Miss Pristina's

Miss Pristina\
School of Welding

Buddy & Bubba's

Buddy & Bubba\
Bridal Boutique

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Summary -- The End -- Hooray!

This Web 2.0 project had so many diverse things in it that much is a blur. Things that stand out are the personal blog, the fun stuff like the image generator, Facebook and Library Thing (although I haven't gotten back to them). It was good to get exposed to these things, but I can't say that I'm comfortable with most of them simply because I haven't used them enough and don't really expect to. I'd seen youtube and flickr before because people had sent me things. But simply looking at them is a lot easier than trying to add them to blogs and feeds, at least when those activities are new to me.

The biggest unexpected outcome is that now I have a cumbersome folder of new sites I should check regularly but don't really want to. My Bloglines, Gmail, Facebook, Pandora, LibraryThing etc. accounts will probably all languish because I won't remember my sign-ins and because in my regular daily life I won't think about them for weeks and months at a time. Remember that I'm a "connected but hassled" -- I can do it if I have to, but usually it seems more bother than it is worth.

The program format was good. Great job, Ellen! I would never NEVER have dug out all of this on my own. And I hope the page stays active for that future time when I may actually have a reason to want some of these tools and need to refresh.

NO NO NO I don't want to learn about anything more -- danger: brain overload -- danger ... danger ... overload ... meltdown ... brain exploding ... NO-NO-NO-MORE ...

If a similiar project was offered, I would probably participate because I don't like to acknowledge that I am basically a lazy wimp.

Thing #23 -- Podcasts

This one had me stumped for awhile. I explored several but couldn't find any podcasts with the RSS icon. I think that I finally did some kind of windows podcast download, but by now I'm not honestly sure what I did. At some point a feed for "blogging from the Alley" showed up in my bloglines account; maybe that made the difference. From there, I could then see an RSS icon in the podcast I chose, "uncontrolled vocabulary," which I am absolutely certain was not there the first few times I tried to find it.

I like the concept of podcasts, but disconnected voices totally annoy me. That's why I can't stand to listen to talk radio, and have major difficulty with the interludes between songs on regular radio. I'm not able to ignore voices, yet I vigorously attempt not to listen to them. The same words in print form might interest me, so the content isn't the issue. I can't stand full-length audiobooks either, even with exciting plots, although for some reason I did enjoy listening to the brief, one-chapter readings of Alice in Wonderland and other stories that used to air on the Friday morning show on KDHX (I believe that the segment was called Something A Little Fishy, but it doesn't seem to be on anymore).

Monty Python's Gorilla Librarian

Mongolian Fiddler (Thing #22)

A fascinating video, slightly over 7 minutes long, featuring Mongolian musicians (anyone squeamish, be warned -- there's a sheep-slaughtering episode in the middle). I love the opening sequence, with the lone fiddle player just a speck against the massive snowfields of the mountains. So remote! yet we can watch from the comfort of our computers. I chose it because I was curious about the music, but what captivates me is the sense of peeking into a community that is almost unimaginable to me. I can't understand the words, but that makes me even more curious. I wonder about these people as if they lived next door. Why does the small boy need crutches? Do they ever get any vegetables, or is dinner always plain mutton? Does the snow fall year-round? How do they get/make the lovely objects in their home? Is their culture falling apart as the larger world intrudes?

Wish I could figure out how to imbed. Here's the URL:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3r7X--vtRgs

but I can't find anything that says "embed" as directed. Is this another one of those places I need to create a sign-in for? Oh, now I see something I missed before -- this particular video says "embedding disabled by request." I'll have to find another. The next one will not have dead sheep, I promise.

Thing #21

This was a little frustrating. First I had to get a gmail account (I'm getting tired of constantly registering for new logins, at this point I never remember if I've done that one before and just forgotten about it or if I'm truly a first-timer). I tried Google Ride Finder, but kept getting server errors. I tried Page Creator, which was easy, but trying to save it (not publish it) froze the page. I looked at Extensions for Firefox and Experimental Search. The Experimental Searches were interesting -- maps and timelines. I thought about joining the Keyword search experiment but hestitated because I didn't know what I'd be letting myself in for.

Relevance to the library might be something like timelines of authors or medical specialities. Everything will be useful to somebody, but that would have to be a noticeable pool of users before it should "graduate."

On the Graduated list, I liked Google Transit (but it doesn't cover St. Louis yet).

Thing #20

Ooooohhh, I'm glad I did this. I picked Pandora (#2 in the Music category) and now I have great music playing. I'll have to figure out how to have multiple profiles, since sometimes I want to hear Willie Nelson and other days B. B. King or Joni Mitchell. I really like how it finds comparable music and lets me rate it to guide future choices. As someone who can barely tolerate the DJ's talking between songs, this is a great option for variety without annoyance. If only I could access it from my car, I wouldn't need to carry my CDs around. But I'm sure that built-in Internet will be a future option in the automotive industry. Then we can all worry about people surfing the web while plowing through traffic and pedestrians.

Thing #19

I had fun with the Resume Circle Template on Google.Docs although it was annoying that I couldn't use my mouse to cut and paste -- I got a message box saying my browser (Firefox) couldn't do it and I needed to use keyboard functions or the top browser menu toolbar. And now I think something's frozen; I saved it and tried to send it to myself, but nothing happened and I can't close it either. Maybe I can retrieve it at a later time.

Basecamp looked fun; I didn't sign in to actually use it, but took some of the tour. I think these types of easy collaboration are definitely going to be popular. How we'd use it in the library is not immediately clear to me, but assembling a group project (esp. one that didn't require much security) seems like a great application. Students may find it particularly useful.