Tuesday 25 November 2008

Locate a few useful library related blogs and/or news feeds - Reflections.

Locate a few useful library related blogs and/or news feeds - Reflections.



  • Now that you are blogging, where do you want to take it? Is
    is just an exercise or will you start building your readership through
    your own RSS feed?
I have already set up a test blog for IFLA/FAIFE, which should be appearing soon. After that, I will hopefully be adding a WordPress blog to my own website, with various feeds/blogrolls.
  • So you've found some good blog reads. Are
    you sharing these finds with others? How are you doing that? Through
    blogrolls on your blog? Through contributing to wikis and other
    collaborative content? By sharing a My Yahoo or iGoogle page?
I am already various blog reads via the FAIFE-L mailing list, while waiting on the new IFLA website to become active with the FAIFE blog. I have made a few additions to Wikipedia, but do not particularly like My Yahoo or iGoogle as prefer to have more control. I  also use Linkedin & Facebook for collaboration.

  • Now
    that you are reading more blogs more regularly through the use of your
    feed reader, how are you going to use that knowledge both personally
    and professionally?
I am already using these personally to stay aware of world events & things of personal interest. Professionally I use them to feed into my professional associations & committees; later they will be extremely useful in future employment, to keep clients up to date & allowing them to manage their own information.

Week 5 RSS & Newsreaders -Challenge

Week 5 RSS & Newsreaders -Challenge



On Bloglines

1. Add a Bloglines Subscribe button to your web browser to make it super easy to subscribe as your browse. Bloglines tells you how here.


Given that my Newsreader is not Bloglines - this is not really applicable. The integration between Firefox & RSSOwl is getting better & should provide the same functionality soon.
2. Feeling really brave? You can try sharing your feeds on your blog. Bloglines tells you how here.

I prefer the Google Reader sharing, it allows for a chronological feed rather than a BlogRoll (ie. seperated into feed sources) - see the "Censorship via MarkP" section on my blog.

Week 5 RSS & Newsreaders - 23 Things - SLA's Wiki Spaces

Week 5 RSS & Newsreaders - 23 Things - SLA's Wiki Spaces

Reflections: Localize your learningsAsk Yourself

* How will using a feed reader change my web experience

I have been using a feed reader for a while (RSSOwl), which has enabled a much easier tracking of information from various sources, replacing many email list subscriptions & visits to websites. It also enables faster dissemination of such information to interested colleagues, etc.

* How can I use a feed reader to optimize my professional development?

I use my feed reader to stay up to date with various professional associations, library IT / law / general developments. It also alerts me to online training opportunities, often free (eg. SLA's 23 things).

* Can we use RSS feeds to enhance a resource we are currently providing to our users?

Definitely. Not only can it automate certain resources such as alerts & news, but also broaden the resources available. However, it is important not to forget that certain users do not have RSS feed readers, so that other routes may also need to be made available.

* Do RSS feeds help us to think about a new set of resources we can provide to our users?

Yes, if combined with blogs - it can allow user input via comments; plus, given that RSS feeds are multimedia, podcasts, videos, images can also be provided.

France - Journalist from state-owned television station France 3 asked to reveal sources for report about Moroccan arrest warrants

France
- Journalist from state-owned television station France 3 asked to
reveal sources for report about Moroccan arrest warrants

France - Journalist from state-owned television station France 3 asked to reveal sources for report about Moroccan arrest warrants

(RSF/IFEX) - Reporters Without Borders is exasperated to learn that Joseph Tual, a journalist with the French state-owned TV station France 3, was questioned on 20 November 2008 by a court in Lille on suspicion of "violating professional confidentiality" in a report about new developments in the investigation into the 1965 disappearance of Moroccan opposition politician Medhi Ben Barka in Paris.

Sunday 2 November 2008

10. Create a blog post about anything technology related that interests you this week

  • Which Web 2.0 technology have you found most challenging so far? Why?
Delicious - very new form of 'bookmarking'; difficult to separate what I wish to be public & that which is personal. Plus, the networking side is not yet clear, perhaps Delicious will remedy this is a new release
  • Which is most likely to effect the way you do your work, or the way that you support your organization?
RSS & Mashups* have definitely already changed my working patterns, plus the way I follow the news.
  • What are your thoughts on the longevity of these products? Are they here to stay or just a flash in the pan?
Here to stay in one form or another, although some of the more purely 'gadget' products may disappear...

*One area I definitely would like  to research more is that of Mashups, but particularly 'data mashups'; an excellent video series introducing this is "Making Mashups with Info 2.0 - part 1 of 7"

I am also looking forward to the '23 things' sessions on sharing feeds on my own blog (differing  from blogrolls I suppose), rolling my own search tool with Rollyo and adding an entry to the Learning 2.0 sandbox wiki (wikis being another area I would like to get into)

Saturday 1 November 2008

9. Have some Flickr fun and discover some Flickr mashups & 3rd party sites.

I like the idea of mashups - but not particularly with Flickr or images, I think maps & data would be more interesting; although I can see that creating slide shows could be useful...

Wednesday 29 October 2008

Explore Flickr and learn about this popular image hosting site

What are some ways that you can use Flickr or other photo-sharing site both professionally and personally?

I have been using Flickr for a while now to share personal photos with friends & family. While I can see the advantages professionally for finding & sharing images, plus eg. using for guided tours of libraries - I am much more of a 'textual' person.

What was your favorite Flickr capability - blogging, geotagging, exploring, groups, etc.?Add a geotag to you photo.

