Saturday, February 21, 2009

Social media lets me down (Thing 11)

I got all set up for Digg. I’ve seen Digg icons at the bottoms of individual blog posts, and I wondered what it meant. Hmm, social bookmarking that ranks interest. I don’t care. Sorry, just don’t care. (I did Digg a couple of articles on sugar-based soda that were replacing corn syrup sweetened soft drinks. I love cane soda.)

I think it might be Digg that’s the problem for me, though. I couldn’t Digg sites on my favorite online home, the New York Times. NY Times had options to e-mail items of interest, which I’ve used often, but there was no option to Digg.

OK, try another. Just the name “Newsvine” looks promising. OK, Newsvine is my thing. I’m clicking and linking and reading and learning—and loving it. I guess I just needed to find my genre.

Net result, however: timesuck. This is the sort of tool that draws you into a web of links you’ll like to read because someone like you liked to read them too. Click. Click. Click. Wait, how long have I been on Newsvine?

This is the first Thing I’ve found that I can’t see used in libraries except by people like me who have time on their hands during Saturday reference desk hours. I give this Thing my first thumbs down. Sorry social media (but I’ll be back for Newsvine’s links to The Times of London).

I'm Delicious! (Thing 10)

I had never used Delicious before, and I was curious about what it was and how to use it. Mystery resolved!

I created a Delicious account and added three blogs that I find fun to unwind to after a day of serious computing. I added the Delicious badge to my Wysocki in 23 Bytes blog, which displayed my Delicious username and not the blogs I’m following. I would rather it list my blogs than my username, which may be reparable, but I’m not getting into it now.

What I like about Delicious is the possibility for library homepages to use this tool. One of the most frequent questions I get is “How do I cite this in [APA/MLA/Chicago Manual]?” Pretty much every library website has some link to citation guides, but it would be interesting to see the Delicious links to other citation resources. Duke of course comes to mind with their excellent style guide resources.

Delicious also might be fun to link new acquisitions to Amazon or Barnes & Noble (or whatever). Amazon always brings up the “Shoppers who liked this book also liked this,” a fun and helpful feature.

I'd also love to see students' free text searching methods and incorporate their tags into the catalog. I just had a student ask for books ON War and Peace, and I found the OPAC a little balky. It kept wanting to show me war and peace in Europe, the Middle East, negotiating peace in time of war... I had to really push the OPAC to see what I wanted for her. We resolved the dilemma, but it seemed like it could have been easier.

I definitely look forward to exploring Pagekeeper since it is designed for an educational environment. It may turn out to be more useful for my academic library than Delicious.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

My "I really wrote too much" post on (Thing 8)

ON IM:
I’m an IM-er. I mostly use IM to communicate among my professional peers at the college, and many of the exchanges go like this:

“hey. busy?”
“no. what’s up?”
“wanna go to lunch?”
“sure.”
“i’ll meet you at your office in 10 minutes.”

That could be a literal transcript of any Thursday afternoon.

I also IM through Gmail and Facebook with my friends. It’s fun to log-on to either one of those sites and get a little window that tells you who’s online. My recent social IM’s included asking a friend who works in historic preservation about getting rats out of my home’s walls and explaining to someone else why I am unhappy with my cuticles.

Despite my apparent frivolity, I actually IM professionally, too. Flagler College has its own IM system. The circulation specialist I work with most often and I log on to IM to keep abreast of what’s happening at each other’s desks. She lets me know when a patron needs reference help but went to the circulation desk accidentally, and she gives me a brief overview of the patron’s research topic. In that respect, our professional use of IM is timely and pertinent, even more so than the comparatively slower e-mail system.

ON SMS:
I absolutely do not text message for one reason: I can’t afford monthly cell phone text plans. I am a simple, Luddite cell phone only kinda gal.

