Friday, May 30, 2008
Thing #23 Wrap-Up
I always meant to explore some of these web2.o applications, but never got it off of my "to do" list.
I am sure that I'll use Zoho in the very near future, in my personal life as well as at work. I belong to a writing group and we exchange pages every week. I'll be emailing them about Zoho tonight. We are in different parts of the country so this would be perfect.
I'm so much more comfortable with wikis and RSS feeds now. And even blogging is something I wanted to try, but never got around to. And I'm surprised that I liked certain things..like ListenNJ.
I hope we do more of this. There's so much more I'd like to learn about. I hope the next round will include social networking sites. They could be a great way to reach our customers. And if someone could explain to me the fascination with Second Life, I'd be really grateful.
The best thing about these exercises is that they made me think about the future of libraries and how web 2.o will change things. This is a pretty exciting time to be in this profession. There are so many possibilities.
Thing #22 Listen NJ
I downloaded Anne of Green Gables and gave it an obligatory listen. And I didn't hate it. It felt like someone was telling me a story. It wasn't bad at all.
And yes, I might go back and listen to some more. For me, this is a very big step.
Now don't get me started on the Kindle...
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Thing #21 Podcasts
There was an article in US News and World Report that discussed how university professors were using web2.o to teach. The really creative ones included podcasts. MIT physics professor, Walter Lewin, became a celebrity. His physics podcasts get thousands of hits a week.
There's a whole site on colleges that have classes (not for credit, just for fun) on a learning consortium http://ocwconsortium.org/
And of course, many of these classes combine the best of web 2.0 and include podcasts.
Now anyone can watch a podcast on physics from MIT or check out a class on nutrition at John Hopkins or view some materials on 19th Century Europe from UMass.
Thing # 20 You Could Be on YouTube
My story also contains a line from the slinky commercial and I wanted to get it right. The slinky jingle changes over the decades. Here's the one from the 1960's http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oA_rrlzQ77A
Watching videos on YouTube was a great way to get the feel of the decade.
My husband was researching martial arts techniques on YouTube and he found himself in a video. When he was a teen, he was in a martial arts show. As a blackbelt, he was one of the people the instructor threw around to demonstrate a technique. It's hard to see him because the video quality is poor (hmm... it could be a little old), but he's there. Doesn't this make you wonder if there's a video about you on YouTube too?
Thing #18 Why don't I use Google Docs or Zoho.com?
It's not like I don't see their value. Either one would be an asset for any collaborative project. For example, the programming team could use this for projects that require collaboration.
I did read that some people/groups/nations are hesitant to use Google docs because of concerns about security. In March 2008 ZDnet reported the following "Google CEO Eric Schmidt revealed yesterday that the US government has made "requests" for the search giant to share information about its users -- and that Google would comply if the requests were legal." The tech blogs are buzzing with stories about how colleges/nations/companies are concerned about privacy, perhaps concerned enough to not use these applications.
But that's not the reason I haven't used them. So we go back to why. Am I so entrenched in my comfort zone that I'm afraid to try something new? Am I too focused on putting out fires and trying to get a task done that I'm not looking at a better way to do it? I wish I had the answers.
I'm sure I will use one of these in the very near future. I look forward to seeing how it works in the authentic context of a collaborative project.
After looking at both, I prefer Zoho. In addition to the word processing feature, I'd love to try the chat feature. That could be fun. Plus I'm going to take a more detailed look at the planner. I hate Microsoft Outlook. It's not user-friendly and if anyone but Microsoft created it, it would have been long gone. So perhaps the planner feature on Zoho would finally get me away from my little black calendar book.
Thing #19 Web 2.0 Awards
All my business sector friends are on Linked-In. Some of them say that they've gotten jobs and clients from it. It was good to take a look at it. Pandora is one of my favorite sites. I discovered it not too long ago. Be careful not to ban a song when you're in a bad mood. There was one song I wasn't in the mood for and when I wanted to turn it off, I got the message that they'd never play it again. ColorBlender is a fun site. I'm sending the link to my sister who is painting her house. But it would also be great to use for webpage design and brochure design and maybe even for creating powerpoint slides.
Thing #7 Scanning

Thing # 15 Library 2.0
If I could pick our future, I'd go with the one described in the Library 4.0 section of "To a Temporary Place in Time". Mind gyms. Knowledge spas. Immersion in the luxury of ideas...it all sounds lovely.
