Thoughts on Thing 17.
I love those "something, something, something in plain English" videos. And, that guy is so cool. I want to learn how to flick paper off a drafting table like that.
Anyway, now I understand wikis like I never did before, but what happens when a whole bunch of friends (the camping group, for instance) all start editing and saving at once? If three of them suddenly realized they needed a tent and offered their own, does the "what we have" list show three tents? Who dominates (oooh, that's a loaded word)? Who edits for criss-crossed posts? The owner of the wiki?
A curious mind wants to know.
Ciao. Barb
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Playing catch-up with Thing #15
I read most of the material Heather provided through the links on the Thing #15 ELL page. Now that the stuff has marinated a bit in my brain, I don't think anything I read sums up my thinking on Library 2.0 better that Rick Anderson's article "Away from the Icebergs." Here's the salient quote from the end of his piece:
"No profession can survive if it throws its core principles and values overboard in response to every shift in the zeitgeist. However, it can be equally disastrous when a profession fails to acknowledge and adapt to radical, fundamental change in the marketplace it serves. At this point in time, our profession is far closer to the latter type of disaster than it is to the former. We need to shift direction, and we can’t wait for the big ship of our profession to change course first. It’s going to have to happen one library—one little boat—at a time."
I'm not inclined to elaborate at length (that's different for me), I'll just add that this ELL program, the up-grades to our sites, our blogs, our Loft 2.0 features, and the like are exactly the right things to be doing now.
I have two worries:
Are we leaving the non-digitally connected segments of our population in the dust? Are we moving too fast for them?
What happens when we lose the power grid? Even a temporary shutdown wreaks havoc on things. I see more of that happening not less. (Yeah, a pretty dystopic view of the future, isn't it?)
On that cheery note...
Ciao. Barb
"No profession can survive if it throws its core principles and values overboard in response to every shift in the zeitgeist. However, it can be equally disastrous when a profession fails to acknowledge and adapt to radical, fundamental change in the marketplace it serves. At this point in time, our profession is far closer to the latter type of disaster than it is to the former. We need to shift direction, and we can’t wait for the big ship of our profession to change course first. It’s going to have to happen one library—one little boat—at a time."
I'm not inclined to elaborate at length (that's different for me), I'll just add that this ELL program, the up-grades to our sites, our blogs, our Loft 2.0 features, and the like are exactly the right things to be doing now.
I have two worries:
Are we leaving the non-digitally connected segments of our population in the dust? Are we moving too fast for them?
What happens when we lose the power grid? Even a temporary shutdown wreaks havoc on things. I see more of that happening not less. (Yeah, a pretty dystopic view of the future, isn't it?)
On that cheery note...
Ciao. Barb
Thursday, September 4, 2008
Thing 11--Library Thing
OK, I put in some titles, mostly books waiting to be read or reads in progress. I am not inclined to take full advantage of all the Library Thing features. I attend one bookclub (sometimes two if I go to the North Branch session), and talk books with people all the time. I have no urge to do this virtually. I do understand that it's a blessing for many who can't get out, prefer to chat and share ideas online, want to be anonymous and the like, and I say, "Go for it!" to them. If I were to start using this site regularly, I don't know when I'd get time to read. Here's the link to my site. Wanna talk? Call me....
click here
Ciao. Barb
click here
Ciao. Barb
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Boomers take over Facebook! MySpace under threat!
Just imagine if social networking became as popular with the people in my age demographic as it is with the teens and 20-somethings. The Baby Boomers would take over the social sites. Would that be bad? It might be the kiss of death for this kind of thing for the age group these sites were originally aimed at. There are probably quite a few young people who don't like the idea of anyone over, say, 30 joining "their" sites, and just imagining their mom or dad or (gasp) grandma networking and becoming their friends creeps them out.
But, hey, maybe I'm the one with the problem. Am I being age-ist here? Am I imposing my own ambiguous feelings about a)--social networking (a virtual experience) replacing real-life/real-time/face-to-face experiences, and b)--my own discomfort at being thought too old to be hip anymore? In all honesty, I think there's a bit of that going on with me these days which is why the ELL is a good thing even if I don't join up or use every 2.0 tool we're exploring.
Ciao. Barb
But, hey, maybe I'm the one with the problem. Am I being age-ist here? Am I imposing my own ambiguous feelings about a)--social networking (a virtual experience) replacing real-life/real-time/face-to-face experiences, and b)--my own discomfort at being thought too old to be hip anymore? In all honesty, I think there's a bit of that going on with me these days which is why the ELL is a good thing even if I don't join up or use every 2.0 tool we're exploring.
