Friday 25 February 2011

Things 18 and 19

Now, having said what I said in my last post, Thing 18 has made me wonder again about whether there could be a useful side to Flickr! I can definitely see the benefits of having access to so many images. I had fun looking around for an image to put into my blog, and chose these two of my old workplace, The Queen's College in Oxford, taken by bez_uk.

Queens College - Front Quad

Queens College - Back Quad

I haven't saved it to my computer as instructed, but played around with the 'Share this' options provided by Flickr. I'm still a bit confused about how to attribute a photo - is saying bez_uk took it enough? Maybe I should add a link to him on Flickr? And I notice in Emma's blog post, she's got a link to the Creative Commons licence. Aah, after a bit of digging I found this:

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic License.

Right, I think that's enough? Now onto YouTube.

Other than my Dad occasionally recommending videos to me, which I've never followed up, I've never had anyone tell me anything about YouTube. So, I've dug out my MP3 player headphones, and here goes.

 Well, I had some fun watching some videos - I watched two on the BL's video stream, and and interesting round-up of the year by Warwick's Vice-Chancellor. As with Flickr, I can see this is a great tool for people in their personal lives to have some fun. It's certainly made me want to have a bit more of an explore once I am out of work time. I found it was very distracting - after watching one video, there were links down the side to more that I wanted to watch! I think I could have easily wasted the day on it. As for its use for organisations, and libraries in particular, I'm again still to be convinced. I guess it's nice for ex-Warwick students to catch up with activities on campus, but I can't really see anyone searching for Library related content.

But then, maybe if the Library creates and actively promotes a certain video, say with instructions on how to use the self-check machines, this could be a good use for the site. I did a search for University of Warwick Library, and saw that there were some tutorials for using the catalogue. I think if promoted well, this could be a really good resource. Not being a student, I have no idea how well known about these videos are. The 30 views for 'How to access MyLibrary' suggest not very.

I'm glad to have finally visited and had a go at Flickr and YouTube. I'm sure I shall be re-visiting them again in the future.

Thing 17

Well this is another week I've been looking forward to. I've never used Flickr, and until recently had never looked at YouTube. I'd just never had the time or inclination to work out how they worked. So this was a good opportunity to have a play around.

It was easy to register with Flickr with my Google credentials. And uploading photos seemed quite straightforward. I can see why Flickr could be a really useful tool for friends or family who want to share photos. I'm not convinced by whether libraries can make much use of it though - it was interesting to browse the BL's photo stream, but I certainly wouldn't take the time to revisit it again to see what new photos they had uploaded. I wonder how useful it actually is for an organisation to be able to post lots of photos on-line.

I can't see myself using Flickr, either in my professional or personal life. I don't take a lot of photos, and those that I do I doubt anyone would be interested in! If I want to share photos I would probably put them on Facebook, or just put them on a CD to send to someone. So, Flickr has yet to convince me...

Monday 14 February 2011

Things 15 and 16

I've had a look at the Zotero website, and I've had a browse through the Endnote web workbook. I'm not going to sign up for an account as I don't have any reason to use it, and I feel I've got enough new accounts for the time being! It seems like it could be a really useful thing to have - I can understand why students find it extremely useful. When writing my dissertations I used BibTeX in my LaTeX documents, and this has some of the advantages of these tools - it allows you to store all the details of your references, and then formats them for you into the referencing style of your choice. I always found this a great help, and I can see why these tools would be even better - BibTeX requires that all your references are typed manually into a text file, and these tools seem far more sophisticated than that.

It seems a bit odd that users have to enter a comma after corporate authors in Endnote web - this seems a very strange thing to have to remember to do. I'd have thought it would be easier to have a check box to say that the author is a corporation, and then have the software add in the comma for you.

Zotero looks very easy to use from the instructions on the website - citations seem to be added by simply clicking on a button in the address bar. I don't know how this works in practice, but this is how I expected the tools to work. Endnote web looks a bit more complicated, with saving to files and then uploading these files. But maybe you get more functionality with the added complexity. Without a thorough examination it's hard to tell, but I can easily see why either of these tools would be an enormous help to a student writing a dissertation or thesis.

