Checked out the big huge labs stuff. It's OK. Reminds me a bit of Publisher style stuff. Created the billboard there. Got the photo from Flickr. Has possibilities for promotional stuff and fooling around with staff photos on the intranet. Free is free, I suppose, but I still prefer some good software on my desktop rather than the web based stuff. And I don't mind paying for it if its good and it does what I want, especially if I can get it cheap on a computer magazine disc.
Mashups article in wikipedia says
"Mashups currently come in three general flavors: consumer mashups, data mashups, and business mashups.
The best known type is the consumer mashup, best exemplified by the many Google Maps applications. Consumer mashups combine data elements from multiple sources, hiding this behind a simple unified graphical interface.
Other common types are "data mashups" and "enterprise mashups".
A data mashup mixes data of similar types from different sources (see Yahoo Pipes), as for example combining the data from multiple RSS feeds into a single feed with a graphical front end. An enterprise mashup (see Denodo Technologies & JackBe), usually integrates data from internal and external sources - for example, it could create a market share report by combining an external list of all houses sold in the last week with internal data about which houses one agency sold.
A business mashup is a combination of all the above, focusing on both data aggregation and presentation, and additionally adding collaborative functionality, making the end result suitable for use as a business application."
There's a lot of other info there including links to other mashup sites. The data and business mashups sound like they are worth investigating but I'm not sure that they will do anything for me that some good desktop software won't do anyway.
Unshelved - The library comic strip
Monday, April 21, 2008
Mash me up, Scotty.
Invasion of the "pod people"
I realise now that all the people with wires hanging out of their heads are part of the advance force of the pod people. The ABC and Library Success Wiki are merely instruments of their grand design....... What? Oh. Sorry, I've been listening to too many sci fi podcasts, I think.
Podcasts on the ABC are great. Love going back to them for stuff that I've missed or just to find something interesting to listen to. Check out Trainspotter Tim Fischer's "Great Train Show" on the ABC site for a rollicking good time.
Obvious application for podcasts and vodcasts is local studies oral history projects and library events generally, e.g. author visits etc.
I think we will need to get some training on using the video and audio equipment for them to look and sound professional. Unless we get a grant to do it....... Hoping that there will still be grants
Monday, April 14, 2008
Slammin' the boards?
Gee, I don't know about "slammin the boards". Sounds a bit too try hard to me. A touch of the "let's sound like cool and groovy librarians". Is it just me or do librarians trying to sound cool always sound lame? I think I'd rather watch paint dry.
Could be OK for training I suppose, or if you haven't got a life. Could be good if set up locally, or cooperatively. Ask a Librarian type thing. I can't see my Council wanting me to spend work time on Yahoo answers, as rivetting as that may be. Providing Bruce McAvaney with my most romantic getaway destination may not impress them as a great use of my professional time.
A great use of my time however is reading "Annoyed Librarian" Check out the article on "Library stress reduction" and others. A delightful style and sense of humour. Libraries....it's not a tough gig. We're not solving world peace and world poverty here. Relax and enjoy it.
By the way, did you like the cartoon? Check out "Unshelved - the library comic strip" for more library humour.
Widget wonderland
Found a widget to enable recent comments to be added at the bottom of each post. Now that the widget is installed, if you click on the title of any post, the comments on that post will appear underneath it. Neat.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
It's not you, it's your LibraryThing!
Checked out the Kingston Library site (Thanks Bambino for the tip). Integrated LibraryThing into the catalogue. Neat. Tag clouds, lists of similar works from LibraryThing, etc. can't wait to get it into our catalogue.
Even created my own LibraryThing account. I'm getting a bit attached to it, adding a few items each day. It's strange looking at the things that I read grouped on a computer screen. On the bookshelves at home they are part of the furniture and I tend to take them for granted. Now that I'm adding them to my LibraryThing account, I'm going over them and starting to reread some.
I'm also asking myself, who is this person reading this stuff? Is that really me? Waxing a bit metaphysical here....... quick, back to reality. Well....sort of.....
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Mmmmm! del.icio.us.
YouTube me
I must admit, I do love YouTube. My youngest son (18 yo) and I often trawl throught the comedy videos, especially Bill Bailey who is a very talented and funny man.
Check out his theory that all classical music is derived from a few themes in cockney music.
I also found some interesting one minute marketing videos from Harris County Public Library in the US.
And check out this great clip from Pete Denahy called "Sort of dunno nothing". Me and my boys love it...although my wife is sick of us playing it and laughing so much, not to mention tapping out the riff on every solid surface we can find..