Ciao. Barb
Labels:
age-ism,
Baby Boomers,
Facebook,
MySpace,
social networking,
Thing 10
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
LibraryThing and me
Thing 11--LibraryThing--wasn't hard to do. It was, however, one of those things in life where once you get started, it's hard to stop. So many links to click, so many FAQs to read, so many potential ways to spend life on a website [sigh]. Honestly, I have to wonder how 2.0 fans have the time to keep up their own blogs, read all their RSS feeds, up-date their Flickr and YouTube accounts, visit their social sites, check emails (how quaint, email), text, eat and breathe. It's all so, um, virtual. My goodness, this has turned into a bit of a rant. I thinks it's time for me to go offline for a while.
Ciao. Barb
Ciao. Barb
Friday, August 22, 2008
Vive la difference!
In answer to the age-old question "is contra dancing like square dancing?"...I'd have to say yes and no. The calls are similar--allemande, balance & swing, do-si-do, etc.--the patterns are not. There is a caller for contras, but he or she is usually calling a specific dance, whereas many square dance callers wing it, making the dance pattern up as they go. And, a huge difference is that lady contra dancers don't dress in extreme versions of what I call a twirling skirt, there are no ruffled petticoats or poufy sleeves; and the gents don't wear those string ties. I do sometimes wear my cowboy boots, they are just the best for an occasional stomp or two. To muddy the waters a bit, contra groups will throw in a square dance now and then. Here's an example of what was done at Chicago Barn Dance last fall. The goofy turkey hats? Don't ask...please just try to ignore them.
I forgot to mention that the groups that meet regularly in the Chicago area always feature live music and some folks come just for that (entry fee is $6/person). The type of music varies from Old-Time-y, jazzy folk, Celtic, good ol' American country, you name it. Most times there are fiddle, banjo, and guitar players, sometimes base and keyboard.
Hope some of the ELL learners would like to give this a try. It's good for the body, brain, and soul.
Ciao. Barb
I forgot to mention that the groups that meet regularly in the Chicago area always feature live music and some folks come just for that (entry fee is $6/person). The type of music varies from Old-Time-y, jazzy folk, Celtic, good ol' American country, you name it. Most times there are fiddle, banjo, and guitar players, sometimes base and keyboard.
Hope some of the ELL learners would like to give this a try. It's good for the body, brain, and soul.
Ciao. Barb
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Contra dancing--what's that?
I love all kinds of dance, and have taken classes in ballet, modern, jazz, salsa and more for a long, long time. I've been contra dancing for four years now. Many folks aren't quite sure what it is. I usually describe it as like the line dancing you'd see in the movie "Pride and Prejudice" (you know--two lines facing each other, partners weaving in and out in complex patterns, flirting with each other like crazy). So, for the YouTube Thing, I thought it would be fun to show you what contra dancing looks like. There are a couple of places around Chicago where there are regular dance gatherings, so I just entered the search terms "contra dance Chicago," and, sure enough, there they were. One was from a University of Chicago contra dance that I've attended. I clicked play to check it out, and, by golly, there I was center screen!
Anyone interested in a fun, energetic, social evening can join us this coming Monday for the Chicago Barn Dance gathering in Evanston. Visit the site for details
Chicago Barn Dance
The University of Chicago contra gatherings are during the school year on the 1st Saturday of each month. Here's the site with the schedule for the 08/09
U of C. Folk
Ciao. Barb
Anyone interested in a fun, energetic, social evening can join us this coming Monday for the Chicago Barn Dance gathering in Evanston. Visit the site for details
Chicago Barn Dance
The University of Chicago contra gatherings are during the school year on the 1st Saturday of each month. Here's the site with the schedule for the 08/09
U of C. Folk
Ciao. Barb
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Books on my nightstand
I often will read two books at the same time, one fiction, one non. One becomes the upstairs book, one the downstairs. Right now I'm reading my bookclub selection, Loving Frank by Nancy Horan, and Tony Horwitz's new book, A Voyage Long and Strange: Rediscovering the New World. Not shown here are all the books waiting for me on the hold shelf at North Branch. I need more time and more reading stamina--if I'm too comfy-cozy, I get all drowsy [sigh].
The photo here is my first attempt at uploading a pic. I did a Flickr one, too (same books, different shot). I am feeling very accomplished right now and have given myself an "atta-girl."
Ciao. Barb
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Spell with Flickr--make it work for you
Thanks to Heather for the link to this fun site Spell with Flickr. Here is one possible application:




Ciao. Barb




Ciao. Barb
Thursday, August 7, 2008
I'm baaack!
I left, now I'm back. Wordpress was not making me happy, nor did I feel particularly tech savvy floundering around their universe. Too much lingo, too many cute-sy gizmos, way too many steps to accomplish simple tasks. I suppose I could have tried for a private tutorial, but we at EPL are way too busy for that especially since I had sooo many questions.
