Tuesday, July 22, 2008

TOOLS OF TELECOMMUTING

My organization has started some new and wonderful things for its employees—flexible scheduling and telecommuting. More and more organizations are adding this benefit to help people save money on gas, spend more time with their family, and, in general, add to their quality of life.

But how can a solo librarian telecommute, you ask? Well, I may not get much cataloging or shelving done on the one day a week that I’m home, but I am able to do just about everything else. Still, in order to be successful, I needed a few weapons in my arsenal of home-based technology, which I’ll gladly share with you:

  • Computer
  • Internet Access
  • Document editing software (remember Google docs, or one of the many shareware options available if you don’t have Office or Works at home)
  • Friendly web-based e-mail client (no, really.)
  • Telephone (really? why would I need one of those?)

Let me explain further on those last two.

The first thing I noticed about my workflow, was that it really suffered when I was trying to sort or search through our web-based e-mail client (Outlook). Basically, these functions on the web-based version are null and void. For now, I have been creating special top-level folders for e-mails that I need to refer to in the near future. I have also been more diligent about adding people to my address book, rather than relying on sorting and finding the last e-mail I received from them (come on… you know you do that too.) I am now investigating a POP option to forward all of my e-mails to a free web-based account, such as Gmail.

Now, the phone. Yes, people still need to be able to reach me via phone. Although I do a lot of internet based reference, on occasion, people like to be able to call me. Go figure. I am lucky enough to have a home phone in place, an office who’s telecom system can transfer to outside phone numbers, and caller ID that even tells me that I’m receiving a call from work. (It’s weird to be answering the phone at home saying, “This is Molly, how can I help you?” So far, I haven’t greeted a telemarketer that way, but I’m sure my time is coming.)

But what if you don’t have a home line? So many of us don’t anymore… and perhaps like me, you don’t want to use your cell phone minutes. Or maybe you are like my co-worker who literally lives in the woods and gets no cell phone reception and so she relies on an old-fashioned phone line. But she also can’t access her wireless connection in her house, (because the trees are too full in the summer, of course) so she has made an office for herself in another nearby building. This means that somethin’s gotta give- in one spot, she doesn’t have a phone, and in the other she doesn’t have internet. Her solution? Skype
. The internet-based phone/video system. (I KNOW you've heard of it.) Now she has a phone wherever she has internet. I think she pays a small fee to be able to call non-Skype phone numbers, but it’s worth it to her, and we have a local phone number that we can reach her on too.


So there you have it. I was going to add "printer" to the list, but honestly, I haven't used mine yet. I generally e-mail myself a copy of whatever I've been working on at the end of the day.

Friday, May 9, 2008

TWITTERING, MASHUPS, AND PRIVACY

I have one word for you- Twitter. It's an APB for your routine happenings and on-the-go bantering. Posts have to be short- 140 characters or less. A great way to keep up with co-workers or friends. For those tech-dependent enough to have unlimited texting... this is for you. Don't shrug it off yet- an American in Eqypt recently used twitter to alert people that he had been arrested. Twitter has a nice Common Craft vid on their homepage if you have the inkling to watch it.

As with many social apps, with Twitter your updates can be public or private. And anything that is public can be used for any number of things... Like, for example, this Web site TwittEarth.



(It might take a few seconds to load, but it's cool enough for the wait.)


What are you looking at? It's a Mashup (something that mashes two or more data sources, applications, etc. together to create a new application.) that puts real-time Twitter posts on the globe with monstrously cute icons. It is strangely hypnotizing and voyeuristic. And strangely comforting, in its own way, that normal people are doing normal things around the globe. For me, it makes me want to join in and be part of the global Twitter community. But...


In the back of my head, there is that privacy issue again. Why would I want to broadcast my every move to anybody and everybody? Okay, so maybe not my every move. I'm still trying to find that fine line of an public online life, with a relatively anonymous one and yet still not have a phone book's worth of user names and log ins. Sometimes it's enough to make my mind hurt.