I like the integration with other tools such as Facebook & blogs; finding 'friends' is excellent although limited, as they have to sign up to a Yahoo account, as opposed to eg. 'Fotki'; similarly with geotagging - limited to 'Yahoo Maps'.

What group(s) did you join?


CILIP - Chartered Institute of Library & Information Professionals (UK)
SLA Solo Division



Sunday 26 October 2008

"At Work"


"At Work", originally uploaded by Mark A Perkins.

Test photo for 'SLA 23 Things'

Saturday 25 October 2008

Perspectives on Library 2.0

Blog your thoughts about Library 2.0, Web 2.0 and libraries of the future.

Much of the 'Library 2.0' world seems to be purely an extension of current library services using new tools; new methods of outreach to users, reference question tools, enabling access to collections via new technologies. While much of this does require organisational change within the library, providing staff time & appropriate job descriptions, this again is not new.

Incorporating Web 2.0 into libraries seems to be a much slower process; this is the area where users are not just giving feedback to libraries or access existing collections in new ways - but actually contributing to library collections through Institutional Repositories, Wikis, photo sharing services or adding tags to catalogues.

Web 2.0 does present challenges to libraries in terms of 'Acceptable Use Policies' (AUPs), although these are already often in place for eg. Internet access; perhaps more importantly is the need for scanning & moderation of user input to ensure compliance with AUPs.


How do you plan to incorporate Web 2.0 tools and technologies into your products and services?

Initially by discovering what users are already using & feeding services into that - eg. RSS feeds for new acquisitions, chat facility for ref questions. Then moving slowly moving to eg. Wikis, etc

How do you maintain high quality products and services if anyone can add content to your resources?

2 routes to this; just because anyone can add content does not relieve the responsibility of librarians from their cataloguing, collection development, user guide roles - user tagging is in addition, not a replacement (though very useful for 'see also' entries'. Then there comes the monitoring issue for both AUPs but also to see how user provided content is developing & feeding this into library mainstream where appropriate.


Wednesday 22 October 2008

Technorati - further comments

Perhaps I need to come back to Technorati in a few months; currently is flooded with US elections & so difficult to see beyond into 'rising news' & 'rising blog posts' - though the ability to switch between them is excellent. For 'rising news', I am quite happy with my RSS reader for this at the moment.

The ability to filter tag searches via authority is useful, although the language filter seems to indicate a very anglophone bias - perhaps would need to use other blog search tools...such as 'Globe of Blogs' which displays blogs via location (thanks to Yahoo directory for this one)

The 'blog directory' button could be useful when looking into a new domain, as would the 'blog' tab when looking at tag search results - although Yahoo seems to have fuller directory minus the 'authority ranking'.

Blog directories, Folksonomies and Tags, oh my!

What value-add does a tool like Technorati offer your library?

Allows for wider audience for library services, with some 'authority' if others link to library blog.

Does the ability to monitor people's conversations and
the tags people are applying to their content offer additional research
portals for your products and services?


If used carefully ('authority' is a relative term, especially in the sense used by Technorati), then it useful.

How could you incorporate information Technorati offers into the research delivered to your users?

This depends on the research in question. Very valuable, if not essential, for research into how others are viewing an issue or company.

How would you maintain authority and reliability of information pulled from this resource?

As with any other resource, checking the website, checking 'who' (not how many) are positively linking to it, etc.





Saturday 18 October 2008

Delicious - excellent CAS, poor networking

Set up delicious account, added my blogs & some bookmarks.

I'm not so worried about 'portable bookmarks': not only do I keep my Firefox bookmarks saved on a USB stick, but I also would not wish to share all of them for privacy reasons. However, I can see how it would be useful for libraries wishing to share with clients.

I also added certain delicious tags to my RSS newsreader - an excellent current awareness tool.

However, the social networking side is poor as it very difficult to find others user names, there is no 'search by email address/contacts' as for eg. Facebook. The delicious forums state that they are looking into this but they have privacy concerns - this could be solved easily by adding an opt in choice within user profiles...

Wednesday 15 October 2008

Further thoughts on blogging

Another issue, besides permissions, is integration with other tools:

Some users prefer (for various reasons) email lists, plus I also use Facebook & Flickr (mainly for friends, family & close colleagues); the question is how to integrate these with a blog....

ScribeFire - excellent Firefox blogging addon

ScribeFire Blog Editor :: Firefox Add-ons
Long Description

ScribeFire is a full-featured blog editor that integrates with your browser and lets you easily post to your blog. You can drag and drop formatted text from pages you are browsing, take notes, upload images, and post to multiple blogs.

Here is a list of the blogging services that are compatible with ScribeFire: http://www.scribefire.com/help/supported-services/

Monday 13 October 2008

Thoughts on Blog Choices

I have been following various Blogs for a while, first using 'Blog Navigator', now with RSSOwl. I have setup a test blog for Censorship & Freedom of Information issues (email me if you wish 'guest permission') which should be taken over by another organisation soon, but this is my first public blog.

I decided to concentrate on my interests - copyright, etc & librarianship in General - as can be seen from the Blog Rolls; I have yet to add Websites (no RSS) to my 'Lists' - to come. I also decided that the 3 column layout was not suitable, so changed the template to 4 column; plus I prefer tags in a list rather than cloud for the moment. If things go well, will move over to my own websites with WordPress.

One of the difficult decisions in both the test blog & this was regarding permissions - who can read, post or comment, & related issues of moderation.

I have set up a Delicious account - new to me so will see how it goes...