Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Pod is the word

Podcasts consume the rest of my time between TV, youtube, RSS feeds, work, sleep and eating. I have been subscribing to numerous podcasts, both audio and video for some time now and catch up on them periodically.
Of course podcasting doesn't work at work, so I had to remember to subscribe to more at home to complete the activities for this week. The British library being one, and more ABC podcasts. I had since subscribed to a Stephen Fry podcast after Week 1, just from seeing his great video on Web2.0.
I can see great opportunities for libraries and podcasts, book group discussions, author talks, speeches at events and even weekly news or upcoming events in an audio podcast.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Answer boards and social searching - Librarian's have all the answers!

Well the bonus from this week is that I have discovered taste.com.au from the referral in the social searching section. What a brilliant recipe site that I will return to. Love the social searching rating aspect.
I have often used answer boards for IT related issues, but more recently have come across them for more general information. The authority of the answer is hard to judge, but having librarians slam the boards is a great way to increase the reliability of them. I love that the public recognise the quality of answers from Librarians as shown in the wiki.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Tagging & Folksonomy

Del.icio.us
I like the way both Sutherland and Cleveland have used Del.icio.us for their tags. We sustain links pages for HSC, local and other general reference websites on our site. I think using Del.icio.us would appeal to those who already social bookmark and would also make it easier to update and reduce the need to train staff in editing webpages.
A tag cloud is a much preferable style of view to see the tags to me. You can easily see the most popular/used and is a positive move away from old school lists.

Technorati
It is great to see that you can broaden or narrow your search by using a keyword or tag search. The principles of library information retrieval remain! The results were more precise when using "bookmobiles" as a tag search, and conversely nswpln as a keyword search provided more posts. It's great to see all the images of libraries that have been added to flickr as part of learning 2.0

Librarything
What a wonderful thing librarything is. I have added a couple of books and put the widget on the right hand panel as you should see. In terms of the quality or cohesiveness of the tagging, perhaps this works for the most part, but I still see the need for some kind of uniformity. Forgive me I am a Librarian. I do like the social aspect though as it is interesting to see what other read and tag who have the same titles as you in their library.
I already use a similar tool on my social networking page, so probably wont be able to sustain 2, so will leave librarything for this exercise.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

The tube or youtube...

When at home my choice is usually do I watch TV or do I watch something on youtube. Inevitably it is usually a TV show that I catch up with on youtube.. (as suggested by the Stephen Fry clip in week 1) My first choice is usually youtube, although I like that Google is not restricted to 10 mins.

I noticed that google video listed both youtube and their own videos when doing the example searches for lego etc. I think this is a recent development when Google bought Youtube, as a year or so ago I remember google videos being only google videos. I particularly like that author talks at libraries are available, and would like to post many of our events on there, if we had the resources that is... I often would like to go to the author talks at Mosman and other libraries, but because I am usually at work here, don't get the chance. Online videos give me the opportunity as though I was actually there.

All the DIY and information videos is something I have recently discovered on youtube. I think libraries can take advantage of this and instead of giving someone a 2 dimensional book on creating something, they could have a real-time instructional video, or at least supplement this with the book.

Instead of embedding a library related video, I have decided to continue my Peruvian theme and show this short clip of exactly what I will be doing, seeing and feeling in 6 months time....

Monday, April 14, 2008

Wookie

Wikis are a fun word, and also a great tool.
I have been a member of the wetpaint wiki for some years now and have contributed a little to a couple of sites, book related.
Discover: I loved some of those wikis, particularly as you can see from my heading the wookieepedia. Wiki is a word that that you can have such fun with and the Star Wars fans obviously have.
I think a way Libraries can use wikis is to collaborate on information that needs currency. Book groups, reviews and other opinion sharing subjects is a great way to do this. The book lovers wiki at Princeton library was a perfect example of this.
Explore: I contributed a paragraph to the NSW public learning 2.0 wiki, and noticed in the list of next generation catalogs that Queens library with Aquabrowser was listed. We have wanted this and Queens use it very well. It is a pity that most Library Management Systems are not in touch with this possible next generation as their standard OPAC. They have missed the wave...
Adventure: I couldn't believe that my small suburb was listed in Wikipedia! It even listed famous people that live/d there. I would like to add a picture of the library building that has been closed for some time as my contribution to this article, but I have yet to take a photo.