So, on to my true purpose in blogging (and less griping)...a book on the New Titles table caught my eye, 15,003 Answers: The Ultimate Trivia Encyclopedia, 2nd edition. (031.2 Newma.S) Just imagine how many family arguments could be settled at the Thanksgiving table if you had this handy. Having given it a quick perusal, I found a section with the first lines of famous works. Do you know where these are from?
(Answers below, no peeking.)
"Mr. and Mrs. Dursley, of number four, Privet Drive, were proud to say that they were perfectly normal, thank you very much."
"The great fish moved silently through the night water, propelled by short sweeps of its crescent tail."
"Marley was dead, to begin with."
"Stately, plump Buch Mulligan came from the stairhead bearing a bowl of lather on which a mirror and a razor lay crossed."
"All children except one, grow up."
"In my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I've been turning over in my mind ever since."
Harry Potter and the Sorceror's Stone
Jaws
A Christmas Carol
Ulysses (Not Homer's...Joyce's)
Peter Pan
The Great Gatsby
Hope you had fun.
Ciao. Barb
So, on to my true purpose in blogging (and less griping)...a book on the New Titles table caught my eye, 15,003 Answers: The Ultimate Trivia Encyclopedia, 2nd edition. (031.2 Newma.S) Just imagine how many family arguments could be settled at the Thanksgiving table if you had this handy. Having given it a quick perusal, I found a section with the first lines of famous works. Do you know where these are from?
(Answers below, no peeking.)
"Mr. and Mrs. Dursley, of number four, Privet Drive, were proud to say that they were perfectly normal, thank you very much."
"The great fish moved silently through the night water, propelled by short sweeps of its crescent tail."
"Marley was dead, to begin with."
"Stately, plump Buch Mulligan came from the stairhead bearing a bowl of lather on which a mirror and a razor lay crossed."
"All children except one, grow up."
"In my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I've been turning over in my mind ever since."
Harry Potter and the Sorceror's Stone
Jaws
A Christmas Carol
Ulysses (Not Homer's...Joyce's)
Peter Pan
The Great Gatsby
Hope you had fun.
Ciao. Barb
Thursday, July 24, 2008
The Woman Who Created the Children's Library
Can you imagine a world where children were not allowed into libraries so they would be protected from the morally corrupting influence of novels? Until Anne Carroll Moore (b. 1871), the subject of this fascinating "New Yorker" article, took on the task of creating a children's library for New York City in 1895, you had to be 14 years old and a boy to get in to the Astor Library. As I look around me at the very busy North Branch on a summer afternoon, I find it hard to believe that kids were denied this wonderful experience. Moore's influence turned out to be a good thing, of course, but there were aspects of her story that are almost as surprising as the experts' opinions of children's needs and limitations. For one, if she didn't like a book, that was it. She would deem a book unsuitable with a terse,"Not recommended for purchase by an expert," noted in the margin of a publisher's catalog. Unfortunately, she disapproved of E. B. White's Stuart Little.
Read on for a very interesting story on libraries and the world of children's literature:
click here
Ciao. Barb
Read on for a very interesting story on libraries and the world of children's literature:
click here
Ciao. Barb
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Too many mistakes
Somehow I've posted twice now to Kate's blog. I'm sorry. I haven't a clue how this happened (unless it's something to do with both blogs being open on the same PC). Anyway, she showed me how to do a Wordle, and it's loads of fun. Here's mine:
title="Wordle: Dance! Dance! Dance!">
src="http://wordle.net/thumb/wrdl/73596/Dance%21_Dance%21_Dance%21"
style="padding:4px;border:1px solid #ddd"
>
Ciao. Barb
title="Wordle: Dance! Dance! Dance!">
style="padding:4px;border:1px solid #ddd"
>
Ciao. Barb
Do we have a book on...?
This was a pretty interesting subject search. A young woman in pursuit of material for her research paper (junior college level, I'd guess) asked for a book on sarcasm. That's a fairly broad topic to search under, and I had only moderate success by suggesting we look in the 808s and biographies of Don Rickles and the like. I did have book on irony, however, and since irony is close to sarcasm, and using the right tone, irony can be delivered sarcastically, I thought it was worth a look. The book is called The Big Book of Irony by Jon Winokur. Ironically, it's a very small book.
Ciao. Barb
Ciao. Barb
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Here goes!
First posting, kinda scary. Writing my profile was harrowing enough. Anyhow, I'm using this as a learning experience to be able to be a better librarian and to maintain a place in the world of the digitally hip. I really don't believe there are a lot of people out there who want to know my thinking on too many things, so I will probably offer a mix of book recommendations, library experiences (the most interesting question of the day), and random thoughts as they come up. I don't promise to be fascinating, controversial, or titillating. I do promise to use good grammar and spell things correctly.
Ciao for now.
Barb
Ciao for now.
Barb
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