Friday, June 27, 2008

Digital Media Collection

The Art of War
The Essential Translation of the Classic Book of Life

From description:

For more than two thousand years, The Art of War has stood as a cornerstone of Chinese culture, a lucid text that reveals as much about psychology, politics, and economics as it does about battlefield strategy.

Podcasts

The Podcasts Alley link was pretty interesting. Searching is easy, performed by keywork or browsing. I was able to find a few sites that interest me. I linked to Practical Backpacking's podcasts on my Bloglines account. Here is a link to my Bloglines list: http://www.bloglines.com/blog/mitchellp23things

You Tube

Peter Aerts

I.K.B.F. World Heavyweight Champion
W.M.T.A.World Muay Thai Heavyweight Champion
K-1 GRAND PRIX '97 3rd Place
K-1 GRAND PRIX '94, '95, '98 Champion
K-1 WORLD GP 2001 in Las Vegas Finalist
K-1 WORLD GP 2003 3rd Place
K-1 WORLD GP 2006 - 2007 Finalist






I don't have any problems with YouTube, and generally like everything abou the site. Sorry, but I don't really see the benefit for libraries using this.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Onmidrive

From the Seomoz.org Web 2.0 list of awards I chose Onmidrive in the Digital Storage category. Digital storage is nice for documents you might need when away from your computer. I don't know if I would trust having this service for all my documents, however. What happens if the company shuts down? Are all documents lost? It seems too risky for me. Also, the storage amounts are too small for use of anything except temporary storage of files. The free account only gives you 1 gb of storage. The pro3 account, at $200 per year, only gives you 50 gb of storage. I'm not impressed. Nor would I use it in a library setting.

Zoho

If I had to use an online word processor, this would be a good choice. It seems to have excellent features for an online product. The equation editor seems particulary useful. Typing was easy and seemed fluid; some online products are stuttery. Even so, I still am not yet a fan of online applications although I am sure we will be forced that way in the future.

Friday, June 13, 2008

PBCLS exploring web 2.0 wiki

Another wiki. Its nice, you can add content and easily search it. Even though I like wikii, I'm thinking they are just web pages that are easily searched. Yeah. Nothing really new or novel, but I do agree it is easier than searching a normal web page.

Wikis

I generally like wikis. Wikipedia is a great resource, containing real information, with sources of that inofrmation. The content is "peer-reviewed" in that others can update that information. The wikis linked to for this exercise however, are not much more than a collection of links that could be posted on a normal webpage. I noticed one of the wikis could only be updated by librarians. Kinda defeats the purpose of a wiki...

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Away from the “icebergs”

Interesting article. Discusses the obselete "just in case" collections that libraries have, usually static and periodically updated information for everyone. Suggests patrons wanting access to digital information warrants dumping of print materials to better serve patrons. Also suggests that services should be able to be used without training, or the service is undesirable. Article also suggests putting more information online, pushing our services out, instead of requiring a parton to come to us. WEb 2.0 to me, and this article, is about providing easy to use information sources digitally.

Technorati

Technorati seems to be a pretty powerful seach tool for searching blogs. The different ways of searching by tags is really useful. A search is available by general topic, as well as the top 100 blogs. Searching other popular blogs is also available.

www.technorati.com

Thursday, June 5, 2008

del.icio.us

This app is useful for bookmarking sites and being able to find them again. Also, other users bookmarks are cataloged, so searching a tag would help you find other sites on the same topic. I can see this being more powerful over the folder method. I don't know if I would use this for doing much research, but it would be nice for having bookmarks available at any computer.