This post from The Shifted Librarian explores two scenarios about personal privacy online. One is that sometimes it may be out of your control. The other is that maybe privacy doesn't really exist anyway, so why not put yourself out there? The Shifted Librarian also lists her choices for online user name registry for children and adults- as a means of protecting your name in the future.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

RADIO SCHMADIO, TV SCHMEEVEE

I like my tunes in the car and my prime time as much as anyone, so don't call me crazy yet. Still, with the advent of podcasting and YouTube, I often download my favorite programs and listen to them on my iPod, or watch TV shows online (like this 2007 version of Jane Austen's Persuasion).

Oh readers, I can hear you now, "I need a Common Craft video on Podcasting, stat!" And that you shall have, my friends:



To start listening, here are some places to find podcasts: PostCastAlley.com and ODEO (also a podcatcher, like iTunes). Traditional radio, like NPR, is also creating podcasts of their shows. Browse NPR's Podcast Directory to find your favorite show.

You might have noticed, that the video up there was brought to you via YouTube- Common Craft produced it, and Lee LeFever posted it for all the world to enjoy (and even post to their own blogs). Videos can be promotional, educational, tutorial, personal, commercial, nonsensical, and just about anything else. Are ya gettin' it yet?

As you can imagine, both of these tools are becoming increasingly popular for schools and students. Why limit lectures and project presentations to just the classroom audience, when the world at-large could be watching or listening in? For libraries, podcasting and YouTube are both another way to connect with your users. YouTube is not only a Web site- it is a community. People say, "Thank you, YouTube," and they're talking about the other people on YouTube, not the company.

The possibilities are really limitless for librarians and educators... instead of only promoting a "design a bookmark contest", ask people to submit videos to YouTube about why they need a bookmark. Or, if teaching, why not use educational Podcasts and YouTube videos to add to the content in your curriculum? Or, on the administrative side of things, why not create podcasts or videos for training purposes? I'm sure that now you're hip to this technology, you'll get a big light bulb over your head next time it can be used in your library or classroom.

As for me, I'm going to go look for a podcast with Guy or Pierre on beginner conversational French...

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

GO AHEAD- POST THOSE PHOTOS!

I have been a longtime fan of Flickr, one of the many online photo sharing Web sites out there. It is such a great way to share major events, daily life, and your world with friends, family and even strangers if you choose. If you have a digital camera, then nothing should be stopping you. Don't know what I'm talking about? Then watch this Common Craft video to learn about Online Photo Sharing in Plain English:




Here's an example of the power of sharing photos online. Take this photo, for example:


It was originally a sign of a sheep, but was industriously changed into an elephant.(By bored teens wielding sharpies I assume.) It definitely got a laugh out of us, and we just had to stop and photograph it.


Just out of curiosity, I searched Flickr for other elephant road signs, and got over 2,000 results! Who would have thought that something as random as an elephant road sign would be such a fun window to the world?

I feel oddly connected to the people who posted similar pictures; we were obviously all travelers reveling in a new landscape. But this connection shouldn't be too surprising, given the power of pictures.

For this very reason, libraries benefit from having photos online. Post pictures of spaces, events and staff and get connected with your users, your community, and the anyone else who happens across your photos.

Monday, April 21, 2008

GOOGLE DOCS AND FREE ONLINE DOCUMENT SOFTWARE

I am creating this post using a free, online document software. That means, that I don't have to have Microsoft installed, or anything installed for that matter. Since I heart Google, and like to keep my online self as least scattered as possible, I am using Google Docs. When I sign into Google, many services (like my news reader, custom home page, and even this dear old blog) are right there at my fingertips. Now, so are my online documents, spread sheets, and presentations.

