If ever a service was aptly named, it is Twitter.
When you sit near a flock of house sparrows in early Spring, the sounds of the throng are both cheerful and annoying. Try to identify the song of one bird. It's almost impossible to discern one voice. Perhaps they all have a vocabulary of different sounds. Or it could merely be 75 Johnny-One-Notes chirping at random intervals. It is layered, intense - even competitive. And so like Twitter.
Twitter is a whole world of users talking at once. Who can absorb it? Who wants to?
The service has undoubted value for marketers and projects to raise public awareness, which is what the Library's Twittering is all about.
Personally, I can't imagine subjecting myself to this nattering network. I simply don't give a sweet Tweet.
Thursday, June 3, 2010
Friday, May 28, 2010
LibraryThing
For anyone pining for a book club, without the time or the contacts to join one, or someone just looking for recommendations for a good read, LibraryThing has a lot to offer. The site provides information about millions of titles, including reviews and links to similar books. It offers connection to other people with similar reading taste and a system for keeping track of the books you own.
Today, I checked out reviews on Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, as well as The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. The reviews are uneven in quality, often sketchy in content and merely providing a opinion about whether or not the book was enjoyable without developed reasons for why it was. Still, with enough people contributing to the discussion, you start to get an idea about a book.
I am a lucky woman. I belong to a relaxed book club where discussion is wide ranging. It flits from the book chosen for the meeting to any good book we have recently read (digressing along the way to families and current events). At work, I have Terrill Budd, my maven for quirky good reads and films. And generally, the CPL work culture is a place where good books are shared.
While it's not a substitute for readers' advisory, it is a place to start.
Today, I checked out reviews on Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, as well as The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. The reviews are uneven in quality, often sketchy in content and merely providing a opinion about whether or not the book was enjoyable without developed reasons for why it was. Still, with enough people contributing to the discussion, you start to get an idea about a book.
I am a lucky woman. I belong to a relaxed book club where discussion is wide ranging. It flits from the book chosen for the meeting to any good book we have recently read (digressing along the way to families and current events). At work, I have Terrill Budd, my maven for quirky good reads and films. And generally, the CPL work culture is a place where good books are shared.
While it's not a substitute for readers' advisory, it is a place to start.
Monday, May 10, 2010
Google Documents
Google Documents offers a nifty way of working on a collaborative document or presentation. It is also a boon for accessing work-in-progress, using different computers at different locations - no memory stick needed, no need to attach a document to an email (a multi-step process when you store documents on the I drive at CPL).
Access to technology is becoming more democratic with the development of online productivity tools. In recent times past, expensive software was required to provide the applications that are now available online for the taking. Part of the appeal is the collaborative way the products evolve.
Who would choose an expensive networking system when you have free access to an online solution?
Access to technology is becoming more democratic with the development of online productivity tools. In recent times past, expensive software was required to provide the applications that are now available online for the taking. Part of the appeal is the collaborative way the products evolve.
Who would choose an expensive networking system when you have free access to an online solution?
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Flickr and Youtube and Foodies
For some time now, I have been thinking about writing a food blog, and if I ever finish paring my life down to manageable levels, it could happen.
There are a lot of them out there. Some are astonishingly good and others are very, boringly bad and self indulgent. Then, there are those that are just plain freaky. I visited one "food" site where the author devoted an entire blog to killing a snake in her garden. If you are as pretentious as moi, you know which side of the scale I am aiming for, which of course keeps me from moving forward. The potential for egg on the face is enormous.
Flickr is a goldmine for anyone thinking about writing food and punctuating the text with pretty pictures. There are many ways of searching which produce quite different results, for example, food and produce or vegetables and eggplant.
With Youtube, cooking becomes comic entertainment. Try "cooking with Christopher Walken" for some unconventional advice and hilarious parodies.
If you are going to be bad, you may as well be funny.
There are a lot of them out there. Some are astonishingly good and others are very, boringly bad and self indulgent. Then, there are those that are just plain freaky. I visited one "food" site where the author devoted an entire blog to killing a snake in her garden. If you are as pretentious as moi, you know which side of the scale I am aiming for, which of course keeps me from moving forward. The potential for egg on the face is enormous.
