Tuesday, September 30, 2008

del.icio.us- an old friend revisited (week 7)

In the spirit of this course I have signed up with del.icio.us, but I have already had an account in the dim dark past (well, maybe a couple of years ago). I even had the tool bar sitting on my home computer, but I ditched it through lack of use. I had set it up when learning about this stuff through Uni, and I thought it might actually be quite useful since I was spending hours on the net doing research. I was always forgetting the great sites I had come across so I would save the web pages, but when it came time to create my fabulously in depth bibliographies the saved pages would often have no URL on them and the computer would have long forgotten its address and I would spend ages trying to refind these obscure pages just so I could reference them and squeeze a few more marks out of the assessor and... so on and so on. I am sure you get the picture. Anyway, I thought delicious might actually be the answer, and I did use it for a little while, but it didn't stick. I probably found a couple of good sites from serendipitous delicious browsing, but it didn't really work as a personal filing cabinet, and once I had finished study I really had no use for it. This time around I have ditched information architecture sites in favour of the weather, because as Sydney market stall holders we are quite obsessed with it. And of course since there was a Blogger gadget for it that got added too...
I did like the Ask Now's collaborative reference page list. What a great idea. I plan on looking into the sites when I have the time and energy. I think that would work well in any library, and allow you to tailor the sites to the specific needs and interests of the library community, much as Sutherland has done.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

More week 6 stuff

I just had an idea for videos in libraries. How about filming the living books from Living library events? They could then be "borrowed" at anytime...

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Video Stuff (week 6)

OK, before I address all of the serious library related themes, time to embed some videos...
Humanity has been superseded. I have the found video evidence. Yes, robots have learnt to ride bicycles. From here on in anything is possible.

I present Exhibit A.



This fabulous robot had me worried for a while. I imagined this creature to be human sized, and armed with incredible balance and possibly some sort of jet pack. I was sure it was the beginning of the end for Homo sapiens sapiens. But being a very thorough sort of person (ahem) I conducted further research. Fear not gentle readers! As Exhibit B will reveal, our robot friends are just about the cutest little fellows around. It is hard to be scared of a chibi robot.




Anyway, back to the reason we are all here…

The whole youtube/google video search thing was a lot of fun- It was a guilty pleasure to look at videos during work time. Like Blogs, audio files, Wikis and the rest, videos have a role to play in enlivening libraries- they are one more media type to be exploited. Thet are such a great idea for oral histories, and book readings, and undoubtedly a hundred other applications that I haven't even been thought of yet. I think often though they are a bit of a novelty. Virtual tours and video blogs are fun, but of a less serious nature. It will be interesting to see how they develop in the future, and how much interest they get from patrons.

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

Futurelib Wiki (week 5)




I was contemplating the future of wikis and libraries, and I had a blinding vision. It is called the the catablogue ( or a catablog if you live in the U.S.). It is a catalogue that is a wiki. How obvious is that? All of our patrons will be potential contributors, making the cataloguer's job much easier. A load shared is a lighter load after all.

I think this could really be the future of user- centered design. We have held the power for too long, and it is time to share both the responsibility and the privilege of information management.

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Ahhhr! SS (Week 4)

Mmm.. Really Short Syndication, Rich Site Summary, RDF Site Summary, how can one acronym have so many potential meanings??? Anyway, I joined up to Bloglines and subscribed to a few feeds; some news, 2 weather reports, and a word of the day (gubernatorial: of or pertaining to a governor). I found the site a bit confusing, and more complex than I could ever require. I already have a couple of feeds coming through Google Reader, which I find a lot simpler. I am much more likely to actually look at it because it is linked to my gmail account and it is just a click away when I am checking my email. It is one less thing to sign into and remember passwords and usernames.
The YouTube video about RSSs suggest that it is way of saving time- why go to all of those sites when they can come to you? But I suspect it is really just another way to waste time on the internet. How much information about the world do we really need? But that is just my internet headache talking. I can certainly see why news junkies would enjoy RSS feeds. getting their daily fix is very easy. I think they would also appeal to people with a passionate interest in a particular topic, or to people doing a lot of frequent research on the internet. With a little discipline I think that RSS could be very useful in a professional sense- a regular quick scan of the headlines to see what is new, while resisting the urge to spend half the morning following up on all of the trivial stuff.