Is this where all software applications are headed, you ask? Hmmm... Not if software companies have anything to do with it (Online yes. Free, maybe notsomuch.) And we're by no means there yet, as many of the online document creators still have many, many glitches. I assume those glitches will be worked out eventually
and online docs will become more and more common. But if I had to put a wager on it, I would imagine that software companies will continue to increase the features and usability of their products, so that we still want, nay need, to continue to buy their products. Microsoft is half way there, and just announced an download-able subscription based service for office products, although critics are already picking apart the idea of paying for this service forever.

Here are a few articles for further reading:
Office Live Workspace vs Google Docs: Feature-by-Feature Comparison,

The State of Office 2.0 and its Future.


A (sort of) screenshot of me working on this doc. You'll notice that the toolbar looks very very familiar. But it is missing a few formatting features. For example, I would really love to have been able to add an outline for this image box, but I had to do that in a another program before dropping the image in.
















Thursday, April 17, 2008

HAPPY NATIONAL LIBRARY WEEK!

Welcome to the Jungle... err Library.

This is just too good not to share. I can imagine mean karaoke versions of this classic Guns N' Roses song cropping up at summer reading celebrations and teen nights all over the place. Lyrics courtesy of my co-worker, as part of the on-going National Library Week celebration in my office.


“Welcome to the Library”
Lyrics adaptation by Samantha Wallace


Welcome to the library
We got books 'n' games
We got everything you want
Honey we know the names
We are the people that can find
Whatever you may need
If you got the notion honey
We got your good read

Chorus:

In the library
Welcome to the library
Watch it bring you to your shun n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n knees, knees
I wanna watch you read


Welcome to the library
We take it page by page
If you want it you're gonna read
But it's the price you pay
And you're a very well read girl
That's very hard to please
You can see the fancy new books
and you can rent them for free
In the library
Welcome to the library
Of Dewey decimal you will learn
I, I wanna hear that page turn!

Welcome to the library
It gets better here everyday
Ya learn ta read like a professional
In the library where we say
“If you got a hunger for what you see
You'll take it eventually
You can have anything you want
And you can rent it for free!”

Chorus

And when you're high you never
Ever want to come down, so down, so down, so down. YEAH!

You know where you are
You're in the library baby
You're gonna check out a book!
In the library
Welcome to the library
Watch it bring you to your shu n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n knees, knees
In the library
Welcome to the library
Or watch, watch, watch a dvd
In the library
Welcome to the library
Watch it bring you to your shun n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n,n, knees, knees
In the library
Welcome to the library
Watch it bring you to your
Research that baby down!

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

HAPPY NATIONAL LIBRARY WEEK!

Jokes all around

As ALA celebrates the 50th anniversary of National Library Week, my own office is celebrating me- their librarian! Such a great surprise. I feel all warm and fuzzy. Part of the celebration includes an onslaught of library and librarian themed cartoons, experiences, and jokes. I'm sure half of these jokes were pilfered from someone else's blog, so please excuse me for lifting them. Then again, some are just so bad, I imagine they were dreamed up on the spot.

So, without further ado...


What does a library book wear whenever it leaves the building?
A pager.

........

Why did the librarian slip and fall on the library floor?
Because she was in the non-friction section.

........

I was waiting in line to check out some books at the library desk. Ahead of me a teenager stood empty-handed, shifting his weight from one slim, tightly clad hip to the other. The librarian looked at him enquiringly. "I want a play by Shakespeare," the youth blurted out. The librarian, suppressing a smile, asked gently, "Which one?" The young man shifted his hips again, ruffed up his hair with one hand, cupped his chin between thumb and forefinger of the other, all the while frowning in concentration. Finally, he raised his head and looked at the librarian. "William," he replied triumphantly.

........

Knock knock.
Who's there?
Clothes on.
Clothes on who?
The Library's clothes on Thanksgiving,
but we'll be open again on Friday!

........

Why did the vampire check out a drawing book?
He wanted to learn how to draw blood.

........

