Friday, February 01, 2008

January Tech Talk meeting

We discussed an interesting mix of resources at the January Tech Talk meeting on Wednesday. Here's a quick summary:

MedInfoNow's CatalogConnect: CatalogConnect is a new service from MedInfoNow (formerly Doody's), which allows us to link from the catalog to book information. The book information, compiled from Matthews Medical Books, Amazon, and MedInfoNow, includes publisher summaries, MedInfoNow reviews, and more. I'm working on implementing the links using WebBridge in the catalog's staging area. Once it's ready to go, we'll add it to the live catalog.

Web 2.0 sites for bookworms:
  • LibraryThing: LibraryThing is designed primarily for cataloging personal book collections, though some people use it to manage reading lists too. You can add reviews and ratings, get recommendations, and read reviews from other users.
  • GoodReads: Unlike LibraryThing, GoodReads is designed to manage your reading list. You can tag books as to-read, reading, or read, plus create custom tags if you wish. You can also add friends on the site, and you'll be notified when your friends add books to their shelves or post reviews.
  • Books iRead: Books iRead is a Facebook application similar to GoodReads. You tag books as read, reading, or to-read and add ratings or reviews. You can see what your friends are reading, and the application includes a Never-Ending Book Quiz that consists of about 85% Harry Potter questions but is still addictive.
Wesabe: A web 2.0 site for financial management? Yep. Wesabe is a free, web-based personal finance tool that includes some of the basic functions of Quicken or Microsoft Money. More advanced features aren't available--yet. According to the FAQ, the developers are planning to implement advanced features, but they won't be free. It's easy to upload data to Wesabe, and the ability to tag transactions is useful.

Infodoodads: Infodoodads is a technology blog by 6 librarians, at least some of whom have Oregon connections. They post about interesting sites that demonstrate new technologies, providing a great source for discovering useful new resources.

Yahoo Pipes: Yahoo Pipes is a platform for creating your own mashups. Mix up RSS feeds, Flickr photos and more to create custom information resources.

Sometime during the discussion, someone asked if it is possible to export photos from Flickr. I dug around a bit, and I can't find a way to do it. There are lots of ways to get photos into Flickr, but as far as I can tell, you can only get them out manually.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

You may also enjoy:
http://home.litminds.org/index.html