Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Social Networking Awards

Mashable.com just posted their 2006 social networking awards. The post serves as a useful directory of social networks by category--general ones like MySpace and Facebook, plus social networks for video, photos, music, etc. I've only heard of about a fifth of the ones they mention; clearly I'm behind the times.

Friday, December 22, 2006

Friends and Identity on Social Networking Sites

I just finished reading a fascinating piece in First Monday called Friends, Friendsters, and Top 8: Writing Community Into Being on Social Network Sites, which analyzes the relationship between choosing online friends and constructing identity on social networking sites. If you’re interested in social networking, it’s worth a read. FYI, I wrote a detailed blog post about the article on my personal blog at http://crumj.blogspot.com/2006/12/friends-and-identity-on-social.html — definitely an optional read :-)

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Meebo and Librarians

There's a nice post on the Meebo blog (meeblog » Blog Archive » librarian love) about librarians and Meebo. Apparently librarians are beginning to put the Meebo Me widget on library web pages to make it easy for patrons to open chat sessions. The comments on the post are also fascinating. A common theme is that Meebo allows people to circumvent filtering software, common in libraries and workplaces, that blocks access to chat programs.

If you want to see a Meebo widget, take a look at my staff page; I have one embedded in the top righthand corner.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Ripping DVDs may never be the same again | Perspectives | CNET News.com

Here's a column that summarizes an interesting copyright case, Paramount Pictures v. Load 'N Go Video:
Ripping DVDs may never be the same again | Perspectives | CNET News.com

This case potentially could be a landmark in digital copyright history.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

The Google Divide - October 15, 2006 - Library Journal

Check out John Berry III's editorial in Library Journal about generational differences and resistance to change:
The Google Divide - October 15, 2006 - Library Journal

Maybe fodder for a TechTalk discussion sometime?

Friday, November 10, 2006

Do you agree?

Here's an interesting quote from Max Frisch:

Technology is a way of organizing the universe so that man doesn't have to experience it.

Agree? Disagree? Let the discussion begin.

FYI for those who care, here's a link to the quote on The Quotations Page:

Quote Details: Max Frisch: Technology is a way... - The Quotations Page

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

ALA TechSource | My Avatar Wears Tight Jeans and 4 Other Things I Learned from Internet Librarian 2006

Here's a great post from Michael Stephens on this year's Internet Librarian conference:
ALA TechSource | My Avatar Wears Tight Jeans and 4 Other Things I Learned from Internet Librarian 2006

Lots of links to interesting stuff. Have any of you checked out Second Life yet? I plan to do so in my (ahem) spare time.

And here's a great quote:
We should insist on features that our "power users" (our Superpatrons?) want, "because these are the features that the average user will want two years from now."
Wish I could've been at the conference.

Social sites becoming too much of a good thing / Many young folks burning out on online sharing

From the San Francisco Chronicle, an article on social networking burnout:
Social sites becoming too much of a good thing / Many young folks burning out on online sharing

Apparently many social networkers with accounts on multiple sites find that maintaining their online presence in so many places is exhausting. It'll be interesting to see how much consolidation takes place. In the meantime, if your friends are divided amongst several sites, it could be challenging. Maybe what we need is some kind of mashup to connect MySpace, Friendster, TagWorld, Facebook, etc., into one big social space, kind of like the way Meebo lets you consolidate all your instant messaging accounts in one convenient place. Give it time...

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Comments sought on draft report

From the ALA newsletter, for those looking to include their two cents:

"R. David Lankes and Joanne Silverstein have produced a draft of Participatory Networks: The Library as Conversation and are looking for comments, feedback, corrections, and additions. The report, produced for the OITP, describes how Web 2.0 technologies can impact the various conversational modes of a working library.... "

Friday, October 13, 2006

A Tour of .Mobi

This week's ResearchBuzz includes an entry on .mobi, the newest top-level domain. It's reserved for sites designed for mobile devices like cell phones and PDAs. See A Tour of .Mobi

And if you haven't checked out ResearchBuzz, do! It's a great source of information on new and interesting sites and trends.

