Monday, December 29, 2008

Thing # 24: End of the year, end of the project!

I can't believe I'm done with the 24 things! It's been fun, and I've learned a lot. A bunch of the things--especially near the end--were applications I'm familiar with, mostly from non-work-related stuff I've done just for fun.

But here were also several things that I'd been avoiding because they just seemed too complicated or mysterious, or I had one of those random techno-blocks about them. Having to explore them for work was enough to get me past that, and that's been good.

Since it's New Year's Eve Day, and a big time for reflection and list-making, I'll hand out a few Playground-related awards:

Thing I Hadn't Known How to Do Before That Became an Addiction: RSS feeds, in a landslide. What did I ever do without Bloglines?

Thing Whose Appeal Continues to Mystify Me: Technorati. Maybe it's because I'm a lazy tagger, but I'll never understand how this is better than just Googling.

Biggest Surprise (besides the wonder that is RSS): Discovering the depth of my e-mail phishing naivete.

Happiest Reunion: Library Thing and me. I still don't know if I ever will add enough titles to my account to justify my paid membership, but it was good to get reacquainted.

Would I participate in another program like this? Sure. I like the self-paced exploratory nature of it, the support materials were really helpful, and it was fun.

That's all-- Happy New Year!

Thing # 23: Audiobooks

I just had a quick look at the Overdrive catalogue to see what's new there and what I might want to listen to. I've downloaded books from them before, and listened to them on my computer--a good book can make doing the dishes go much faster!

One thing I like about downloading audioboks: no overdue fees. When your loan period is up, the book just disappears from your hard drive. Of course, the downside of that is that...well...the book just disappears from your hard drive, whether you're done with it or not. Thus it was that I only got halfway through Meg Cabot's Avalon High a few months ago, and then--zoop!-- it was gone. Maybe this "thing" will inspire me to download it again and finish it!

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Thing #22: Podcasts, and the Lure of the Familiar

First, to be totally clear: The CBC is a wonderful organization, better funded and in many ways more creative and adventurous than its U.S.-based equivalents, NPR (National Public Radio) and PRI (Public Radio International).

That said...sometimes, since moving up to Vancouver, I miss the NPR/PRI shows that I used to listen to. I miss the indie-hipster storytelling of This American Life, and the charming goofy panelists on Wait, Wait! Don't Tell Me! and Terry Gross's soothing and occasionally off-kilter interviews on Fresh Air.

For a while, I wandered unmoored in a brave new aural universe. Then, a few months ago, I discovered podcasts. Oh blessed podcasts, connecting me with the radio voices of my past! Now I subscribe to my old NPR shows--not to mention such CBC gems as Writers and Company and The Vinyl Cafe and listen to them whenever I want.

Then I discovered I could subscribe to podcast-only shows, like the kidlit-centered Just One More Book! and the universe expanded once more.

So these days, I don't turn on an actual radio much any more, except in the car. Instead, I've pretty much created my own radio station from podcasts. I miss the virtual-community feeling of tuning in at a certain time, and knowing I'm listening to a radio show at the same time as thousands of other people, but on the other hand I don't have to be sad any more that I'm missing Stuart Maclean's finest just because I'm on the reference desk Saturday mornings.

Plus, I have "Dave Cooks the Turkey" saved on my computer for posterity, just in case I ever get the urge to laugh so hard I fall over.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Thing #21: YouTube, ITube, We All Tube

A couple of months ago, some friends and I got insanely ambitious and even though none of us had any filmmaking experience whatsoever, we decided to make a 5-minute video about the financial crisis. With Barbies. (Our kids helped.)

So we did, and we posted it on YouTube, and it was fun. Here it is:

Thing #20: Askaway

I've worked three or four Askaway shifts now, and have gotten a bit more confident about it. The hardest part for me has been signing in! There are two or three levels of sign-in, and at least two windows that need to be open during the Askaway session, and it took me a while to get the hang of it.

