Friday, December 18, 2009
#9 Chat and Instant Messaging
Thursday, December 17, 2009
#8 Social Networking
#7 Tagging, folksonomies & social bookmarking in Del.icio.us
We swim in a huge ocean of information, and librarians' jobs are evolving from organizers and keepers of quality print information (and the DD treasure code) to finders and organizers and disseminators of quality electronic/virtual/online information. The Delicious tool is one more way that we can avoid reinventing the wheel by sharing good information with each other. No one individually has the time to wade through millions of Web sites and blogs, but collectively we can glean the best information out there. Wonderful idea!
Artwork by Nessa Dee at www.nessadeeart.blogspot.com; Used with permission. Also available at http://www.etsy.com/shop/nessadee
Monday, October 12, 2009
Method 6: You, too, can You-Tube
I checked out the McCracken County Public Library, who posted this video on Youtube. and they use quite a few of the Web resources that we've been learning about through A Dozen Ways to Two-Step, for example, the Flickr Web site to store their library activity photos.
McCracken County Public Library Web site: http://www.mclib.net/staff.html. Used with permission.
Youtube video found at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bu-TijjVs_g&feature=related
Method 5: Photos and Images
Method 4: Make life “really simple” with RSS and newsreaders
RSS and newsreaders sounds great if I had an iPhone, which I hope to have some day. I can see how this would be a tremendous time saver on personal communication devices. Right now it's easy to access my favorite Web sites/blogs from the computers I use most often. I'm not there yet, but I see how this could be very useful in helping us sort the overwhelming amount of information we have to wade through daily.
Clutter by Vanessa Roeder. www.nessadeeart.blogspot.com. Used with permission.
Method 3: Computing in the Clouds
I love that the library is ever-changing, always evolving, and technology's merging of print and plastic is introducing more ways of allowing people to access information and reading sources.
A Dozen Ways to Two-Step, Texas State Library & Archives Commission's shortened version of Helene Blowers' work, 23 Things Program, will help me learn more about "emerging technologies on the web that are changing the way people, society, and libraries access information and communicate with each other."1
This blog was created for the purpose of demonstrating and reflecting on what was learned from the Web-based training.
1 - A Dozen Ways to Two-Step. http://www.tsl.state.tx.us/ld/12things/?page_id=116
Library Elves by Vanessa Roeder www.nessadeeart.blogspot.com Used with permission