Solutions from PC Magazine: Save the World with Your Screensaver

Remember the SETI@Home project, which lets users install a screensaver that searches for extraterrestrial life while you aren't using your computer? Now there are more projects that use this model, called grid computing. While it's otherwise idle, your computer can search for cancer treatments, help find a cure for Parkinson's Disease... or help SETI find extraterrestrials. PC Magazine provides a nice overview of some grid computing projects and how you can participate. See Solutions from PC Magazine: Save the World with Your Screensaver

Friday, October 06, 2006

Youths no longer predominant at online hangouts with half of MySpace users 35 and up

Can it be that MySpace is growing up? According to this newspaper article:
Youths no longer predominant at online hangouts with half of MySpace users 35 and up

41 percent of MySpace users are 35-54. The article talks about some of the other social networking sites too but doesn't mention one of the newest, TagWorld.

I wonder how many of these sites will be around in a couple of years, how many will merge, and how many will simply die from lack of market share. I also wonder if these sites will actually be able to make money. They're valued quite highly, but then so were a lot of dot.com companies a few years ago. Time will tell.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Web sites mentioned at the last Tech Talk meeting

I just unearthed my notes from last week's Tech Talk meeting and found a list of web sites Andrew showed us. I'm posting them here, so we can refer back to them.

http://zoomr.com
http://www.experienceproject.com
http://www.blish.com (buy and sell digital content)
http://www.wize.com (comparison shopping)
http://www.viewscore.com (more comparison shopping)
http://www.mycroftnetwork.com

Many thanks to Andrew for bringing these to our attention!

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

A few items from today's meeting

Another great TechTalk meeting today! This post includes links to stuff I talked about. I hope others who presented or mentioned sites will post their links too, so we have a record of what was covered. Here's mine:
And one last thing: The first e-mail I read when I returned to my office after TechTalk was American Libraries Direct. It contained a link to an amazing story from the LA Times about a Mississippi Delta librarian's last day on the job. I am struck by the contrast between what he dealt with every day and the fascinating technology discussion I just left. I feel very privileged to do what I do, but I also feel very privileged to be part of a profession that includes this man and his library. Read it for yourself and realize how much libraries matter.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Mashup Awards

Talis, British library vendor and recent purveyor of all things Web 2.0, has announced the first winners of the "Mashing Up the Library" competition, which is "intended to openly encourage innovation in the display, use, and reuse of data from and about libraries." Check out this announcement from ALA's TechSource.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

LJ article on Library 2.0

The current issue of Library Journal includes an article on Library 2.0 that's worth a read. John Blyberg's comments on ILS vendors and the lack of open standards are of particular interest. We have recently purchased some 2.0-ish products from Innovative, but they are, of course, proprietary and -- as far as I know -- cannot be accessed except via Innovative's ILS. That's quite different from the leading Web 2.0 sites, most of which offer a variety of ways to interact with content outside of their own interfaces (e.g. APIs, RSS). Isn't it ironic that these private, for-profit companies can open their systems, but many nonprofit libraries can't?

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Modules and Widgets for Customization

At today's Tech Talk meeting, I'll talk about widgets. I've put the main points of the presentation into the OHSU Library wiki as well as in this blog post. In addition to the what and how of widgets, I hope you'll think about the implications for libraries. Yahoo widgets to search a catalog are nice, but I think there are larger implications here. Users expect customization in all their online tools, but libraries have been slow to provide it. Yes, there's MyLibrary, but consider for a moment what widget-like customization could look like. A library could provide a list of modules (e.g. document delivery, database search, FAQs, news headlines). The user could choose modules of interest and assemble them into a fully-customized interface to library services. Ideally these modules would be compatible with other campus resources (e.g. intranet, employee information system, student information system, research portal), so that library services could integrate smoothly with other systems needed by the user. Even cooler -- the modules could integrate with third-party services outside the library and university (MySpace, Facebook, Google personalized home page, etc.). Hey, I can dream, can't I? In the meantime, here's what we can do now:


While users have been able to customize content within various services (e.g. Yahoo) for awhile, customization is being taken to a new level with modules and widgets. Now we can customize our desktops or create a customized home page by assembling various small programs and tools into a unique combination of functions and information to meet our needs. These tools are created using lightweight code and, often, APIs that allow them to interact with other programs or web sites.

Types of Modules and Widgets

  • Accessory widgets - self-contained programs that don't require internet access or an additional program. Examples: clocks, timers
  • Application widgets - associated with some other application. Examples: iTunes controllers, media players
  • Information widgets - interact with data from the internet. Examples: stock quotes, news headlines, internet radio tuners, Flickr photo tools, satellite radio tuners, weather information.