Thing 14

Well I'm more impressed with Diigo than I expected to be. I've heard of Delicious but never used it before, and was a bit suspicious about its usefulness. I didn't really understand how it was different from a browser's bookmarking facilities. Registering for Diigo and installing the toolbar was remarkably easy. And from my initial investigations it seems very easy to use. I can see that if you do a lot of work on the Internet it may be a very useful place to collect a large amount of websites. I sometimes find it annoying that all my favourites don't fit onto my bookmarks bar, and I spend time shortening their names to make everything fit. I do like having easy to access buttons at the top of my screen for the websites I use on a day-to-day basis. But I can see myself adding websites to Diigo that I just need to remember about, or might need again in a week's time.

I'm not so sure about the highlighting and post-it notes facility - again, I can see why a researcher might find it useful, but to a web-user such as myself, I think it is a bit of a gimmick that I can't image myself using too much. As with all these technologies, the test will be time, and we shall see if I actively do start adding websites to Diigo, and maybe using some of the other facilities.

Thursday 10 February 2011

Thing 13: Reflection week

Well here we are, officially half-way, although in some respects not really half way at all for me. I feel the first few weeks were a nice gentle introduction, as they were mostly things I had encountered before. It was only this last week that I actually had to get to grips with a completely new technology, Twitter. And I'm really glad I have! It's nice to finally know what everyone else has been going on about, and it's also filled two holes for me: Firstly, a few weeks ago the Data Services team had a meeting about how we could make ourselves more known around the Library, and Twitter seems one very good way to go about this. Secondly, I'm also starting to work towards my CILIP chartership, a large portion of which seems to focus on networking with the wider librarianship professional. Again, Twitter seems one obvious way of going about this. I'm hoping more uses will emerge. Several members of staff have sung its praises, and described how they have used it to network with other professionals. However, in order to do this you have to be 'out there', getting yourself followers and regularly tweeting interesting things. I like the idea of communicating with other librarians, particularly other cataloguers, and am willing to give it a go. I've already sent a tweet that was re-tweeted by at least 4 librarians, which gave me a lot of pleasure. There's quite a lot of pressure to think of interesting things to say though!

So that's my reflection on my favourite 'thing'. I'm also enjoying blogging, and again am finding it useful as I begin on my Chartership journey. I'm not sure I would blog without some express purpose, but for the purpose of Chartership it is a great way of recording my thoughts and feelings on my work and experiences.

The next three weeks are packed full of technologies I haven't used before, so I'm looking forward to adding them to my repertoire.

Friday 4 February 2011

Thing 12

Well, I've had a browse of various libraries on Facebook. I'm torn as to whether I think Facebook is relevant to libraries or not. In some senses, I'm not sure it makes any difference at all. I think that there is a way of communicating with students through Facebook, but as not all users will be on Facebook, let alone a fan of your page, you will always need to send messages out through official channels as well. And then what is the point of repeating the message on Facebook, when one or two students may happen to see it among all the posts from their friends?

That being said, I think Facebook does offer an opportunity to offer a non-intimidating way for people to interact with libraries and librarians. I was very interested to see the British Library's page, where people are posting on the wall to ask questions. And these questions are being answered by a human at the Library. I'm very impressed that someone at the BL is taking the time to respond - and I think that is the key. If you have someone who is going to put the time and effort into making it work, I think Facebook could have benefits for a library.

But, you need the users to engage and interact in order for that to work. I'm tempted to change my mind again - the Warwick Library page is full of notes from library staff, but has no interaction at all from students. So is it worth it? Are the students reading the notes?

I think I'm going to sit safely on the fence on this one!

Wednesday 2 February 2011

Things 10 and 11

I'm excited about this week - I've always felt that Twitter was something I should know about, but I've never quite got round to investigating it. So I've now got my own profile: @metadatamonkey. I was disappointed that @metadatamagician was too many characters - Twitter seems to be obsessed with limiting the amount of characters you can use for everything. I've had to change my name and re-write my profile description in order for them to 'fit'. It's no wonder the world is resorting to txt speak!

I've found some people to follow - some Warwick 23 Things participants and some celebrities. Stephen Fry seems to be the most famous tweeter so I'm giving him a go. I've also tweeted with reference to other tweeters. I think I'll monitor progress over the week, and might get more adventurous with my tweeting as more people join. Whether I'll think of anything interesting to say is another matter!