The last shift I worked was the busiest-- the questions just kept coming, and we were shortstaffed, and I'd somehow gotten myself out of the chat page that lets librarians staffing the service communicate with each other, so I wasn't sure exactly who else was on or what they were doing, so I kept trying to take all the calls I could.

A lot of the questions I've gotten on Askaway are pretty simple--people want a single reference, or, alternately, they want to know about something so specialized that I know it would take me a long time to dig up even the beginning of the answer, so I refer them to a more specialized resource (like an archive, or a law library). That seems to work fine, and people seem to be happy with the information I can give them.

I think it's hardest on Askaway to do the kind of iterative reference work that I think of as the bread-and-butter of in-person reference service: someone comes in with a vague idea about what they want, you start to show them something but keep talking with them at the same time, and then they talk a bit more and clarify what it is they're looking for-- sometimes it's something they didn't think of mentioning, or sometimes their own needs become more clear as they look at the first resource and realize it's not what they want after all--and then you look together for something else, and then they get more specific, and finally you hit on the thing they really wanted, or at least figure out what it is and how to order it, and everybody's happy.

That kind of reference interview depends so much on in-person give-and-take, tone of voice, body language, back-and-forth conversations; it's hard to reproduce in an online chat environment. But for more straightforward questions, Askaway works pretty well.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Thing #19: Liveblogging a Couple of Databases


I've used EBSCO a lot, and found a few car things for people in the Auto Repair Centre, and I taught a lesson once on Canadian Newsstand QP Legaleze, so I should know my way around those (though I continue to have a hard time actually finding what I'm looking for in QP Legalese-- maybe I need to take a class before teaching another one!), but there are a bunch of databases I've never even looked into. So I'm going to look into a couple of new ones, and liveblog my experience here:

1. Encyclopedia of British Columbia:

I'm interested in finding out about the street trolley that used to run along Hastings Street, near my house, so I did a search for "Trolley". I got the "Street Railway" entry, which gives me a nice little article with a lot of links to other encyclopedia articles, and a photo of one of the President's Conference Committee cars which ran in Vancouver starting in 1939 (see photo above.)

That search reminded me that I want to find out more about the Kettle Valley Line, about which my daughter learned a song last year. So I'll do another search, and:

Hmm. "Kettle Valley Line" gets nothing, so I'll try just "Kettle Valley."
Bingo! An article on the Kettle Valley Railway. Informative, filled with links, includes links to other related websites, more photos, and a map of the Kettle Valley Line route. Nice!

Oh, and there's a helpful Subject Search feature that lists and links to long feature essays on topics like Architecture, Peoples of BC, and Physical Geography. Good to know.

Okay, on to another database...

2. Oxford Reference Online

This is mostly a literary/language reference, so I wanted to see if they had any citations for a folktale I heard at a workshop with Margaret Reid Macdonald last week. She told it as "The Great Smelly, Slobbery, Small-Tooth Dog," but then said she'd made up the "slobbery" part, so I just looked up "small tooth dog."

And there it was:

Small-Tooth Dog, the. A Derbyshire fairytale, an analogue to Beauty and the Beast, with the hero in the form of a dog; he recovers human form when the girl renames him ‘sweet-as-honeycomb’ (Addy, 1895: 1–4; Philip, 1992: 69–71).

Groovoid!

Friday, December 12, 2008

Thing #18: Office 2007

One day, a few months ago, I came in to work, double-clicked on my trusty Word icon, and whammo! What was this?? Everything was different!

I had been transported into the magical world of Office 2007, and my life would never be the same.

Well, okay, my life was basically the same. But my experience of using Microsoft Office, particuarly MS Word, was not.

Here are some things I like better about the new version of Word:

  • Sliding bar to zoom bigger or smaller-- easy! intuitive! I use this a lot, especially when printing up big song lyrics to display at story times.
  • No more paperclip office assistants! (I always did think that paperclip was creepy...)
  • Strikethrough font now has its very own menu button!
  • New menu design makes it quick & easy to change paper orientation from portrait to landscape, insert page breaks, and do other tasks.