Platforms

Creating Widgets and Modules (especially in libraries)

These tools don't appear to be too difficult to create. Some libraries have created Yahoo or Apple widgets for searching their catalogs, and CISTI has created a Yahoo widget for ordering documents and checking the status of orders.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Scan This Book! - New York Times

In Scan This Book!, Kevin Kelly of Wired discusses the universal library, the (ending) hegemony of the copy, the legal tug of war between Google and publishers, and the larger conflict between old, copy-based business models and new technology. Here's a brief snippet:

What is the technology telling us? That copies don't count any more. Copies of isolated books, bound between inert covers, soon won't mean much. Copies of their texts, however, will gain in meaning as they multiply by the millions and are flung around the world, indexed and copied again. What counts are the ways in which these common copies of a creative work can be linked, manipulated, annotated, tagged, highlighted, bookmarked, translated, enlivened by other media and sewn together into the universal library. Soon a book outside the library will be like a Web page outside the Web, gasping for air. Indeed, the only way for books to retain their waning authority in our culture is to wire their texts into the universal library.

Kelly offers more than the idealistic, "information wants to be free," argument. Definitely worth a read.

Thursday, July 27, 2006

» Napster founder commerce enables unprotected MP3s on MySpace | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com

Here's another short piece addressing the economics of web 2.0, as well as that perennial favorite, digital rights management. See
Napster founder commerce enables unprotected MP3s on MySpace | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com

» YouTube, Digg, MySpace: How much is a non-paying 'user' worth? | Digital Micro-Markets | ZDNet.com

Can free web 2.0 sites ever be profitable? Or have we entered another dotcom boom, soon to be followed by another dotcom bust? I'm not sure I agree with this author's take, but his post is worth a read: YouTube, Digg, MySpace: How much is a non-paying 'user' worth?

Thursday, April 06, 2006

EDUCAUSE REVIEW | March/April 2006, Volume 41, Number 2

EDUCAUSE Review just published an extensive article on Web 2.0 technologies for teaching and learning: Web 2.0: A New Wave of Innovation for Teaching and Learning?

popurls.com | popular urls to the latest web buzz

Can't keep up with all the cool stuff being posted to social software sites like del.icio.us and Flickr? A new site, popurls.com, includes links to the most popular stuff on a bunch of these sites, all on one page.

When you first go to popurls.com, the blue text on black background can be hard to read. But have no fear! There's a formatting bar in the upper righthand corner that will let you change the background color and make the text bigger.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

ALA TechSource | On the 2.0 Job Description: Part 1

Michael Stephens posted to ALA TechSource about Library 2.0 job postings: ALA TechSource | On the 2.0 Job Description: Part 1

It's interesting to see that some libraries are beginning to include Web 2.0/Library 2.0 technologies (blogs, wikis, podcasts, etc.) in position postings. I'd love to know how many applicants they get who actually meet the qualifications.

Friday, March 17, 2006

Some ideas for using this blog and our del.icio.us account

Here are some ideas for using this blog and the del.icio.us account in conjunction with our Tech Talk meetings:

The blog can be a place to continue discussions that begin in meetings or start new ones. It can also be a place to comment on new technologies, post links (with comments) to interesting new sites or web services, etc.

The del.icio.us account can serve as our community bookmarks, a place to store links of interest. You could post links you find interesting at the time you find them. Then, in our meetings, if we need ideas for what to discuss, we can talk about some of the sites that have been added recently.

For me, the difference between the blog and del.icio.us is this: If you find something interesting on the web, post it to del.icio.us. If you want to comment on it -- or comment on some general topic not tied to a link -- use the blog.

What do others think? Any other ideas for how we can use these tools?

Welcome to Tech Talk!

In this inaugeral post, I'll try to explain what Tech Talk is. I'll talk about the blog in a subsequent post. Please post and comment with your own ideas! Tech Talk is brank spanking new and can become whatever we want it to be.

Tech Talk is an informal group of OHSU Library staff, students, and guests that will meet at 3 PM on the second and fourth Friday of each month in the OHSU Library's History of Dentistry Room. It's intended to be a place where we can share cool technology we have discovered (software, web sites, gadgets... whatever) and ask questions about technology topics. The group is open to any staff member, student... oh, pretty much anyone who wants to come. You don't have to be a techie -- but you might become one if you stick with the group long enough :-)

Before we go any further, I should present the Fundamental Rule of Tech Talk:

No Preparation Required

We all have too many meetings with agendas, minutes, action items, and prepared presentations. Tech Talk isn't one of those! Come as you are. We'll have a laptop and projector for showing off stuff, but you are not expected to do any formal preparation for the meeting.

So c'mon in, pull up a chair, and enjoy some tech talk!