Wednesday, November 28, 2007

"everybody has won, and all must have prizes"

ah, here we are at the end of the 23 1/2 things. le sigh. i have really enjoyed this experience. as a person who is fairly "in the know" with computery techological sorts of stuff, i've had a lot of fun playing around and learning some new tricks. i feel pretty good about myself for finishing this project on time (as i know many people have not been able to keep up). and i think this was probably a great challenge to those who are not as familiar with said 23 1/2 things.
some of my favorite things were some of the graphic design 'things' like playing with flickr and making librarian trading cards and the image generator. other tools that we learned about i might not necessarily use, but i think its good to know what is out there. and to be able to recommend it to patrons if applicable.
i don't think there are any major improvements that need to be made with the program. maybe more incentive to continue reading other participants blogs? maybe more inter-participant participation? he he he he.
i would definitely do something like this again. it was a lot of fun and i definitely learned a few things to take away with me. and i won't lie. i like prizes. i cannot wait to get my $25 gift card. and (cross fingers) i hope i win the laptop! my laptop just died! maybe i can learn to love PCs again if i get a free laptop ... don't i deserve it? has my blog not been a true joy to read?

thing 22 OR why do audiobooks on mp3 have to suck?


i happen to be a lover of audiobooks. i listen to them in the car, on the subway, sometimes i will even listen to a good audiobook at home and knit (it has to be REALLY good to make it into my home) anyhow, there is nothing i would like more than to be able to download an audiobook from the library and then listen to it. but i cannot. why? because i am a member of team apple. i love all things technology that begin with a lower case "i". none of the companies supplying audiobooks on mp3 are mac friendly.
they all blame this on apple ... and i guess i should blame apple too, but c'mon people ... can't we all just get along?
one time in a moment of desperation i purchased an audiobook off of iTunes, but it felt SO wrong! why should i have to pay for a book?! i am a librarian!
then, we have the problem of titles. now, i think it is GREAT that the queens library provides audiobooks on mp3 for PC users (and ebooks and all that jazz). great great great. that is GOOD stuff. however, and i find this problem with all the audiobooks on mp3 no matter which vendor is being used, i think the title selection leaves much to be desired. i find it is mostly popular fiction like james patterson and robin cook, which i don't tend to read. or it will be classic literature that is no longer subject to copyright. and while i love classic literature and i encourage all to read it, i read my fill of the classics while getting my BA in english and i don't feel like reading it for pleasure now. sorry. where is the philip roth and the ian mcewan and the zadie smith?
in the end i feel that audiobooks on mp3 are a little too new and the kinks haven't been worked out yet.
for instance, why must an mp3 file be "returned"? it is a file! it is not a physical thing! i hate that we can't have multiple users accessing an mp3 audiobook. with a regular physical audiobook it is different. if i have the 10 disk set of alice sebold's "the lovely bones" (not available in mp3), no one else can have it. because i have it. it is physically impossible for someone else to posses something while i posses it. there can be no simultaneous users. unless of course some whacko comes into my car to listen to it with me ... but that would be weird.
i know they say blah blah blah copyright issues you can't have two people using the mp3 file at once because people will LOSE MONEY! oh no! ... but i think that is bad business. they are trying to hold onto something that is inevitably going to escape them. an mp3 file is not a tangible thing, there is no reason why 100 people shouldn't be allowed to access it at once. there should be no recently returned shelf for something that cannot be physically put on a shelf.
hopefully one day these problems will be solved ... apple will stop being so secretive and libraries will be able to provide digital media items to mac users. after a while i am sure more and more titles will become available. and hopefully vendors will get it together and allow multiple users to access electronic files.
but until that fabulous day ... i will continue to take audiobooks on CD out of the library then rip them into itunes so that i may listen to them on my ipod, but then forget to delete later and then when my ipod is on shuffle i will wind up listening to a random chapter from On Chesil Beach.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

thing 21 OR i am so lonesome i cannot podcast

i would like to listen to a podcast, really i would. i love apple and iTunes and my iPod and would love to combine my love for these things by finding a podcast on iTunes and downloading it to my iPod and listening to it. HOWEVER, since i am here at work and since my computer does not have speakers and since i no longer have a desk in "the back" i cannot really listen to a podcast here in the library. maybe on my off time i will listen to a podcast. maybe.
however, i like the idea of podcasts even though i have never listened to one. and although i prefer writing to speaking, i would be interested in learning how to podcast so that i could do a podcast program at the library. i think the kids would like it.

thing 20: you tube


i love youtube! always have, always will. what an amazing resource...you think of something you once saw ... maybe an old tv show, a commercial that you thought was funny, an excerpt from a movie ... and then lo and behold you can find it on youtube! when you think about it as a concept you wouldn't think it would be so tremendously successful, yet now that it exists i wonder how i ever lived without it. i think it's great that this website has given people an outlet for expression ... sure, most people probably won't be as famous as the "leave britney alone" guy but plenty of people are being creative and making something that is being seen by hundreds sometimes even thousands of people. and these people who are making videos that probably don't seem all that important, these videos somehow get passed around the web and then sent to the people who appreciate them. like the above video which was sent to me by a friend. i know i was supposed to peruse youtube myself, but i think as an avid youtube user i can pass on that today.

