Monday, April 14, 2008

mashups





I found masups entertaining. The big huge lab is very easy to use and could be used for a number of things, to create posters and flyers for promotional material for the library perhaps. Use it to design activities for kids or get kids to use them in a workshop for a school holiday activity. The star viewer was great, and would be a hit kids interested in astronomy.

I downloaded a picture from flickr and put it in a calendar. I t was very easy.

http://destabilizer.org/

I visited the above site and found it very interesting as a mashup. It has news and everything else you could imagine. I watched a YouTube video clip about men trying to pull a palm tree out of thier yard. You could see what was going to happen ( why couldn't they). This site has photos, video clips, music clips and news items. I don't know about using it for work!! Perhaps visit it in my break to relieve stress!!

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

podcasts

Well this was a frustrating topic for me as our IT has restricted many forms of podcasts. I have been able to view a few so can work around these.
Stories on pod casts form Denver Library seems a really good idea for grandmothers baby sitting. Just put child in front of screen ( make sure it is a large flat screen) and go!!
There are a lot of subjects out there with podcasts. ABC would be good for all those radio national fans to get a repeat of what they have heard or catch up with something they have missed. Good for the man on the land for all the rural sessions.
Its interesting that some are just for listening and some for viewing. Red Symonds commentary is good (if you like his brand of humour).
In a library situation you could use it for an education tool - find a podcast that shows seniors how to use podcasts from one the education sites perhaps.
I googled "gardening podcasts" and came up with a lot of sites - amazing what is out there if you have the time to search.
Sorry I would rather be in my garden!!

Monday, April 7, 2008

Answer boards

This is just one more way of answering reference questions. I think the librarians give "exemplary answers" because this is what they are trained to do. Just like the American libraries that have a "late night book service" to answer questions via the web for night owls.
It would be a great way to get to the teenages with what is available in the library and answer questions they pose. Also a good forum for feedback.
It seems like a good idea in theory but it is always the monster TIME that prevents us from following through these inovations.
Pehaps this will be the way of the furture because teenages want information NOW without too much effort on their part.
It would be sad if this happens as the libraries then become only recreational centers. All other information will be web based, and the need to come into a library will not be necessary.
Will we be than, siting behind a computer screen all day and not face to face with our customers?
Sound very boring to me!!
I have put a question on Yahoo!7 Answers and I am eagerly waiting for the answer, but sorry it was not a library question!
Just cheked my question - no answers yet!!

Friday, March 28, 2008

Del.icio.us and others

https://secure.del.icio.us/settings/maureenm56/index


As far as I can see libraries use del.icio.us to list sights for further research and interests.
I must admit I like Cleavelands site better than Sutherland as it it easier to read. I must like lists because I don't like the CLOUD view.
Perhaps the library could make use of this in a library blog for HSC students. We could add sites that would help the students with further study, sites for coping with stress etc.
It also could benefit staff, as everyone could add their bookmarks of sites that may help for eg. readers advisery.
del.icio.us is easy to log onto and use, the instructions we were given were a great help.
searching "bookmobile" and searching bookmobile as an exact phrase in the advance search brought up the same results.
I had trouble finding nswpln2008. I put it in as a blog search in advance search and found it where as I couldn't under ordinary search.
The LibraryThing looks great, I will have to find more time to have a good look around. It would be a great help in finding books to read that are of similar interest, series and all books by authors.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Videos online


This video clip shows you what intersection to avoid in St Petersberg.


I found that YouTube and Google video can be very addictive. Many funny and serious videos. Searching both youtube and google gives you different subject matter on the same theme. I loved the young boy interviewing for NJ libraries, I thought it was brilliant, also the video clip to get information online all night ( must help the due next day project).

The oral histories I thought was a great idea and one that could be taken up in our library. Just imagine if once a month you asked one of your older borrowers to give a brief history of what it is was like growing up in their town or farm and how it has changed. Kids also would love the oportunity to give thier view of the world. This would be a great local history project and perhaps get more teenages involved in the library through giving their views on things and putting them in a library blog site.

This would be a great way of sending videos & keeping contact with family and friends that you don't get to see, eg interstate & overseas. You would of course have to watch the content for security reasons.

Embedding a video was very easy once I found the instructions in the blog help. I have found the blog help very useful and simple to follow, I have used on numerous occasions!!




Monday, March 17, 2008

Wiki World

The concept is good - everyone going to one page to place and edit information. Must make this a lot simpler than many emails and cc.

The first paragraph on the 'Full library success: best parctices wiki ' says a lot of what concerns me. People diliberatly putting fulse information or just using it for a personal vandetta site. You wuold be forever cleaning up content. A lot of staff time.

No doubt putting logins and password in place would help to put a stop to this to some extent.

What can you say about 'wookiepedia' - a Star Wars lovers dream. again anyone can set up a new user and put on what they wish - makes for entaining reading - not for vaild information.

The ' Book lovers wiki ' I can see real value in this site. We could set up a wiki on our web opacs for staff and borrowers to place book reviews and genre book lists. Beats paper copies on notice boards or book marks. A "readers advisory" dream.

It would take staff time to clean up and make sure content is legit, but I think this would be worth while. It would be forever updating itself, in that borrowers would be adding to it all the time, so when anything new comes out, no doubt there would be comment on it.

Having gone into the - Learning 2.0 wiki - I realised how simple it is to edit and manipulate content on a wiki page. I also learnt that nearly all library officers feel the same about their work. We are very passionate about our work in libraries!!

Thursday, March 13, 2008

RSS Feeds

I can see a lot of potential for feeds. I don't know if I would have the time or inclination to read a lot feeds coming in but one I would glance at every day would be the ABC news as it would update me on what is going on in Australia and the world, so i had current knowledge to pass on for reference questions. I added the - ABC news just in - feed to my blog.
I added gardening feeds ( as I am a garden fanatic) as well as library references to bloglines but I will more than likely forget to check them out regurally.
Perhaps if you set up a blog for the library you would be able to put feeds for borrowers to be able to check out. We would have to be very selective as there are hundreds out there.
I found bloglines very easy to use and it was very simple to add a feed to my blog.
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About Gardening (12) (0)
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Home and Garden Television (10) (0)
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NYT Book Review (10) (0)
The Shifted Librarian (12) (0)
USATODAY.com Books - Top Stories (40) (0)
Washington Post Book reviews (10) (0)