Library 2.0! Knowledge can be play!

So the time has come to give my over all view of the course.  Wow, it’s done?  Can’t believe it.

 I honestly can say that I will miss it very much. I had a lot of fun in this course.  You can tell based on my past blogs that I was always amazed at the new things I learned and I really did love all of the tools.  I found them very useful for myself and for libraries.  I didn’t have a full grasp before this.  Truth is, you can never really have a full grasp of any of the tools just a great understanding which can pave the way for one to be able to know how to use these tools in the future.

I remember in the beginning of the class where we all had to say why we took the course.  One of mine was “understanding lingo”  How funny it can be when if you try to too hard to understand something and you can’t, but, when engaging in the thing you’re trying to understand, only then, you do!  This has been the case for me.

The class was great, you can tell based on the blogs I’ve read that they all have great personalities and a whole lot to offer.

One thing I really wanted was more commenting on our blogs with eachother, that’s about it.  Other than that, I had no problems with this class.  I really had a lot of fun! and no matter who said what about “gaming night” who cares? It was definitely fun! and YES it will be part of our job in libraries….the whole bloody internet thing will be our jobs!  HOW COOL IS THAT? 

How many people out there in career land can say that they really love their jobs?  (Please understand that, I am in no way knocking anyone’s career!) but for me, working with the internet at your job is really awesome.  I tell people all the time that this is what it is going to involve, and some of their jaws drop.  It’s true, we really are in line for something awesomel I truly believe it because librarianship is teaching me that anything can go! ANYTHING GOES! We can do anything with libraries as long as it brings knowledge to people.  As long as we can continue stimulate minds!

I also believe that library 2.0 allows us to realize that with all the networking tools out there that Michael has shown us we truly get the sense that knowledge can be play and that there is NOTHING wrong with that.  We are all creatures that learn even when don’t do anything!

In conclusion,  I am very thankful that I took this course.   I take great pleasure in saying that I had so much fun!  I really do use a lot of the tools that Michael exposed to us in class, and, if I took anything with me from this class is that, I can’t wait to become a librarian!  We have so much to offer! and most of all, LIBRARIES ARE NOT BORING!

 Thank you. :-)

Bob (Bobosaurus)

Delicioso!

Another lil internet gadget that hit me from the side was none other than www.Del.icio.us.com.

I had heard of it before taking this course but no matter how much people explained it to me, I couldn’t seem to understand what de.icio.us was. 

Needless to say, now I know what it is and I am happy that I do! :-)    I use it all the time now.  It’s faster and it’s fun to store all the sites I believe are important to me.  The same thing goes for the RSS Feed and Google/reader.

I love it! I find it useful (then again a lot of the sites I’ve learned in class I love.)

However, the question I had about it was, how could this be used in librarianship?  My honest answer? I do and I don’t.

I can see how a librarian can definitely use it to bookmark useful information for their patrons but I don’t find it useful for patrons.  Maybe I just don’t know any better, YET!  Patrons have the option to just bookmark sites onto their computer.

I personally as I mentioned find del.icio.us to be a fun internet tool.

That’s all I can think of about that. :-/

B

Blogging about my Paper.

My paper focued on blogs and the future of the library.

I chose this topic because it was a topic that (once again) I was not really aware of.  Not that I didn’t know what blogging was. It was more about how libraries got involved with blogging.  The questions that ran through my mind were: how did they use it? Why would blogging be good for the library?

 As I wondered, I used the class and Professor Stephens’s lectures to give me some sort of insight.  The way that happened was more when we did a little bit of the hands on.  

I would go on different social networking sites such as www.Myspace.comwww.facebook.com, and www.Ning.com.  What I found was very interesting.  I saw that there were many libraries from throughout the nation coming together and marketing their library.  I also saw a lot of library patrons engaging themselves by commenting on how they love their library or even coming up with ideas for events.  This totally exposed me to another world that I never knew existed.

The entire thing gave me a whole new glimpse of hope.  The reason I say that is because I also used to be one of those people before getting into librarianship where I believed that not a whole lot of people pay attention to libraries.  I know, woe is me, but it was true. 