anyway, i think there are many library uses for youtube videos ... instructionals on how to place reserves, how to use rfid, how to search the catalog, etc. also i think there are LOTS of things you could do with kids or teens if you had a webcam: book reviews, craft instructions, plays, poetry readings, etc etc. or my favorite idea which i had when i worked at nypl: booktalk smackdowns!

in conclusion: youtube is good.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

thing 19: web tools

so i went to the web 2.0 awards and i was totally overwhelmed by the number of web tools listed. so i just looked through the winners and tried to find something of interest. first i went to something called cocktail builder where you can type in what liquor you have at home and it magically tells you what kind of cocktails you can make out of it. it will also gives suggestions of what you could make with just a few more ingredients. for instance, i have maker's mark at home. you cannot make a cocktail with this without something else. so it listed some helpful suggestions of what i could go out and buy so that i could make a proper cocktail. this might be useful if i actually was the type of person that had ingredients in their home. but alas my cupboard is bare. thank you take-out restuarants!
so then i decided i'd like to try one of the games. wouldn't you know it, most of them are blocked by queens library. no fair. but then i found one called guess the google. this was fun, especially if you are a librarian who loves google and thinks she knows a thing or two about keywords. oh my god! that's me! so anyway, it's a game and in each round you look at a mosaic of 20 google images that all have ONE keyword in common and you have 20 seconds to guess said keyword. there are ten rounds per game. i played THREE times and i still haven't gotten on the list of top scores.
so i like web tools. i purposefully didn't pick ones that were useful because it is the day before thanksgiving and i'm not feeling up to thinking too hard, and i'm kind of depressed, and i really don't feel like hanging out with my family, and i wish i was ice skating and why do all the cool things happen when i'm out of town .... oh, sorry ... got caught up in a tangent there ...
what i was surprised at was how many things are considered "tools" that i use so very very often and totally take for granted. such as: feedburner, craigslist, 43 things, google maps (i LOVE maps), flickr, facebook (although as i already have stated, i prefer myspace), and youtube. who knew i was using so many tools!




thing 18: google docs and other web-based software applications

i happen to love google ... i google everything and have no fear of using google as a verb. i don't even mind if the good people at google are spying on me. so i decided to check out google documents, since i have strong brand name loyalty. turns out i already have documents saved in Google Docs. i logged into google (as i am a gmail user) and lo and behold there were already documents there! you see, i am in a creative writing group and it turns out that a lot of the submissions that have been passed around were saved in my google docs unbeknownst to me! who knew? not it. and sometimes member of my group will edit text and then send it back with corrections and comments and things highlighted in red. i had no idea that they were using google docs!

so i think google docs is cool. for word processing, it seems just as good as microsoft word, if not better because it's on the internet and it's FREE! (i just bought a macbook and am debating about buying microsoft office for myself) but here is the downfall of google docs and other web-based applications ... you have to be online, right? sometimes i don't have internet access but i have my laptop and i'll want to do some word processing. you know, like if i were in a cafe without wifi. or if i was somewhere cheezy like starbucks and had to PAY for wifi, which i refuse to do because wifi should be FREE FREE FREE. also, the internet in my area seems to go out alot. i think i live in some sort of time warner black hole. so i can't really count on web-based applications ... however, i like the idea of uploading documents to a web-based application so that i could access them remotely. so in conclusion my verdict is .... drum roll ...


web-based applications are very useful, but i don't think you can use them as your primary software ... unless you live in a perfect world of constant internet access, you're going to need to pay for some software. (damned you microsoft i WILL be buying microsoft office for my mac!) or you could use that linux stuff my computer dork friend is always yapping on about.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

thing 17 1/2 ... myspace versus facebook: the ultimate smackdown


i am on facebook ... it's okay i guess. maybe i'm just old skool. i like myspace better. i like decorating my profile and adding songs and all that. i even recently joined a group of ministers ordained in the church of spiritual humanism. who wouldn't love this?


but they say facebook is the new myspace. i just don't get it. all my friends are always asking me to take these stupid quizzes and download these applications. some of them are fun but mostly they're lame. i like the graffiti application. that one is fun. i draw very bad but cool graffiti.

see, now i can't even give you the link to see my facebook profile because you have to be my friend in order to see it. whereas with myspace i can show it to anyone. maybe this is to protect my privacy, but i am purposely on a social networking site ... i don't want my privacy protected ... i instead just choose not to post anything too personal or incriminating.

NO ONE MUST KNOW MY SECRET IDENTITY.


anyway ... the two facebook applications i really like are Books iRead and Where I've Been.

sometimes there are patrons who actually know which librarians can recommend books that are good choices for them. for instance, when i worked at a library where people actually read, there was one woman who ONLY wanted book recommendations from me. she trusted no one else. if we were both on facebook she could see which books i like and get her recommendations that way.


i also like where i've been. you have a big map of the world and highlight the places you've been in one color, places you've lived in another color, and places you'd like to go in another color. then you can compare your map to others. this has few library uses, but i still think its cool. i've been SO many places. next continent to conquer: asia.