Thursday, February 28, 2008
Wiki
Several months ago, I spent two days at a middle school telling the students how to find reliable sources online. "Library database: good." "Wikipedia: bad." A site where anyone can change information without proving their expertise is not a relevant source for a research paper. I admit, I sometimes browse Wikipedia just for fun, or to get a preliminary idea of my subject. But you have to take what you see with a grain of salt. If you like Star Wars, check out Wookieepedia.
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
Rollyo
I created a Rollyo searchroll for genocide and human rights sites and blogs. I am sure I will add more as I come across them.
I had some difficulty posting the Rollyo bar on my blog. Thanks for your help, Glaucia!
I had some difficulty posting the Rollyo bar on my blog. Thanks for your help, Glaucia!
Library Thing
As someone with a vast library at home, Library Thing would be great to help me "catalog" my collection. If I had the time, that is. I may be able to get ideas for books to read by perusing the groups. Assuming the posters have anything intelligent and coherent to say.
My Library Thing
My Library Thing
Friday, January 11, 2008
Play around with an online image generator

I had poked around Flickr toys during the Flickr exercise, so it was fun to explore more image generator sites. Some of the sites were pointless and random (type in your name and a word pops up that has nothing to do with you). At least the sites with online quizzes have some meaning - you have to answer a question, even if the choices are limited. I explored Books for Dummiez, the Catalog Card Generator, and Spell with Flickr. I liked the Black Adder quote generator. I assume these are for your blog.
This image is from Sporkforge.com - Sketch Generator.
My sister had gotten a tongue ring while away at school. My parents nearly killed her. My dad took her to a tattoo/piercing place and had her get the piercing taken out. As an older cousin and pain-in-the-you-know-what, I doctored this photo of my little cousin. Someone's gotta be an influence on the kid. ; Þ
Wednesday, January 2, 2008
Thinking About 2.0
"Librarian 2.0 controls technolust This librarian does not buy technology for the sake of technology. " This quote is by Michael Stephens in Web 2.0: Where will it take libraries? "Into a new world of librarianship: Sharpen these skills for Librarian 2.0." As entertaining and enticing many of these technologies are to me (especially flickr toys), we cannot afford to buy into every single new trend. With property tax and other budget cuts, we are limited how we spend our funds. Subscribing to a program just to say "we offer this service" is a waste of funds if the service is not utilized and just eats money.
Dr. Wendy Schultz, in her article "To a temporary place in time...: On the way to the library experience of the future," brings the evolution of libraries full-circle. In "Library 1.0: Commodity," there is an emphasis on books, research, and education. "Library 2.0: Product" focuses on libraries in the digital age and people creating their own content (MySpace, You Tube, Facebook, blogging, LiveJournal). "Library 3.0—Web 3D to Library 3D: Service" talks about librarians in the virtual world. "Library 4.0, the neo-library: Experience" includes aspects of Library 1.0 through 3.0: book storage and retrieval, digitization, virtual librarians, etc. It also will have a space that harkens back to the old-fashioned library with quiet reading rooms.
Schultz mentions virtual worlds such as Second Life. I've heard about Second Life, and I have to admit I'm not as knowledgeable about it as I should be. Nor do I have an interest in joining that community. I don't have time to look at all the rss feeds and newsreaders I signed up for on bloglines - how do you expect me to create and maintain a virtual avatar? Libraries going virtual - will the whole world one day be virtual? Will we receive all our mail, movies, music, and books via the computer or i-Pod or MP3 player (without ever having to leave home)? Will there come a day when the only "face-to-face" contact we have is on a virtual plane? Having access to research, news, and communities online opens a world to people who live in isolated areas or cannot get the support or information otherwise, but there is still something to be said for personal face-to-face interactions, hearing someone's voice on the phone, or reading a handwritten letter someone took the time to write and mail. Maybe one day Schultz's Library 4.0 will come to fruition - and we can have the best of both worlds.
Dr. Wendy Schultz, in her article "To a temporary place in time...: On the way to the library experience of the future," brings the evolution of libraries full-circle. In "Library 1.0: Commodity," there is an emphasis on books, research, and education. "Library 2.0: Product" focuses on libraries in the digital age and people creating their own content (MySpace, You Tube, Facebook, blogging, LiveJournal). "Library 3.0—Web 3D to Library 3D: Service" talks about librarians in the virtual world. "Library 4.0, the neo-library: Experience" includes aspects of Library 1.0 through 3.0: book storage and retrieval, digitization, virtual librarians, etc. It also will have a space that harkens back to the old-fashioned library with quiet reading rooms.
Schultz mentions virtual worlds such as Second Life. I've heard about Second Life, and I have to admit I'm not as knowledgeable about it as I should be. Nor do I have an interest in joining that community. I don't have time to look at all the rss feeds and newsreaders I signed up for on bloglines - how do you expect me to create and maintain a virtual avatar? Libraries going virtual - will the whole world one day be virtual? Will we receive all our mail, movies, music, and books via the computer or i-Pod or MP3 player (without ever having to leave home)? Will there come a day when the only "face-to-face" contact we have is on a virtual plane? Having access to research, news, and communities online opens a world to people who live in isolated areas or cannot get the support or information otherwise, but there is still something to be said for personal face-to-face interactions, hearing someone's voice on the phone, or reading a handwritten letter someone took the time to write and mail. Maybe one day Schultz's Library 4.0 will come to fruition - and we can have the best of both worlds.
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Trading Card Maker 2

Loca Librarian - The Dark Side
Originally uploaded by quackers82
Librarian joins the Dark Side. Mwa ha ha!!!!!! } : )
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