And here are some aspects of Word 2007 that have been, er, challenging for me:

  • The automatic double-spacing in the default format is awkward
  • I'm finding it harder to change the margins to non-standard sizes
  • There have been version compatability issues on some computer terminals, making it impossible to save a document until the hardworking Technical Services folks come and do something to the computer to fix it
  • I've had a hard time getting used to the menu bar at the top; there are menu items I've been using for literally decades that just aren't where they've always been. The help system seems pretty good, and I've been able to use it to find some things that mystified me (like the "Select all" button), but it's definitely a learning curve.

All in all it looks like the new version is a Good Thing: more powerful, more features, and sometimes even more intuitive. It's going to take me a while to get used to it, though.

Thing #17: Shared Calendars in MS Outlook

I use online calendars a lot. A ton. Almost constantly, to tell the truth. At my old job as a teacher-librarian I was juggling so many balls that without my calendar (and the old catalog cards on which I kept a constantly-updated set of to-do lists) I would have been utterly lost.

These days, I use Microsoft Outlook for my work calendar and Google Calendar to coordinate my schedule at home: my spouse, my daughter, and I each have a different complex and variable schedule that could change at a moment's notice, so we finally jettisoned our paper calendar and rely on Google to keep track of our work schedules and auxiliary shifts and PAC meetings and childcare needs and birthday parties and piano lessons and...and...and...I'm sure I'm forgetting something; let me check my calendar ;-)

So inviting people to meetings isn't new for me, but I'd never known about shared exchange calendars, so it was neat to poke my virtual head into the LV Board Room and see what's going on there.

One caveat/funny story about using Outlook to schedule meetings: five or six years ago, at my old job, I was scheduled to go into a classroom to teach some information skill or online database. I made myself an Outlook appointment so I'd remember it, and invited the classroom teacher as well. I set the pop-up reminder to two days ahead of time, so that I'd remember to prep and make handouts for the lesson.

Little did I know that this meant that the classroom teacher would also get a pop-up reminder two days early. Being something of a technological novice, she couldn't figure out how to make it stop popping up-- I think she was setting it to "snooze" so it kept showing up every ten or fifteen minutes--and eventually she came over to the library to complain and ask me to please stop constantly emailing to remind her about the session!

After that, I stopped setting reminders ahead of time when inviting others to a meeting; instead, I made myself a separate meeting or task at the same time and put the reminder on that. Complicated, but it worked.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Thing #16: Email and Phishing

I read up on email etiquette, which I'm mostly familiar with, and on phishing, about which I thought I was pretty savvy.

Then I took the SonicWALL Phishing and Spam IQ quiz. And I only got 6 out of 10! How embarrassing!

Fortunately, the results page includes a "Why?" link for each question, pointing out clues that should give you a good idea of whether the email in question is phishing or legit. After studying the questions I got wrong, I now have a better idea of what to look for: a message that addresses me by name, an actual link address that matches the address listed in the message, and a cut-and-paste option if the message instructs me to go to a certain website to take action.

OK, then. Good to know.

Thing # 15: Sandbox!


Well, that was fun. I logged into the NVDPL Sandbox Wiki and added my travels to the general list (Can it really be that I'm the only one here who's been to Wales? That seems unlikely, somehow), as well as my favorite book and movie, and a cute kid story from when I was on the LV Children's desk this morning.

Then I noticed that the "Favourite Movies" category, though it was linked in the narrative text on the home page, wasn't listed along with the other sections in the sidebar. I thought, "Hey, this is a wiki, I can add it myself! I am empowered!" So I did.

When I clicked "Save" on my sidebar edit, I got this message:
This page, 'SideBar', gets special handling on PBwiki — its contents will be shown as part of the sidebar drawn on all standard pages. By deleting this page you can remove the sidebar display. If all 3 special pages (SideBar, QuickStart, RecentActivity) are deleted or otherwise don't exist, the sidebar is not shown. In addition, the sidebar is not shown when viewing these pages themselves, like you are doing now.
And I thought, "Gosh, I could delete the whole sidebar right now if I wanted to! In fact, I could delete all the content, including everyone's travels and favorite books! I'm empowered!"