ON LIBRARY E-MAIL:
Mass e-mails about password changes or policy reinforcements are helpful to pretty much everyone since it is information vital to the functioning of the library. Big HOWEVER right here: too many mass e-mails are in-box cluttering updates on topics that only concern a few people. I get frustrated by my colleagues’ misuse of mass e-mail when I have gadzooks-a messages going back-and-forth between just two people. I don’t understand why they can’t take it off-list. Overall, the majority of mass e-mails I receive via the library are on-target, relevant, and timely--definitely improving channels of communication.

ON WEBINARS:
I recently attended a database vendor’s webinar for an interface upgrade. The vendor was instructing approximately three additional sites simultaneously, and I had no idea whether the other locations were libraries or not. The instructor treated the webinar as if we had never used a database before in our lives, not as if we only needed to see the new features. I felt like the instructor’s inability to get instantaneous informal feedback from us really hindered her custom tailoring of the course. As my fellow attendees and I walked out of the conference room, we all agreed that there was only one tiny piece of data we learned from the hour we just wasted listening to how to form basic Boolean searches. While webinars have a lot of great features, this one fell flat, in part because it wasn’t customized to our particular library’s needs.

WHAT I’D LIKE TO SEE:
OK, webinars are important but not staggeringly engaging. I think they will continue to be a source of information distribution among library professionals, especially as vendors are trying to cut costs on employee payroll and travel funds. If one webinar can service four locations, and the instructor is still at the home site, then that’s a good thing, right? Sort of. But I think it will continue to grow as people are faced with the reality of the expense of hosting on-site events.

Ideally, I would love to see IM reference at Flagler College, but I don’t see us getting into the man-power needed to support it, given our small enrollment. What is possible, immediately available, easy, and necessary is e-mail reference. There should be one general e-mail reference account that any reference librarian can log into to receive student requests. Students could write in with their questions, and we could provide answers—wherever the student is located. Our digital resources are available online to any student with a valid login, why shouldn’t our services be available alongside them?

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Flick-Flick-Flick-Flickr (Thing 5)

I use Flickr quite a bit already to keep up with my friends. Slowly my network of friends has dispersed around the country, and one way we stay up to date is through sharing our photographs. We use tags to separate our photos by subject, location, and time. We use sets so that we can look at pictures of new babies as one group instead of mousing through a stream of unrelated photos. Some of us are dedicated enough to join groups like the 365 days portrait project. I hope my tags, sets, and groups are all logically arranged because I firmly believe in the sanctity of the bibliographic universe.

For my new Flickr membership for 23 Things, I took a few pictures of me and my student-worker enjoying Flagler College’s archive—and, um, drinking coffee.

I had no problem uploading my five pictures, but I couldn’t for the life of me get my buddy icon to load. Three times I tried the same steps to upload an image from my computer desktop to the buddy icon. No red flag popped up on the photo upload area to tell me what I was doing wrong, but I finally realized my photo exceeded the 2 mb limit Flickr uses for buddy icons. Ugh.

To solve my buddy icon problem—because I couldn’t let my face look like that gray, bland emoticon—I used the same photo from my Flickr account instead of approaching it through my desktop. I went to the “All sizes” page on the Flickr individual photo view, and I saved the square image I wanted. I went back to the buddy icon change it in my profile and, voila, there I was! My square photo was finally less than 2 mb.

I next arranged my photos into two sets: “Flagler College” and “Flagler College Archives.” Yeah, they’re the same five photos for both sets, but I haven’t had a chance to take more photos, making the two sets distinct from one another. I also joined the group “Libraries and Librarians” and put our five pictures in there to share with the world of library fans. I added a friend contact to a fellow 23Things@NEFLIN-er, “cats23things.” I look forward to seeing what photos she uploads.

Behold, me, in action:



I may use Flickr to display some of Flagler College’s archival holdings. Since the archive isn’t really open to the public, I hesitate to reveal very much, but we have some cool pieces that could enjoy the digital light of day.