Archive for April, 2008

Web 2.0 101 - Week 6 - Online Photo Sharing

April 15, 2008

OK, now this I could get into.  I finally broke down and bought a digital camera about a year ago and have a bunch of photos saved to my computer already waiting for me to “do something” with them.  In addition, for years I’ve been getting the CD of my photos along with the prints when I got my film developed.  They’re all lying in a pile on my desk waiting for me to “do something” with them.  I think I found “something.” 

Emailing photos to friends and family is too much of a pain because of file sizes and spam filters, and some of my family and friends still have dial up.  So to get around all these problems, I’ve been burning CDs of photos and mailing them to friends and family.  No more!  It doesn’t matter if they have broadband or dialup.  Everyone can receive an email with a URL in it.  Then they can go look at the photos at their leisure…or not. 

For use in a small hospital library?  Probably not.  Aside from posting photos of the library open house or Library Week Celebration, I’m not sure what else this could be used for.  One certainly can’t purchase a collection of copyrighted images of an open heart surgery and post them to Flickr to allow patrons easier access.  By the same token, for privacy and liability reasons, the hospital can’t photograph an open heart surgery and post the photos to Flickr for educational purposes.  Even if they could, chances are that the hospital’s IT department would block access anyway.

I guess I’m starting to sound like a broken record.  I like each of the different Web 2.0 services that we’ve looked at over the past six weeks, but with the exception of del.icio.us and services like Google Documents, I don’t see the services being usable, or even necessary in a small hospital library. 

Curmudegon that I am…

Pool group 4

April 15, 2008



Pool group 4

Originally uploaded by RobbMackes

Trying to post a photo from Flickr to my blog. I don’t think I got it right in Facebook…but I just might get it right here. :-)

Here goes…

Flickr

April 15, 2008

This is a test post from flickr, a fancy photo sharing thing.

Web 2.0 101 - Week 5 Second Generation Web Tools

April 8, 2008

Is this the future of all software products? What do you think?

I absolutely can see  a niche for services such as GoogleDocs.  Being able to work collaboratively on a document without emailing copy after copy after copy to several people all the while hoping that you are working on the most current iteration and that nothing as gotten lost is amazing.

Is the future of all software products?  Maybe…he said with trepidation. 

I took a look at Microsoft Office Live and sat through an online demo of WebEx WebOffice.  I can definately see the advantages to using the products.  We experienced extended Internet outages here at the office several times over the past few months.  Given that my job is to manage web based resources, my ability to do my job was severely impeded.  If I was using one of these products, I could have packed up my laptop, gone home, and performed my job almost completely unimpeded.  Given the fact that all of my Office documents are stored locally, however, meant that I was able to stay at my desk and deal with portions of my job that don’t require Internet connectivity.  Not necessarily a bad thing.

I’m certainly in no position to be able to predict where these different and emerging technologies are headed.  But for the foreseeable future, I can see both locally- and Internet-based software packages living in tandem.  Internet-based packages are incredible for collaborative work, but I think we still need the relative stability of locally (or resident, whatever you want to call it) stored documents and software as well.

Published GoogleDoc?

April 8, 2008

In theory, if you click here, you’ll get one of my GoogleDocs.  But I think I may have done it wrong because the document opens, but not the slide show itself.

Web 2.0 101 Week 4 - Social Bookmarking

April 8, 2008

Can you see the potential of this tool for research assistance?   Or just as an easy way to create bookmarks that can be accessed from anywhere?

As with all the other services we’ve explored over the past month, I will admit to being skeptical at first.  But that skepticism lasted all of 30 seconds with del.icio.us.  Sure, it is an easy way to create bookmarks that  can be accessed anywhere.  But it’s so much more than that.  This is an excellent way for a librarian to create a collection of bookmarks on a particular subject and make them available for others to use.  I used to spend hours on my patron access computers making sure that the bookmark files on each computer were up to date.  Having this sort of service available in a library, provided the hospital that doesn’t block this technology, would be a boon for library patrons and librarians alike.