But I didn't.

Anyone else could, though. Such is the double-edged sword of wikis.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Thing #14: The Wackiness of Wikis

I read the Wiki articles listed under Thing #14, and was particularly intrigued by the comments on this post. Amazing how many commenters didn't know that anyone can edit a wiki. I was also surprised at how many commenters, on learning this, were ready to immediately dismiss wikis as an information source.

Like many teachers and librarians, I have my share of tongue-clucking kids-[and teachers]-today-with-their-ignorant-reliance-on-Wikipedia anecdotes. But I have to admit to using Wikipedia A LOT myself, though when I'm doing research for someone else I always try to back it up with a second source--often from a website cited in the relevant Wikipedia article. I think the breadth and collaborative aspect of Wikipedia is one of the wonders of the post-Internet world.

And Wikipedia's unreliability serves as an excellent reminder that all sources--even the blandest of print encyclopedias--have the potential to be unreliable and biased, and that it's always useful to ask the question "Who wrote this, and why?"

Friday, December 5, 2008

Thing #13: Library 2.0...version 1.0

Well. I have a LOT to say about Library 2.0. Maybe too much to fit in a blog post. I read the articles listed on the 23 Things page, and clicked over to a few of the links, and eventually found this 2006 article by Walt Crowley, in which he attempts to sort through all the writing and thinking and discussions on the topic. His survey is pretty impressive, and he seems to come away from it with the sense that people are using the term "Library 2.0" to mean pretty much whatever they want, but that overall it has to do with use of social networking software and how that affects libraries.

I tend to be skeptical when people talk about impending sweeping changes to any widespread institution, like libraries or schools. It's not that I don't like change, or that I don't recognize that it happens; it's more that change of the kind the Library 2.0 pundits are writing about is usually limited by the budget and human resources of the institution: people--both employees and the public--are not going to adapt to an entire new set of skills or attitudes instantaneously, and change, when it comes, tends to sort of creep up on you until you turn around and realize that things are quite different than they were a generation ago.

Here's an example, from the last wave of the technological revolution: when I started working in libraries, in 1990, I was a clerk (like an LAII). One of my jobs was to place holds for people: if they wanted to reserve a book, they had to look it up in the online catalogue, write down some information about the title and themselves on a Reserve Slip, and then I entered it into the computer for them. When the hold arrived at the library, they'd get an automated phone call or a computer-generated notice in the mail. (This system had been implemented before I started, but there were many employees who remembered having to phone each patron to let them know their holds were in.) When the patron came to pick up their hold, we would pull it from the Hold Shelf and check it out for them.

I remember when the online system was upgraded to allow patrons to place their own holds on the public computers. Suddenly, we needed twice as many hold shelves! People placed many more holds when they were empowered to do it themselves.

A few years later, by the time I started library school in 1995, the library had its own website, and patrons could place holds from their home computers, receive email notices, pick up their own books from the hold shelves, and check them out themselves from self-checkout terminals. Much more autonomy for the patrons, much less need for intervention or assistance from library employees. And yet there was still plenty of work: since so many people had such open access to the library, they were placing even more holds than before.

There was lots of anxiety among library people around that time: would libraries as we knew them become obsolete? Were we library-school students being trained for a profession that had no future? Were we the buggy-whip makers of the late 20th century?

As it turned out, no. The Internet revolution happened, sure, and it swept libraries along with it. But the basic shape of libraries has remained the same, despite predictions to the contrary. As with the book reserves example above, the shape of what we do has changed in some ways-- less calling to notify patrons and entering hold information for them, and more database instruction, printer troubleshooting, and handing out of temporary Internet slips--but what library users want from us is pretty much the same: help finding stuff, and suggestions about good things to read (and listen to, and watch) and ways to search for information.