Thing #14 Technorati
That's a quote I found using Technorati and doing a search on learning 2.o. It's from the blogger Ed Techie.
So perhaps while we are confronted new ways of thinking, new ways of organizing and using information and of course new technology, nothing really changes. Our essential library mission is still the same -- to facilitate, encourage and inspire lifelong learning for every individual in our society.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Thing #13 It's del.icio.us
I had a great use for del.icio.us. A customer wanted some info that was on a webpage. It was a webpage that had a database on it so the url was one of those hundred- character- long -squiggly-filled web addresses, and it wasn't going to be easy to find this page again. I showed him on the reference desk, but he wanted to search the database on one of the cybraryn pcs. If I had signed up for de.icio.us, I could have bookmarked this and then gone onto the cybraryn pc and used de.icio.us to call it up.
I like tagging. It lets the person who created the document to be the one who comes up with the search terms. Controlled vocabulary is slow to change. There's nothing more frustrating that trying to use controlled vocabulary to find a new trend and discover that it's classified under some archane term. However, I do think that controlled vocabulary has it's advantages. All those 'see also' reference are quite useful and the heirarchical structure of controlled vocabulary makes searching easier.
In the future, I hope that we'll be able to figure out a way to combine the best of both worlds.
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Thing #17 Sandbox
Thanks Jill, for letting me know that I didn't complete this. I think I was in the sandbox but somehow didn't quite get this right. But I played again. That's what sandboxes are for, I guess.
Thing #16 Wikis
I taught a computer class on Wikis last night, and it was interesting to see that moment when everyone realized exactly what a wiki was and how the information was created.
However, even after they said that they weren't sure they'd trust the info, when they looked at an article on a subject they were familiar with, they didn't find any obvious errors. Some said they were surprised by the level of detail. I'm looking forward to seeing what happens to wikipedia in the future.
Friday, May 2, 2008
Thing #9 Finding Feeds
Out of Topix.net, syndic8.com and technorati, I liked technorati the best. I wish that syndic8 had some easier instructions and didn't find it as intuitive as technorati. I also enjoyed Technorati's "rising posts and stories" section and learned that YouTube has been out-of-order for the past 90 minutes. Good thing I'm not up to that part yet.
Thing #8 Embracing The Simple Life
That was my first reaction when asked to subscribe to some RSS feeds.
I like hunting for info. That's the fun part. I don't need RSS feeds. I was pretty sure that after completing this assignment, I would have no need to ever use Bloglines again.
Until I found some really cool blogs, and realized that it's nice to have the info all in one place. Here are some of the things I found:
a blog on creativity and writing
one on writing prompts (and they were pretty good prompts)
the shifted librarian (which is a blog I always forget I like so I never read)
a great blog that had an entry on overcoming writer's block (I'm always looking for info on that since I seemed to have developed a chronic case)
Yep, I could be hooked. I even started reading some articles on how libraries are using rss feeds. There are so many possibilities. Some libraries are putting rss feeds on subject guides, others are using it to allow customers to find new books or track favorite authors.
The cool thing about RSS feeds is that they can help us interact with our customers and can help create a sense of community on our website.
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Thing #11: LibraryThing Revisited
This was recently posted on a friend's blog. I thought since it was LibraryThing related, I’d post it here.
I always considered myself a reader, but there are so many books that I haven’t read. Plus there are tons of books that I started and never finished. Sigh!
Below are the top 106 books most often marked as "unread" by LibraryThing's users. As in, they sit on the shelf to make you look smart or well-rounded.
- bold the ones you've read,
- underline the ones you read for classes (at least once),
- italicize the ones you started but didn't finish,
- * if it's actually on your bookcase and you haven't read it.
