Friday, April 9, 2010

Friday, April 2, 2010

Thing 23--My Two Cents

  • See my previous entry for thoughts about the Things.
  • My favorite was the first, blogs, and I've got more of them than I can handle. I learned most from podcasting, and as I said, I use YouTube, Twitter, del.icio.us, Facebook, LibraryThing, and Flickr regularly instead of TV and newspapers.
  • I keep returning to Google thinking that I might use more of their features someday, maybe.
  • What I took away was an attitude about trying and learning, new tools.
  • Break it down into 47 Things and I would definitely participate in any extension of the program or even a review of the old one.
  • One sentence: Essential for all ages.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Thing 22

Now that I've been introduced to some of this s...tuff I'll be sure to keep abreast of it and all the new things that develop. It's hard to believe that just a few years ago there was no YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, etc., all things I use every day. I can hardly wait for the time when I won't have to leave my desk at all except for bodily functions and, who knows, there may be an app someday for them too.

As for what else we could have covered, I still think 2nd Life is what Web 2.0 is all about.

Thing 21--Social aggregators

Thing 21
The aggregators are ok, I guess, but truthfully all the info is overwhelming. To mix twitter with facebook with whatever--too much info! I would rather limit things to their individual services and just go there when I want to catch up. It ain't that hard. Maybe I'm being old-fashioned here and once I learn better how to use these services I'll see a greater need to aggregate them. Or I'll chuck the whole thing in a pond.

My concern is spreading all the info about myself all over the web and giving access to my personal info to every Tom, Dick, and Connie out there. Juan Franela knows what I'm talking about.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Thing 20--Gaming in Libraries

Gaming is a double edged sword. I could see 16 computers at once being tied up with a Mmorpg to everyone's detriment. In fact, I have experienced the downside in the PCC when several lads came in to play Runescape and would be talking loudly across the room to coordinate their efforts, not to mention leaping up to show a partner what they wanted. On one hand I can't see where gaming is any different from any other entertainment the library provides, from cheesy detective fiction to CDs, DVDs, and many websites, on the other hand it can be disruptive--like playing handball in the middle of the 2nd floor--and a resource hog if many players want to be online at once.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Thing 19--Google Wave

This one was easy to do since I haven't been invited to test Google Wave. It looks interesting, especially as a part-time quasi-journalist. Any collaborative thing would benefit using this tool but it remains to be seen how much use it gets if, like blogs and a million other tools, it's just the latest flavor of the day. On the gripping hand several of the items we've explored in 23 things have become indispensable parts of my life on the Web, so I'll try to catch the wave whenever the heck it arrives.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Thing 18--SurveyMonkey

One of the downsides of working in the same room as 23 Things guru, peskew, is that if you try to slide on one of the Things he'll call you on it, which is what happened with Thing 18 and am I glad that it did. Instead of going through the motions of designing a poll I actually created one to survey the listeners of my community radio show Dark End of the Street on Community radio WFHB (Take the survey). So I guess it's an upside.

Maybe I'll try one to sort out Joe's Russian brides next.

I started with Zoomerang and SurveyMonkey but ended up with PollDaddy when I forgot my Zoomerang password. All the services are straightforward and easy to use. I was able to link mine in Facebook immediately and now I'm kicking back with a non-alcoholic brewski awaiting the results.

I didn't use any open-ended questions but it certainly could be useful if you want to find out what an individual is thinking, although judging by what I'm seeing nationally everybody seems more interested in push polls, something I'll leave for people with degrees who do that dishonest sort of thing for a living.