I don't see that changing much in the face of Web 2.0. We'll respond to its demands as patron interest and library resources dictate, whether that be a library presence in Second Life, classes in blogging and Flickr, more responsive online catalogue software (that would be my vote!), and/or other methods that haven't even appeared on the horizon yet. But though the shape of the library may stretch and change, I don't think it's going to be demolished and rebuilt anytime soon.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Thing #12: Facebook, or How I Learned to Love Throwing Sheep


Facebook is reputed to be the social networking tool of the young and hip, but most of the Facebook users I know are middle-aged like me. In Facebook, as in the rest of life, people of similar age and interests tend to clump together, and so it is that without much active effort I have accumulated a gaggle of Facebook friends in their 30's, 40's, and 50's, who are interested in books, our families, and assorted random goofiness.

Actually I have two Facebook pages-- a personal one and a professional one. I set up the professional page so I could start a Facebook group for teens interested in library events and updates.

I set up the personal page so I could throw sheep at my friends.

Seriously. Most of my Facebook friends--the ones who are actual, you know, FRIENDS, but also some of those who are friends mainly in that we have (here it goes, noun-into-verb alert, wait for it...wait for it...) FRIENDED each other on Facebook--anyway, most of those people who I connected with because our our deep interest in words, books, deep thoughts about life, etc.--well, mainly what we do on Facebook is throw sheep at each other, via a silly little Facebook application called SuperPoke.

I know, I know, you can do all kinds of useful things on Facebook, like sending out mass invitations and updates, and letting people know about your recent blog posts, and putting up photos of your family and friends, and all that cool stuff.

But really you can do much of that stuff via e-mail and blog posts and such, while there is no comparable substitute for a good sheep-throwing free-for-all. And when you get tired of throwing sheep, there are lots of variants, like sending flowers, tripping peole, and even seasonal options such as throwing pumpkin pies, throwing Santa, and throwing Hillary Clinton. It's fun, builds community, and is highly theraputic, too.

So, duck! (Baaaaaaaa!)

Friday, November 21, 2008

Thing #11: Technorati

Maybe it's the season sneaking up on me, but for some reason I have the urge to sing the word "Technorati" to the tune of the Hallelujah chorus:

TECH-no-rati!
TECH-no-rati!
Technorati! Technorati!
Tech-NO-ra-TI!

No? Okay, maybe not.

So, as suggested, I checked out Technorati and learned more about how tags work. As I've mentioned before, I'm a terrible and pathetic tagger, and really have mixed feelings about tagging as a useful tool on a large scale; the universe of natural language is just too big and varied.

But I had fun looking at Technorati's tag clouds, and checking out what's popular and rising these days. Seems to me that Technorati would be an extremely useful tool for writers or pundits who want to keep their finger on the pulse of what's being talked about, and it is helpful if you want to see who's linked to your blog or website lately (I did a few vanity searches and found that some surprising people have linked to a couple of things I've written, so that was neat).

As suggested, I did try searching on "Learning 2.0", and found 7,007 posts that mentioned the term, but only 531 with the "Learning 2.0" tag. Which suggests that many other people are just as lazy about tagging as I am. Good to know!

Friday, November 14, 2008

Thing #10: Mmm, Delicious!

image of chocolates courtesy of freefoto.com

Del.icio.us is yet another one of those things I've been hearing about for years and have finally gotten to explore. And it is, indeed, as cool as everyone said. It's like a portable bookmark list! That you can add to quickly and easily and without even hardly breaking stride, as you surf and slide around the Internet!

Only a couple of problems:

1. Tagging. Tagging is my bete noire. In my non-work online life I never remember to tag: not blog posts, not photos, not gmail messages, not LibraryThing books. This means that when I search for something (say, in my formidable backlog of old gmail messages on my personal email account) I just have to try to remember what words I might have used in the subject heading or contents of the message, and look under those. Sometimes that works great, sometimes not, sometimes it works but I have to sift through pages and pages of results to find what I'm looking for.