- + if you want to read it
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Anna Karenina
Crime and Punishment
Catch-22
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Wuthering Heights
The Silmarillion
Life of Pi
The Name of the Rose
Don Quixote
Moby Dick
Ulysses
Madame Bovary
The Odyssey
Pride and Prejudice
Jane Eyre
The Tale of Two Cities
The Brothers Karamazov
Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies
War and Peace
Vanity Fair
The Time Traveler's Wife
The Iliad
Emma
The Blind Assassin
The Kite Runner
Mrs. Dalloway
Great Expectations
American Gods
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Atlas Shrugged
Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books +
Memoirs of a Geisha
Middlesex
Quicksilver
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West
The Canterbury Tales
The Historian: A Novel
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Love in the Time of Cholera +
Brave New World
The Fountainhead
Foucault's Pendulum
Middlemarch
Frankenstein
The Count of Monte Cristo
Dracula
A Clockwork Orange
Anansi Boys
The Grapes of Wrath
The Poisonwood Bible: A novel
1984
Angels & Demons
The Inferno (and Purgatory and Paradise)
The Satanic Verses +
Sense and Sensibility +
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Mansfield Park
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
To the Ligthouse
Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Oliver Twist
Gulliver's Travels
Les Misérables
The Corrections
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Dune
The Prince
The Sound and the Fury
Angela's Ashes: A Memoir
The God of Small Things
A People's History of the United States : 1492-Present
Cryptonomicon
Neverwhere
A Confederacy of Dunces
A Short History of Nearly Everything
Dubliners
The Unbearable Lightness of Being
Beloved +
Slaughterhouse-five
The Scarlet Letter
Eats, Shoots & Leaves +
The Mists of Avalon +
Oryx and Crake : a novel
Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
Cloud Atlas
The Confusion
Lolita
Persuasion
Northanger Abbey
The Catcher in the Rye
On the Road
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry Into Values
The Aeneid
Watership Down
Gravity's Rainbow
The Hobbit
In Cold Blood
White Teeth
Treasure Island
David Copperfield
The Three Musketeers
Friday, April 25, 2008
Thing #12:Vanity Searching, oh yeah and NetLibrary and WorldCat

Thing #11: Library Thing
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/nanthelibrarian
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Thing #10 Technology Blog: Blue Ants, Library Catalogs, and Mom

I drive a lot and sometimes I need to make a quick phone call. Of course, I’m law abiding and hands-free. I have a hands-free blue tooth product by BlueAnt called the Supertooth II that’s mounted magnetically to the car visor. It’s the inexpensive model.
My sister, Jane, taught me how to use it. My family is filled with technophiles. Jane is not one of them. I mean, the woman doesn’t even check her email daily. But it seemed like she mastered the Blue Ant and was eager to show me how simple it was to use.
“It’s easy,” she says, one Saturday when we’re driving along the Staten Island Expressway. “All you have to do is talk.” Jane connects it into my cell phone, snaps it on the visor and presses a button.
The Blue Ant lights up. “Please state your command.”
“Call,” Jane replies confidently.
“Please state the name or number,” says the electronic voice.
“Jane.” My sister smiles.
“Jane?” says Blue Ant. “Calling Jane,” and in a few seconds, Jane’s cell phone is ringing.
I’m anxious to give it a try.
“Please state your command.”
“Call.”
“Please state the name and number.”
“Kate.”
“Kate?” Blue Ant seems like it needs some reassurance, so I nod. Jane laughs, and I suddenly realize that I’m nodding to an electrical device. A few seconds later, Kate’s phone is ringing. Her voice mail answers my Blue Ant’s call.
Not all my conversations with Blue Ant are amicable. I soon learn it does not recognize all names easily. While it seems to be able to handle Jane and Kate and any other name that has a long “A” sound, it has problems with others.
“Please state your command.”
“Call.”
“Please state your name or number.”
“Debbie.”
“Dan?”
“No Debeeeee.”
“Command timed out. Please try again.”
“Call!!!”
“Please state your name or number.”
“DEEEBBBEEEEE!!!!!!”
“Dona?’
At this point, I utter words that are not appropriate for this blog. My rant ends with the word "dummy.”
Something inside the Blue Ant clicks “Debbie? Calling Debbie.”
I’ve learned something. If I speak to the Blue Ant the same way it speaks to me, we get along better. For example, when I say “call Mom” it insists on calling “mobile one”, and frankly, I don’t even know who that is. When it finally gets the right number, I noticed that Blue Ant seems to read the “o” sound in “Mom” as a “u” sound. So now, I mimic the way it says a name to help it understand.
“Please state your command.”
“Call.”
“Please state your name or number.”
Instead of my normal Long Island accent, the tone I take is decidedly British. “Mum.”
“Mum?” says the Blue Ant. “Calling Mum”
And that’s the thing I like least about technology: having to change my own behavior to adapt to it. Sure in some cases it’s no big deal. I can call my mother “mum” so the Blue Ant will understand. But there are times when technology demands too much. And not everyone can keep up.