 So, in writing this paper and doing the research, I was able to find a lot of reasons as to why blogging can be really useful in the library.  Although, it might not be the ONLY answer to exposing what a library has to offer but it is a bridge to a whole new plethora of ideas to come.  Internet tools will never cease and as long as that remains a fact, the library will be able to always market itself; some in a big way and others in a small way, but every way counts!

The GSLIS Toolbar Experience!

The best word that describes how I felt about our project was “wow!”

It truly was a wow experience for me.  Prior to the specific Dominican toolbar that we designed, I was not really aware of toolbars or how they were made. They never crossed my mind. 

I just browsed away, searching and searching for my sites and would be all like “hmmm, where do I go to get that site I found yesterday” or “DAMN IT, WHERE IS IT!!!”

In working with Ruth and Marlene, I was not just able to learn about creating a toolbar but more about the meat behind a lot of the tools of the internet.  I began to realize that sometimes when it comes to the internet it’s not as complex as it can seem.  As I’ve mentioned in my previous blogs, if one just gives these tools a chance along with patience, slow pace, and time it will not be such an obstacle.

Creating a toolbar for the Dominican program was the most ingeniousal idea! The fact that there were sites out there for the public to use and create such neat tools that were totally free blew my mind!  I kept thinking to myself, “what do they have out there and why don’t I know about them???”

In asking myself such a question I realized that Marlene and Ruth’s idea to create a survey for students to answer some questions that were just like mine was a great idea at that.  Although, not many answered, it was quite alright because it was such a beautiful opportunity to gather our librarian minds and do what a librarian should always do, ADVERTISE PRODUCTS!!! DISTRIBUTE SITES that can be useful for the public.

 Way before deciding to go to library school I definitely used to wonder, how did certain friends of mine find out about cool social networking, music, news, comedy, informative sites that were really obscure.  Some would tell me that they found out from another friend and that friend found out from another and yada yada!!! Others would not tell me at all to preserve their eccentric uniqueness; made me angry actually! :-(

BUT ALAS!!!!!!   I the future librarian can dig and dig and find and find and GIVE AND GIVE TO EVERYONE THAT CAN ENJOY!

The GSLIS toolbar was a great step not just for me but for many that I believe will find useful in their Dominican learning experience.

 I thank Ruth and Marlene for allowing me to find out more about my internet self in this project.

 I could go on and on but I’m sure I’ll lose you.

So, I suggest do what I do….explore and share!

B

You Tube, My Tube, Our Tube: The Library.

Huh? you say to my title?

 That’s what I first thought when it came to libraries using YouTube.  Then I was enlightened in class as to how many videos there are out there pertaining to libraries.

 What a great way to expose the library, its tools, as well as the friendly people working in it!  Above all it seems like a lot of fun.

I read in one classmates blog that they have never uploaded a video before on YouTube.  I’ve uploaded before and it was so much fun because I like the idea of being popular for something very positive. 

 Back to what I was saying, YouTube is a great tool to expose your library and what it has to offer….it can allow patrons to create discussion and replies to certain questions.  It would definitely be 24/7 library service!

 Very cool!

 Bob- out!

I found this article on the Chicago Reader about a month ago but never got around to posting it up my blog site.  I thought it was pretty interesting.
So, I posted it up for all y’all to read.  I’m sure there are music lovers in the class.  Talk amongst ya selves, discuss!
  
  
“The Blog as Label

Music blogs have been flirting with the idea of selling music for a while. Is the time right for them to go all the way?

September 21, 2007

Illustration by Kurt Mitchell

When a new niche opens up in any system, be it ecological or technological, the normally incremental process of evolution goes completely bonkers as everyone and everything tries to find the best way to exploit it. That’s how you end up with stuff like bear-size prehistoric armadillos and turn-of-the-century cars with fake horse heads on the front. Right now the music industry is just this kind of free-for-all—the Internet has destroyed the notion of the CD as the standard format, and the major labels’ failure to adapt to that change has created a power vacuum that’s being filled by a variety of contenders pursuing new ideas about how to deliver music to the public.

The Napster model—pay a flat monthly rate for all the music you can download—has had a few years to catch on, but it’s hardly remade the business in its image. How about free downloads underwritten by ad sales, though? That’s what you get from Spiralfrog, which just went live. Or maybe you’d prefer a monetized peer-to-peer network like Grooveshark, still in private beta testing, which promises to split its revenue not just with artists and publishers but with the people who share the music that makes it work.