I'm guessing it will be the same on del.icio.us, when and if I accumulate a sizeable list of bookmarks: I won't remember to tag, so they'll just be all jumbled, like the papers on my desk, and I'll have to sift and sort and guess to find what I want.

2. Del.icio.us button. This button is part of what makes del.icio.us so cool, because you don't have to stop and cut and paste to add a site to your del.icio.us account: just see a site you like, click, and voila! it's added. Only problem is, the button isn't available on shared computers (like the NVDPL computers), so some of the advantage of using del.icio.us is nullified when I'm using it at work, since in order to add a site I either have to stop, open the del.icio.us site in another window, and then cut and paste and click to add a new site to my account, or else have the forethought to just keep the del.icio.us site open in a separate window whenever I'm on the Internet.

Ah, well; nothing's perfect. And the road to ultimate online transparency is ever strewn with rocks and stones and snares.

In the meantime, the name of this application is making me hungry for dinner. Mmm... dinner!

Friday, October 10, 2008

Thing #9: Exorsising my LibraryThing Demons

Goodness, it's been a while. I was so sure I'd be totally done with all 23 things by now! But I'm finally back, anyway. I think I had a LibraryThing block. I'll explain...

To tell the truth, I've been a member of LibraryThing for almost three years now. I heard of it when it first launched, and in a burst of enthusiasm I ponied up $25.00 for a full lifetime premium membership, enabling me to add as many books to my account as I chose (the free membership only entitles one to catalog a paltry 200 books). I picked a few random books from my collection and cataloged them on my account, astounded at the ease with which LibraryThing spat out the full MARC record on any and every title I typed in, including the most obscure, with just a few keyword clues.

Then... I did nothing. All around me, online friends were cataloging their books and their kids' books and rating and reviewing their books and tagging them and making tag clouds and making connections with other LibraryThing members and and posting their collections on their blogs ... there was, and is, an ENDLESS amount of stuff you could do with LibraryThing.

It was overwhelming.

Anyway, I already had a list of all the books I'd read since 1999: it was handwritten, in a scruffy old spiral notebook, and I kind of boggled at the idea of transferring my records of all 1,000+ books from my beloved book log onto LibraryThing just so that I could put my list online. I mean, sure, adding a few books to a LibraryThing account is easy-peasy, but that much cataloging at once felt too much like...well, like work.

So, LibraryThing has been sort of a guilty barely-started project of mine lo these past three years. Like an Internet version of the scarf I once tried to knit, that ended up buried in the bottom of my teenage closet, a sad little skein of yarn with a few holey knitted rows all stuffed in a wrinkled paper bag.

But now, now I must confront my demons. For my job. So, I opened up LibraryThing again. Dug up my account information, only to discover that my "lifetime" unlimited account seemed to have reverted to basic-member status. Emailed the very kind and friendly LibraryThing staff and got my premium account reinstated.

And today, at long last, I have figured out what I will do with my LibraryThing account: I will use it to keep track of the Readers' Choice award books I read each year. That's nice and clearly defined, and much less scary than thinking I'm going to have to catalog my whole collection, or all the books I've read in the past ten years.


So. I just logged in to LibraryThing and added five Stellar Award nominees: three that I've read, one that I'm reading now, and one that I have checked out and plan to read soon. I'll keep them in my paper book log, too, but it's nice to have made peace with LibraryThing at long last.


Over on the sidebar you'll find some random books from my LibraryThing. Can you tell which ones I added back in 2005 and which are new?

Friday, August 15, 2008

I Made a Comic! (Thing #8: Image Generators)

Okay, this "Make your own comic" generator is extremely cool. I found it on the generator blog, and despite a total lack of drawing expertise, I created this comic strip-style reflection on a book I just read in about 20 minutes.

It was fun! And now I want to do a whole series! But I don't think the "Unshelved" creators have to worry about any competition from me.

Now, if only I could figure out how to copy and paste the comic into this post...