Sometimes those of us who are comfortable with technology fail to realize the changes it requires people to make. Take the library catalog, for instance. We all love the way an electronic catalog performs complex searches, slicing and dicing database records faster than a Ginsu knife can cut through a tomato. You can get pretty fancy with your search strategies. It's a wonderful thing. But what about the people who couldn't make the change from the card catalog to the electronic version? How do they find what they need in a library?
At the risk of sounding like a Luddite, there was something ingenious about the card catalog. You learned how to use it in about third grade. Once you mastered the skill, you were library literate. You could go into practically any library in the country and find your book.
Sure, at OCL we teach people how to use computers. I’m in constant awe of the people who sign up for our beginner computer courses. I think they are courageous. For some of them, mastering the mouse, learning a new vocabulary and surfing the net are huge accomplishments. But there’s a whole group out there we’re not reaching. My mother is part of that group of 'unreachables'.
My Mom is in her eighties. She is sharp. She knows the price of her stocks, her FICO score, and how to use a telephone to get information on just about anything. But she has no desire to learn how to use a PC. Trust me. Her sons, who are all technophiles, have tried to teach her. She’s turned down offers of free lessons and free computers.
When she was a child, she was library literate. In the 1930’s she was taught how to use a card catalog and for about 60 years, it worked for her. She could find things on her own. Now, she has to ask for help when she goes into the library. I can sense her frustration. I've seen it in some of our library customers too.
I’m not saying that we should go back to card catalogs. Although I have to admit, from a decorative point of view, they seemed cozier than a computer terminal. And of course, libraries need to be in the cutting edge of change. Web 2.0. Web 3.0. Web 5.0. Bring it on! It offers exciting possibilities. But we need to be sensitive to those who don’t share our feelings. When we look at new technology and new ways of doing things, we need to make sure it’s really “user-friendly”. It’s our responsibility to promote information literacy and to make sure that the changes we make don’t allow for more people to slip through the cracks. It’s important to make sure that we bring everyone along.
Well, I think I’ve rambled enough about technology. Maybe it’s time to go give Mum a call.
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
My friend Flickr?

You don't have to be an expert to make changes to your photos. Anyone with a pc and a little technological know-how can crop, lighten, darken, and even take away those alien-looking red eyes. If you think you look great in the dress you wore to your cousin's wedding, but now the person standing next to you is your ex, zap him out of the picture. Snip and crop until he doesn't exist.
What happens to the art of photography now that we can enhance and change photos? I know a man who stood on a beach for hours to get just the right amount of daylight in his nature pics. Now, he doesn't have to.
Are you really looking at a photo of sunlight streaming through leaves or was it a foggy day that's been, um, altered? At what point does the authenticity of the moment turn into a technological manipulation? Does it matter?
Monday, April 7, 2008
Thing 2: 7 1/2 Habits of Lifelong Learners
I like the 7 1/2 Habits of Lifelong Learners.
1. Begin and end in the mind
2. Accept responsibility for your own learning
3. View problems as a challenge
4. Have confidence in yourself as a competent, effective learner
5. Create your own learning toolbox
6. Use technology to your advantage
7. Teach/mentor others
7 1/2 Play
For me, the hardest is the first one, especially when it comes to learning new technology. If I can see an authentic reason for doing it, then I'm on board. But if I need to learn something just because it's a new technology, then my luddite tendencies creep in and I find learning difficult.
Why is my favorite habit "play" only a 1/2 habit? I take play very seriously. It gets your creative juices going and lets you think with both sides of your brain. Play deserves to be a whole number. If we make play the 8th habit, then we lose the "play" on the Stephen Covey book. But there are other steps that could turn to a half step. Keep play whole.
Here are two quotes about play and I think they do a good job illustrating why it's essential:
"The creation of something new is not accomplished by the intellect but by the play instinct acting from inner necessity. The creative mind plays with the objects it loves. " Carl Jung
"We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing. " George Bernard Shaw
By the way, one of my hobbies is collecting quotes so this blog will be filled with them.
Monday, March 17, 2008
Thing #1
Starting a blog has been on my things-to-do list for months now. I'm glad that I have a chance to try one.
Obviously, I'm going through all of the steps in the web challenge, but I hope to also blog about writing, creativity and how libraries inspire both!