Monthly Archives: January 2008

71 posts

Saying No to PLA recording

Saying NO to PLA recording Originally uploaded by mstephens7 I’d say YES to a podcast in a second! Aren’t some of the other divisions offering podcasts of talks for free on their blogs and web sites? David Lee King’s keynote is available for FREE at LITA: http://litablog.org/2007/10/06/david-lee-king-keynote-podcast-lita-forum-2007/ It would be wonderful if we could podcast our talk and put it up that day for everyone!

Rheingold’s Video Blog

Don’t miss the first entry at Howard Rheingold’s new video blog. http://vlog.rheingold.com/index.php/site/video/a-reslice-of-life-online-part-one-introduction/ Rheingold updates via multimedia an article he wrote 20 years ago about participation in virtual communities. I used Rheingold’s work as part of the theory base for LIS768: Library 2.0 and Social Networking. I’ll be using this video to introduce the course this semester for sure.

Chronicle: Facebook Apps at University Libraries

Jeffrey R. Young notes the libraries offering Facebook apps: http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/article/2643/searching-library-collections-in-facebook So far the application does not seem to be listed in Facebook’s official directory. But a quick search of Facebook’s other applications shows that more than a dozen other academic libraries have created their own search tools for the social-networking platform. The University of Notre Dame has one, for instance, as does Elmhurst College, Pace University, and Ryerson University. JSTOR, the popular, nonprofit digital archive of scholarly publications, also offers a Facebook application. One thing I discovered when I invited Wired Campus readers to join my Facebook friend group is […]

Life imitates art

Life imitates art, originally uploaded by Weymouth Public Library. After reading “Dad’s Bald Head”, Dad Ken decided to take the plunge and shave his head too! Connor is proud of his dad! This made me smile… nice to see on the Weymouth PL flickrstream!

Apple Store Customer Service

http://curtisrogers.blogspot.com/2008/01/apple-store-amazing-customer-service.html Dr. Curtis Rogers just bought a MacBook (hooray!) and he describes the customer service at the Apple Store:  I kept on looking for her to walk me to the back of the store to the check out counter but that was not the case. Another guy came up and while she went to grab my new MacBook, he checked my ID so I would get the State Government discount and with a handheld device, processed the sale.  I NEVER moved! He swiped my card right there, I signed his handheld device and was good to go.  What a great […]

Welcome to the TTW Version 4!

Welcome! TTW is now brought to you via WordPress! Thanks to Mr. Blake Carver, a gentleman and a scholar, for all of the assistance porting over the content and such to the new software. I feel like I’ve died and gone to WYSIWYG heaven! Please update your feed readers, RSS portals, aggregators, etc to these new and improved Feedburner feeds, including a comment feed: New Feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/TameTheWeb Comment Feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/CommentsForTameTheWeb I’d also like to welcome Kyle Jones and Lee Leblanc who will be contributing content from time to time. Find out more about them here: https://tametheweb.com/ttw-contributors/ Lee authored a popular […]

RSS Feed Parser at Moraine Valley

Troy Swanson writes: This is very cool. Our IT department has helped out the by putting up our own Feed Parser. Now, sure what a feed parser it? Basically, it’s a tool that lets you take display an RSS feed in a Web page (Blackboard page, blog, etc) as a bulleted list. It is an easy way for the less technically savvy faculty members to incorporate outside content into course sites. I’ve put together this Feed parser help page to explain how this works a bit more.  http://www2.morainevalley.edu/default.asp?SiteID=10&PageId=2066 

In 2018 Libraries Will Be….

Make your own here: http://blog.acpl.lib.in.us/cgi-bin/in2018.pl Sean Robinson at the cutting-edge Allen County Public Library in Fort Wayne, Indiana, inspired by the incredible folks in New Zealand, has created a card creation system for sharing your thoughts on what libraries will be like in ten years. Scoot on over and give it a go. Then checkout the responses here: http://blog.acpl.lib.in.us/in2018/build_wall.php

Tech Tips for Every Librarian

A big Thank You to the folks at Information Today for granting permission to me to reprint the articles I wrote as part of the “Tech Tips for Every Librarian” department, that Rachel Singer Gordon and I took turns writing in 2006 and 2007 for Computers in Libraries magazine. I enjoyed every one I wrote but was often sad that the immediacy of blogging and the opportunity to comment were lost because it was print-based. After 90 days, the rights to the content reverted to me. In preparing the new version of TTW, I wanted to make sure it was […]