Friday, August 1, 2008

Thing #7: Finding Feeds

The good news is that over the past few weeks I seem to have collected a nice list of blog feeds on my Bloglines account relating to libraries/books/children's & teen literature, and that it's fun, quick, and convenient to check them--they're all in one place, and I can skim the titles and decide which ones I want to read all the way through.

The bad news is that I'm not exactly sure how I amassed the list.

Neither the Bloglines nor the Google nor the Technorati search tools seemed to have a quick, simple way to find a list of library-related blogs, so mostly I found a bunch of blogs I liked and then looked at the sites they linked to. I also subscribed to the Bloglines Quick Picks "Books" package, so now I'm reading the NY Times book reviews and the Globe and Mail arts news on a regular basis.

I have a special soft spot for the book blogs maintained by librarians and other enthusiasts, though. My favorite blog title? Bookshelves of Doom, which focuses on teen literature and also on challenges to books in libraries and schools. Recently she linked to a librarian's thoughtful response to a book challenge. Pretty inspiring.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Thing #6: RSS Feeds

RSS, like Flickr, is yet another thing that a bunch of friends, plus my mom, have been blithely using for years, while I doggedly plod along manually (or manually-digitally) checking each individual site that I like whenever I get around to it. I have to admit that I like the idea of "visiting" different sites, rather than having them all streamed directly to me. While intellectually I understand the usefulness and efficiency of feeds, on a totally irrational level it feels more friendly and sociable to click over to the actual websites.

(NB: It feel pretty strange to have an "old-fashioned" way of visiting blogs already, when five or six years ago I didn't even know what one was!)

Anyway, this afternoon I finally got myself registered for both Bloglines and Google Reader, with some degree of success. Maybe because most of the sites I like to visit are blogs, I found Bloglines easier to use--Google Reader couldn't find a feed for one of my favorite kidlit blogs, A Fuse #8 Production, even when I pasted the URL right into the "subscribe" bar, while Bloglines turned it up right away.

Here is a link to my public subscriptions on Bloglines. I'm actually kind of a blog-reading addict, and have a much longer list of kidlit blogs that I check at least occasionally, but I'm starting out on Bloglines with just a few. Maybe I'll add to the list later, after see how this newfangled way of checking blogs suits me.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Thing #5: Flickr Mashups & Tools

Maybe it's the gloomy weather we've had this month, but I found myself drawn to the oranges when playing with the Flickr Color Pickr. Here's a screenshot of the brightest orange images I could find from the Urban Decay edition of this mashup:


In the original, you can click on each small boxed image to viewthe larger photo. All the ones I've looked at have been just stunning.

Another application I looked at was the Alphalearner, whose purpose is to "help children learn [the] English Alphabet through photos". The Alphalearner gives a taste of the terrific educational potential of social-networking sites like Flickr. It also illustrates some of the hazards of user-generated natural language tags. For examples of the latter, check out the photos displayed in Alphalearner's "D is for Donkey"--which seems to feature mostly human donkeys--and "Z is for Zebra" (there are some zebra-striped animals in there, but only a few actual zebras)

Friday, June 20, 2008

Thing #4: Flickr!

For years, friends have been hounding me to get a Flickr account, to no avail. Turns out, all it took was a few minutes on the Flickr and Yahoo! websites. Now all I have to do is remember my login, which is no small feat.

This photo was the first one I loaded onto my new Flickr account. I snapped it last fall when I was doing some teen programming and was promoting a duct tape crafts program. I also wanted a photo for my page on the NVDPL teen Facebook group that would represent me in some way, but not show my face.

I really like that one of the books in the photo is entitled "Things Not Seen"!

Monday, June 9, 2008

Thing #3: Posting to the NVDPL Training Blog

I just posted to the NVDPL Staff training blog, including a link to Shared Notes; my test post is here.

Thing #2: Test Post

O joy-- I get to blog for work! This is a test post for the NVDPL Playground program, based on the 23 Things program that several other libraries have run.

I have a couple of other blogs, but have created this one just for NVDPL Playground-related posts.

Okay-- over and out!