Tuesday, March 18, 2008
"Funny Animal Antics"
After reading Pinky's blog on the YouTubes, I couldn't help myself. I originally found this on Cute Overload (thanks Project Play for showing that to me....I have lost hours of my life to that)
I loved all the library YouTube examples for this week's lesson. How creative some places can be. I can't help but think, for right now at least, that using YouTube to get young adults and younger involved in the library would be the best use for it. It seemed they were the ones who participated in the library contests featured today. I love the idea of letting them loose to promote a YS program, or just promote the library services to their peers.
And then embedding clips of, or entire, programs, for those who missed them. Fundraising campaign messages. Program promotions. Library opening celebrations. Just plain old self promotion. As libraries get good at promoting themselves with this technology, would local media catch on and use the YouTube clips on their special interest shows? You do see a lot of these "amateur" videos on television these days....
Monday, March 17, 2008
Veronica showed me how to do it
So here it is. Now when I do the YouTubes, I'll know how to do that too.
Friday, March 14, 2008
Podcasting

I'm cheating this week and not doing very much since I'm WAY behind in Project Play. I already knew a little bit about podcasts, as one of the things that gets me through the week is my Stephanie Miller podcast subscription (though she's on vacation this week, which is seriously effecting my mood.....) I did listen to all y'all's gabcasts. Nice work!
As for what you might use podcasts for in the library world: I like the idea of a book talk podcast - mini book reviews on a regular basis - a la abécédaire's gabcast. Or instead of subscribing to the enewsletter, getting a 2 minute update on library happenings via podcast. Or, as some have suggested, tutorials to guide people step by step through processes they need to learn like setting up email accounts. (would a youtube be better for this? just listening to something may not be as conducive to the learning process as listening and seeing.) Recordings of a library program that folks missed but may want to listen to?
Trying to learn, play and fear less.
Thursday, February 14, 2008
MyConfusion

I'm not really confused about MySpace or FaceBook. I've had some collateral experience with it, if only through anecdotes and occasional sightings of my daughter's FB account. (She'll talk about it but won't really let me look at it.) I understand how they are used, and how compelling (and addicting) they would be.
What I'm confused about it why anyone would use this in the library world. The one's that we looked at for examples were boring and outdated. They did not seem useful. If a teen or young adult went to any of them, they would never return. They look like I would look if I tried to talk in teen- or black-speak. Really stupid. I cannot imagine a teen or young adult paying any attention to a library blog whilst they are doing what they are doing on FB or MS.
Having said that, I can see a group of librarians with the same interests sharing articles, and discussions about articles and networking with each other on these things.
Did I just miss the good ones? How does everyone else feel about them?
Friday, February 1, 2008
Milking
While I can see the efficacy of having a task manager online, Remember the Milk isn't doing it for me. It doesn't seem to be a very intuitive, well organized web site. Or is it just me? I rate a web site as useful and excellent if I can get it to work. Not an easy 'award' to give to a web site, since I can be thick when it comes to learning web 2.0, but there are things out there (blogspot for one) that I can figure out.
My complaints:
Any other task managers out there that are easier to learn and more intuitive than Milk?
My complaints:
- it seems like each time I go into it, it looks different...if I login, it has one list, if I don't there's another.
- it includes the signature from your email as part of the message (many of us had this happen with our list additions)
- when I tried to delete my signature, I couldn't figure it out (though a colleague helped me and I cleaned up my and other's mistakes.)
- I can't figure out how to organize it - some listings have dates on them, some don't.
- Too big of a learning curve on this one.
Any other task managers out there that are easier to learn and more intuitive than Milk?
Milking

While I can see the efficacy of having a task manager online, Remember the Milk isn't doing it for me. It doesn't seem to be a very intuitive, well organized web site. Or is it just me? I rate a web site as useful and excellent if I can get it to work. Not an easy 'award' to give to a web site, since I can be thick when it comes to learning web 2.0, but there are things out there (blogspot for one) that I can figure out.
My complaints:
- it seems like each time I go into it, it looks different...if I login, it has one list, if I don't there's another.
- it includes the signature from your email as part of the message (many of us had this happen with our list additions)
- when I tried to delete my signature, I couldn't figure it out (though a colleague helped me and I cleaned up my and other's mistakes.)
- I can't figure out how to organize it - some listings have dates on them, some don't.
- Too big of a learning curve on this one.
Any other task managers out there that are easier to learn and more intuitive than Milk?
Saturday, January 26, 2008
Google Doc'ing

I like the idea of using Google docs. I've used similar document share-things before and they are very handy when a group is working on one large project. But I have yet to use it for all the documents I have on my flash drive. Something about having my drive as one place for all my things. Logic tells me that Google docs would be much more convenient, but emotionally, I want to have things on a drive. Why is that? Is it because I'm afraid of the possibility of things getting lost on the Internet? (I'm one that doesn't worry too much about hackers.) Things I used to depend on being there on the Internet seem to disappear with regularity, though that seems more about people redesigning their web pages than the thing actually disappearing. I'll try to get the courage to take that emotional step to start my next project on Google docs. Help me!
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