploaded to flickr and facebook, so once you've dived into web 2.0, you can use your online resources for a wide range of applications. I imagine that's a key characteristic of web 2.0: it's not just sharing among individuals, but with other websites for endless customization of content. (Thing #20)

Monday, August 17, 2009

Library 2.0 and Web 2.0

I read the contributions to OCLC's Next Space newsletter and thought they were thought-provoking pieces. I'm a fan of Michael Stephens especially. I attended a seminar at Darien Library where he was a presenter along with Jon Blyberg some years ago and admired his zeal about the future of librarianship. In this article he aptly organizes how the library profession should approach assigning value to and, subsequently, implementing these new tools. In some respects, I think necessity will be the mother of invention.

I was also intrigued by John Riemer's comments on metadata, a complex subject, but one I think is necessary to pursue to better integrate all information sources that can be searched online. (Thing #14)

Google Docs

I created a presentation in Google Docs about the poem, Theme for English B, by Langston Hughes. There are many things I like about it. Perhaps it will speak to you as well. As for Google Docs, the interface is user friendly and publishing the docs to a blog is easy to do. I've also sent an email to my library address to try the share feature. (Thing #19)

Del.icio.us

I watched the delicious video and found it very interesting. Many times I have found websites I wanted to share with collegues and have always just sent the link in an email. It works, but when the email is deleted the link is gone. Given that we're planning on developing a new web site, it could be helpful for us to share good web site"finds" with each other and, in the notes field that pops up when you create a bookmark, explain what you like about that site. Installing the bookmarklets on your browser tool bar make the bookmarking and annotating much easier than sharing this type of information in a wiki. When you log into our learning 2.0 delicious account you can see that I added a bookmark to a blog about libraries and twitter. The RSS feed is also a good feature of the site. (Thing #17)

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Technorati

Well, the tutorial video would not load after following the link from learning Web 2.0, so I went to technorati.com and searched "tutorials." There are a lot of tutorials that, or course, are not about the ins and outs of Technorati. But I found some about sewing and crafts which were a lot of fun. I passed this idea for a key chain onto the NC Sewing Group. I think it will be a nice item in their next sale.

More on Technorati to follow.

Later...The tag search for Learnig 2.0 resulted in a list of posts about Learning 2.0. Along with similar search results, the keyword search also suggested checking out their Technology Channel, which tells you "what's percolating in [the technology] blogs now." In the Blog Directory there was a listing for Web 2.0. When you click the link you get the thumbnails and links to a whole host of blogs covering Web 2.0 topics. (I didn't notice a search box on the Blogs Directory page.) (Thing #18)

Here is the Technorati tag for this post:


Sunday, August 2, 2009

Wikis

I viewed the wiki slide shows and look around on the ROC wiki. There's a lot to integrate about contributing to a wiki in a meaningful way and I wonder how universally it would be used in an organization. Alice set one up for us to contribute to the strategic plan and most of us made a contribution, but I wonder if we couldn't have shared the information just as effectively via email. It seems to me that it would be an interesting experiment to take our email away and make us use a different way to communicate with one another. Which would be the first web 2.0 to be adopted. I really don't know. (Thing #15)

I added my blog to the favorite blogs page and created an indivual page on the Library 2.0 wiki. http://newcanaanl2.pbworks.com/FrontPage (Thing # 16)