Librarian: Knock knock.
Student: Who's there?
Librarian: Winnie.
Student: Winnie who?
Librarian: Winnie you going to bring back that overdue book, hmm?

........

Patron: "I am looking for a globe of the earth."
Librarian: "We have a table-top model over here."
Patron: "No, that's not good enough. Don't you have a life-size?"
Librarian: (pause) "Yes, but it's in use right now."

........

Patron: How many reference librarians does it take to change a light-bulb?
Librarian: Well, I don't know right off-hand, but I know where we can look it up!

........

A blonde walks into a library and shouts ''I'LL HAVE A HAMBURGER A COKE AND SOME FRIES.''
The librarian says, ''This is a Library.''

The blonde says, ''Yes I know. I'LL HAVE A HAMBURGER A COKE AND FRIES.'' And the librarian says, one more time, ''This is a library Miss''

The blonde goes ''Oh,'' and whispers, '' I'll have a hamburger a coke and fries!"

........

And one limerick:

There is a librarian named Molly,
Whose devotion to books was her folly,
A stack fell on her head,
She was safe, and not dead,
But she sure saw some stars, by golly!

Monday, April 7, 2008

WHAT'S THE USE IN SOCIAL BOOKMARKING?

Social bookmarking... what can I say? I love it! First of all, it allows me to take my bookmarks with me where ever I go, organize them, make notes about them (I always found the small box for my browser bookmarks to be too constrictive any), and share them with the world... And likewise, see what the world is bookmarking. It's even a good PR tool for your own web resources.


Watch this Common Craft video (I heart their work!) to learn "Social Bookmarking in Plain Language":


Del.icio.us is probably one of the most widely used social bookmarking sites out there. It is free and easy to tag anything from your Dr's Web site to your favorite recipes or flickr accounts. BUT think of the professional uses as well. I can organize my most frequented (and not so frequented) reference Web sites. To accommodate users familiar with tagging, I could publish my cloud tag to my library's Web page. I could... (insert fascinating use here.)

The next time I'm doing research, or have a research partner, I can imagine a bookmarking application like Citeulike coming in really handy. This free service helps you to store, organize and share the scholarly papers you are reading. Not to mention that it gathers citation details that one can then export to Endnote. This service could possibly do for organizing research what the word processor or xerox machine did for office production. (And maybe save some paper too.)

Monday, March 31, 2008

PUTTING THE NET IN SOCIAL NETWORKING

If you didn't notice my heading, I'm about to talk a little about "the net" in social networking. No, not the Sandra Bullock flick, rather, the shiny stick with the cabling at one end.

The thing I love most about social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn is that I can easily communicate with friends and colleagues and get my own little piece of www real estate at the same time. Oh and... It's fun!

The thing that I don't love is how they manage to suck me in and wipe hours, nay, blocks of hours from my life. Hence the net part. Of course, this "it's sucking me in" opinion might have something to do with the fact that I'm usually partaking merely as a social venture, which cuts into my free time, and my healthier habits like walking-the-dog and peeling-my-eyes-from-a-computer-screen.

If you are like my mom and exclaiming (and partially accusing), "You are on FaceBook?" as if it is the equivalent to a girls gone wild video, then obviously, you're watching the same Dateline that she is. [By the way, my mom totally reads this. Hi, Mom!] If that is you, then watch this Common Craft Video on Social Networking. It's not all bad.



But, my mom makes a valid point (and she doesn't even know it)- and that is how do you decide what to share about yourself online? I'm pretty darn conservative with the information I put out there- this blog is actually a big step for me. But I'm a believer in keeping up.

As a librarian, if I want to connect with students or patrons, then you better believe that I need to be able to navigate a MySpace page. And if a patron wants to visit my Facebook page, they'll find links to and maybe even use a resource like WorldCat or PubMed that they wouldn't have otherwise thought to use. Another way "the net" works. If they find out that I have a personality along the way, even better.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

BLOG vs. WIKI

While not quite a Celebrity Deathmatch, the Blog vs. Wiki is definitely a hot debate. I have spent the last year and a half on a committee that debated the very thing- in the end we chose wiki- and I'll tell you why in a minute. Before we chose it, we (meaning myself and a few others) needed to educate and convince the rest of the committee what a wiki was in the first place.

