Sunday, July 20, 2008

You Tube

On a quiet afternoon, I had a quick squizz at You Tube to check out what othe librarians had done with this application. I liked ,the Librarians 2.0 manifesto, the test will be to see if I can embed it successfully in my blog. Fingers crossed. I also viewed the Chasers' video of John Howard; it is a bit dated now but those boys are terribly clever.

I'm not sure how YouTube can be applied in our corporate library environment with its myriad restrictions on introducing new applications. I may be pleasantly surprised by one of the funky young librarians on our team making a video to publicise the library's physical space.

Roll your own

One of my trusty colleagues has already used Rollyo and was quite chuffed that he was way ahead of the Learning 2.0 pack. He has placed on one of the weekly alerting services that he provides a customised Rollyo to search all Australian health and welfare sites. It is quite nifty. I managed to replicate a customised search engine for some of my favourite book review sites (yet another user id and password!) and I hope I can find it again. The next book that will be discussed at my book group is 'On Chesil beach' by Ian McEwan; I called up reviews of this book quite easily and quickly. Neat. By the way, I am finding del.icio.us to be very useful, go to it quite often.

iGoogle

It was interesting and rather easy to create a customised home page, it was a bit disconcerting to find some gadgets are naturally geared to US time zones. I fussed around trying to make Melbourne the default map for the GoogeMaps gadget, couldn't get it to work, eventually I had to abandon this quest and leave San Francisco as the default. I now have Melbourne weather, the current moon phases and the calendar as well as news items, and yesterday's Buddhist thought for the day. It was pleasing to find Leunig as an artist listed, so Mr Curly is part of the background artwork.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Zum Zum


View Larger Map

Hopefully I can remember how to replicate saving a Google map, it is quite neat to be able to send directions to get to a place.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Google maps

I love Google maps! I discovered pubs that I did not know existed in Brunswick, and I worked out I could do a pub crawl to all of them that would take about 1.5km, walking from my flat in Brunswick. I inadvertently found those in Germany too, I was too quick hitting the search button. I will be attending a health librarians meeting in Alice Springs in September, and I found out the quickest route to get from the hotel where I will be staying to the venue. The Internet went down this afternoon while I was working, so could not do something really neat and upload the relevant map with the route marked. Will try again later, hope I can get the technology to work.

I can see the applications of Google docs, easily facilitating collaboration between teams and the ability to access documents anywhere in the world - for example the benefits of placing scanned copies of important documents on my site while I am travelling abroad.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Wikis

Wikis can be useful to create online communities and enable collaboration between peers. I could see how for instance, I could try to understand how to design a website (the very idea is mind boggling for me) using this tool, with more tech savvy colleagues providing assistance. The use that public libraries have made of wikis is innovative and I can see how it would serve as a forum for training - some of the training resources gathered in one place were impressive. Equally innovative NZ Police using of wikis in a positive way.

Wikis can be the place to go if you are after an arcane fact or something obscure - I did a Google search on Andrea Palladio (+ wiki in search box) - the Church of San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice is stunning - and was instantly gratified to find pictures of his public buildings and plans in Wikimedia commons.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_San_Giorgio_Maggiore
There is always a boffin lurking around, collecting little know facts on a topic, wikis can
excel in this regard. Lucky to find archiplanet, a wiki with literally thousands of architects listed and their work.


Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Face Book

It was interesting to see that NASA has embraced Face Book to capture a younger audience. I can see how young people love this, one can instantly engage with hundreds of 'friends' and send out messages and images. I cannot see the value of this in my work environment (or in my personal life for that matter), and did not register. Similarly the Gen Ys and those younger are enamoured with My Space. I can see this facility being useful in the public or school library scene, it would not be appropriate or indeed useful in our work environment. It was worthwhile exploring the various sites, some are very creative and eyecatching. Victorian teacher-librarians are using Ning quite extensively and I can see how this can be a viable tool to share information on the latest in children's literature and general gossip.

PS

I have already joined HLA blog spot, and regularly receive updates on professioan developments. Blogs may not be as useful to be applied in our work environment; much of our work is sensitive in nature and is not appropriate for sharing via blogs.

Feeds

Spent some time this afternoon exploring feeds. Added about three, and then discovered 'bundled' feeds from Google. This may be overkill, I'll review the situation in a couple of days to see if I am overwhelmed with information and delete those that are not as interesting or useful. I can see the advantages of signing up for feeds, just need to remember to check them each day. It would be good if we can apply them to library alerting services - need to negiotate with our IT people though. I have found that they are terribly partial to chocolate frogs.

ImageChef

ImageChef.com - Custom comment codes for MySpace, Hi5, Friendster and more This is a cool app, I can see lots of possibilities .... image chef easy to use. I think I have got the hang of entering text beside the image now. it took a couple of goes.