Thanks to Jessamyn for directing me to lolbrarians.
Twitter from 2007-05-04
- finishing up some long-overdue work #
- WordPress Plugins | alexking.org : http://tinyurl.com/33o3f8 #
- @dwfree: I’m having the same issues…I’d love a bit more granularity from Twitter #
- fighting a virus/spyware infection on our main reference PC #
- finalizing a few details for next week, getting ready for the weekend #
- GAIM becomes Pidgin 2.0 : http://tinyurl.com/2gmj4t #
- heading to food with friends #
Twitter from 2007-05-03
- @jessamyn: I followed the Digg riot as it happened…was surreal to see. I LOVE the new username on MeFi. 🙂 #
- frantically busy today, one meeting after the other, running. #
- WordPress Plugins | alexking.org : http://tinyurl.com/33o3f8 #
I think I will regret this
Somehow, I feel like Steven Cohen will make me rue the day I point this out, but there’s an amazing new WordPress plugin for Twitter from Alex King called Twitter Tools. It has the ability to post to twitter from your WP blog, from twitter to your WP blog (not sure what happens if you turn BOTH options on, besides the eventual heat death of the universe), and even has an API hook built in to further allow for Twitterific integration. Also built in is the ability to Daily Digest your Tweets on your blog as a one-shot post. Brilliant!
Will work for both Widget and non-Widget loving WP types. I just installed it, and love the flexibility and control. Check the ReadMe for more info.
Just for the record
That is all.
Collaboration and writing
So, Karen put up some of her thoughts on our collaborative adventure in writing a book over at LibraryWebChic, so I thought I’d follow up with my take on the ongoing quest to write.
We are a long way apart. Thankfully, we have leveraged online tools like nobody’s business. Here’s a short list of the whats and hows:
- Google Docs: for initial writing, for sharing, for co-editing each others work. I’m quickly forgetting how I ever got things done without Google Docs.
- Flickr: for the sharing of screenshots for insertion into our final documents. We’ve created a private group with only us as members, and that way either of us can just upload/download the pics we need. Flickr used to raise a stink about screenshots, but they actually have the option to label something a screenshot in the advance settings of their website upload tool now.
- IM: for lots of communication, and logs that allow me to go back and check what I agreed to do. 🙂
- del.icio.us: I’m using it for bookmarks to things I’m referencing, so that I can go back and build a more formal bibliography later. I’ve also thrown links at Karen that I think might be useful to her sections.
One of the more interesting things that I’ve found out has to do with personal communication style. I don’t like the phone, and prefer text-based communication (mainly because I can review it when I need to refresh my memory). Karen likes to talk on the phone, and hash things out that way. This far, we’ve done a combination of the two, and it’s worked well…I keep bugging her to upgrade her PowerBook to a MacBook so that we can iChat when we have questions, but so far, no go. 🙂
As Karen mentioned, the biggest problem we’ve had so far is the transporting of some of the “finished” chapters, with really large images inline and such. What I think we need is basically on online drop-box that we can both use, preferably with a fast pipe and a pretty ajaxy drag and drop interface.
Firefox/OSX/Flash solution
The power of the intertubes in action! Some wonderful soul named PÃ¥l Kristiansen found a solution to my Firefox problem!
Found a solution that worked for me:
1. delete the file located at
/Users//Library/Application Support/Firefox/pluginreg.dat
2. Restart Firefox.
…as I said, it worked for me :
And low and behold: no more flash problem! Thank you so much PÃ¥l.
Thinking about the catalog
I’ve been thinking a bit about the library catalog lately, mainly due to my time at CiL talking with Tim from LibraryThing, as well as being on the NGC listserv.
We know that OPACs suck. They suck because they don’t meet the expectations of patrons, and are written for librarians and not the public. But we hate the OPAC because it just fails to deliver the information cleanly, and doesn’t allow for serendipity. But the OPAC is only one part of the ILS, and the other parts are where I feel like I’ll get pushback from within my library.
In thinking and planning in my still-new-to-me position as Head of Library IT, I’m looking at the next year, the next 3 years, the next 5 years. It’s clear that getting out of our current system will benefit us, and that’s not really a question. The question is: where do we go? I don’t want to jump from, I want to jump to.
So what do I want out of an ILS? I know what I want out of an OPAC…and I know how I want it to look, act, feel. But I don’t feel like I’m quite comfortable making judgements about the rest of the ILS quite yet. I know I want flexibility, but that’s like saying I want color…there needs to be more specificity before there is any usefulness in that word. And I’m just not quite sure.
Those of you with more ILS experience, or more experience in other parts of library administration (especially Access or Circ or Acquisitions)…what do YOU want out of an ILS?
Blogging and Preservation
All you librarians out there: take this survey!
Blogger Perceptions on Digital Preservation
What is the purpose of this study?
Since first emerging in the mid-1990s, weblogs, or blogs, have emerged as valuable records of current social and political events. This research study grew out of calls in the literature of information and library science to regard these new vehicles for communication and information dissemination as valuable additions to the human record. The purpose of this research is to survey bloggers’ own perceptions on digital preservation. It is hoped that the results of this study will inform development of recommendations for impacting stewardship of weblogs at the level of creation, and the development of strategies for capturing the content of blogs for perpetuity.
Anyone interested in library blogs should participate in this…plus, it’s being overseen by my Master’s Paper advisor, Paul Jones. 🙂