Wikis don't quite have the recognition or quick I-get-it-factors that blogs now have. Ex: "Oh it's an online diary- I get it." Or, "Oh, it has static entries in reverse chronological order that people can post- I get it."


This is me trying to quickly explain a wiki to my mom:

"Mom, it's a dynamic, collaborative online database that anyone can instantly
edit, change and modify!"
"Hmmmm, so people can add to it from wherever?"
"Yep."
"Hmmmm, your father was just saying that he wants people to start compiling
stories for the Family Reunion in August."
"A wiki would be perfect for that!"

Check out this video "Wikis in Plain Language" if you want to learn more.


Blogs are great for recording thoughts and sharing news in linear and one-way fashions. Wikis are better suited for storing data and collaborative work. The committee I'm on was charged to create on online forum where health information professionals who serve Native peoples could network and share ideas, programs and best practices. We decided to use a wiki- Mediawiki to be exact - to set such a thing up. (I will add the link as soon as we're out of test mode- hopefully in the next few weeks!)

Monday, March 17, 2008

WHAT CAME FIRST- RSS OR THE INFO?

RSS feeds are indeed a very useful tool. My organization already uses RSS as a means to keep people up-to-date on our advocacy happenings, which are generally time-sensitive and have a dedicated group of followers.

As the librarian, I use RSS to keep track of blogs, tables of contents, and news. Like most librarians, I have a dual role here- constant seeking of subject news and resources for my organization and constituents, and library news to keep me sharp.

When I was asked to reflect on how I can see RSS being used by my library, my thoughts quickly migrated to a "New Materials" feed. I have many patrons that would benefit from learning about new resources that we've acquired. But would people subscribe?

Hold yer horses, Saucey. The first logical thing to think about is not the RSS, but the source. First, the issue to think about is simply the creation, posting and upkeep of such a list. Do I have time to do it? Ideally- yes. And that information would be housed on the library web site, for all to peruse- not just subscribe to. The RSS should be an afterthought of the information itself, not the purpose.

But why did I have to take this round about course to arrive back at the need for a "new material" listing for our library? Oh yeah, because that is timely information that people want to know... and the best way for timely information gathering is RSS.

If you don't know what-the-hey an RSS is- then check out this Common Craft video "RSS in Plain Language."

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

WELCOME TO MY WORLD OF SAUCINESS

Hello!

In this inaugural post I will do my best to win your hearts and minds- a daunting task to be sure. I am desperately in need of a Web tools tune up, so I've enrolled in MLA's Web 2.0 101 class. The first assignment- create a blog. So far so good!

I've long enjoyed other people's blogs but was not all up in the action myself-- and I hate to miss out. I'm still trying to figure out exactly what this blog will encompass. Libraryland- fo' shizzle. But with so many other lands waiting to be explored- Culinaryland, Musicland, AmericanIdolland (A guilty pleasure that I might as well confess up front)- I'm sure I'll have more to say. We'll keep the scope open for now, shall we?

You may be wondering about the title. Well, let's just say that it doesn't have anything to do with the lushy glug-glug variety, and I would be misleading you if you thought my reductions were divine... No, this sauciness is more of a state of being. Something I hope spills out through the screen.

That's Saucey. Not Saucy. Now, I'm not claiming that I'm never "fresh" or "improperly bold", as the dictionary would suggest if I chose the latter. Instead, these definitions from the Urban Dictionary are more my speed.

Saucey:
1. A way of describing one who is fabulous in
appearance or general being or lifestyle
2.
Easy flowing

Btw, I think everyone is saucey in their own right. Embrace that inner sauciness, librarians!