Flickr is a goldmine for anyone thinking about writing food and punctuating the text with pretty pictures. There are many ways of searching which produce quite different results, for example, food and produce or vegetables and eggplant.
With Youtube, cooking becomes comic entertainment. Try "cooking with Christopher Walken" for some unconventional advice and hilarious parodies.
If you are going to be bad, you may as well be funny.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
RSS
RSS is a technology that I have now happily embraced.
Using Bloglines, I subscribed to feeds for food and the arts. Next, I added two favourite blogs - You Grow Girl and Apartment Therapy - employing the two different methods described in the CPL2.0 blog. Both methods were easily accomplished.
I enjoy dipping into the content provided by this service that is accessed from one source.
It was like creating my own magazine.
The best part is that, unlike Facebook, it requires no meaningful input from me on an ongoing basis. Interesting content, no relationship. I'm loving it.
Using Bloglines, I subscribed to feeds for food and the arts. Next, I added two favourite blogs - You Grow Girl and Apartment Therapy - employing the two different methods described in the CPL2.0 blog. Both methods were easily accomplished.
I enjoy dipping into the content provided by this service that is accessed from one source.
It was like creating my own magazine.
The best part is that, unlike Facebook, it requires no meaningful input from me on an ongoing basis. Interesting content, no relationship. I'm loving it.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
GOOGLE and CPL2.O
Google's basic service has eliminated the routine use of many reference sources and gives every user access to a dazzling source of information. The astonishingly good gets even better with the extended list of specialized products.
This morning, I dabbled with SketchUp, a tool for creating 3D models which can be imported into Google Earth. Because time and firewalls prevent downloading the program, I explored the warehouse of models of famous sites.
On Google Scholar, I took a look at my son's list of publications. Joe J. Harrison is a post-doc at the University of Washington and writes things like, "Chromosomal antioxidant genes have metal ion-specific roles as determinants of bacterial metal tolerance". Who knew?
My personal Google favourite is the image search which allows me to find pictures of unusual things like angel wings. That was a customer's request and she was impressed with the thousands of pictures revealed by this search.
Last year while making sketches for window painting for Stampede, I wanted a model for the back end view of a horse. You guessed it; I googled "horse rear end" and found all the images I needed.
I think this makes me Joe's smart-ass mother.
This morning, I dabbled with SketchUp, a tool for creating 3D models which can be imported into Google Earth. Because time and firewalls prevent downloading the program, I explored the warehouse of models of famous sites.
On Google Scholar, I took a look at my son's list of publications. Joe J. Harrison is a post-doc at the University of Washington and writes things like, "Chromosomal antioxidant genes have metal ion-specific roles as determinants of bacterial metal tolerance". Who knew?
My personal Google favourite is the image search which allows me to find pictures of unusual things like angel wings. That was a customer's request and she was impressed with the thousands of pictures revealed by this search.
Last year while making sketches for window painting for Stampede, I wanted a model for the back end view of a horse. You guessed it; I googled "horse rear end" and found all the images I needed.
I think this makes me Joe's smart-ass mother.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Facebook, CPL 2.0 and Friendship Circles
Friends require care and attention. At my age, I have more friends than I can look after with the care and attention they deserve. An embarrassment of riches. Most of my sins are sins of omission, after all.
In my day-to-day social world, one of the greatest problems is friends who want me to be friends with all of their friends. There isn't enough of me to go around. (And, occasionally, I need to call the kids.)
In short, I'm not looking for more friends or trying to reconnect with people from past lives, however fine they might be. Downsizer mode is about trying to simplify and be selective. Removing extraneous stuff. Paying attention to what matters. Doing less, but getting more out of it, and on. I don't want baggage, including electronic baggage.
Don't call me cranky; call me selective.
In my day-to-day social world, one of the greatest problems is friends who want me to be friends with all of their friends. There isn't enough of me to go around. (And, occasionally, I need to call the kids.)
In short, I'm not looking for more friends or trying to reconnect with people from past lives, however fine they might be. Downsizer mode is about trying to simplify and be selective. Removing extraneous stuff. Paying attention to what matters. Doing less, but getting more out of it, and on. I don't want baggage, including electronic baggage.
Don't call me cranky; call me selective.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)