The majors are experimenting too. Next month, for instance, Sony and Universal plan to introduce “ringles,” CD singles that include ringtones. It’s a terrible idea, but I can see why it made it off the drawing board—business strategists are usually conservative, and it’s easier to combine two things that’ve worked in the past than to try something nobody’s ever done. A better combo, in my opinion, would be record labels and music blogs.

Two weeks ago a little-known blog called Earvolution, based in Philadelphia and New York City, lit up music-maven sites like the Daily Swarm, Hypebot, and the Velvet Rope with an announcement that it was releasing Let It Roll, an album by a band called the Pawnshop Roses, not only through digital retailer Tunecore but as an actual physical CD. All the fuss isn’t because Earvolution is the first blog to act like a record label—indie-leaning sites like the Catbirdseat, Music for Robots, and Aquarium Drunkard have released CDs before, including compilations and limited-edition one-offs featuring established artists like Simian Mobile Disco and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah. Rather, industry watchers are starting to get it into their heads that the blog-as-label phenomenon might be what’s really going to change things in the music business.

The arrangement makes sense for bloggers and their readers. Blogs already perform some of the same curatorial functions as indie labels: both look for the best acts in a particular talent pool, usually one that covers a narrow stylistic range, and then publicize them, granting their picks the blessing of their endorsement. Readers identify with blogs much as they develop loyalties to labels—and each time you download an MP3 from a blog you trust and it turns out to be something you really like, that bond gets stronger. Blogs even have some advantages over labels: since their specialty is projecting personality and fostering the illusion of a cozy one-on-one relationship, they can more easily assume the role of the cool friend who clues you into great music.

It’s not hard to understand why an enterprising blogger might decide to go from pointing people at other labels’ records to putting out his own. Though blogs haven’t yet proved particularly effective at breaking bands by releasing their albums—no artist whose primary or exclusive label is also a blog has blown up the way blog-famous acts on conventional labels sometimes do—it seems like only a matter of time before one does.

Blogs in general have been blamed for stealing eyes and dollars from old media, but music blogs are unique in that some industry people claim they’re directly destroying the very thing they disseminate—though blog hype can drive up sales and transform unsigned bands into professionals, even some respected bloggers have been responsible for spreading leaked and pirated music. Given how much this infringement pisses the majors off, imagine how they’d react if the blogosphere spawned a legion of legitimate competitors—small, highly specialized labels with direct lines of communication to their audiences and a ready-made method for spreading hype. That’s their worst nightmare, not least because they can’t sue somebody for beating them at their own game.

But that’s not to say the blog-as-label setup doesn’t have problems—foremost among them the obvious conflict of interest. Craig Bonnell from the local blog Songs: Illinois worries that a blog participating in the industry it covers is venturing into an ethical swamp. “The one guaranteed outlet Earvolution has to promote the record is Earvolution,” he says in an e-mail. “Even if they were large enough to promote the record effectively that would mean near constant plugs on Earvolution. As a reader I’d wonder if every time Earvolution posts about their band, Pawnshop Roses, being the best thing ever. . . they were just trying to push more units.”

A newspaper or a magazine can and should maintain a strict separation between its content and the ads it sells, and Earvolution owner Jeff Davidson promises his blog will pursue a similar policy concerning its own releases. The site’s primary reviewer, he wrote in an e-mail, “has nothing to do with the label and will never review an Earvolution Records release on Earvolution.com. I rarely write reviews myself. In fact, I’ve only done a single complete CD review because I happened to get the record from the band.”

Of course, there’s a big difference between a newspaper running someone else’s ad and a blog selling its own records, and it’s possible that most blogs won’t care to jeopardize their all-important cred by crossing that line. But there are precedents that suggest it could be a nonissue: Both Vice and Fader magazines have labels, and while they don’t review their own releases, they blog about their bands—check out the Editors Q&A that Fader ran or the zillion Black Lips posts from Vice. They have yet to suffer a recognizable backlash or lose the trust of their readers, something the Earvolution people seem to be hoping will hold true for them too: as of this writing, the latest bit of content in their site’s MP3 section is a plug for the upcoming Pawnshop Roses tour.

Bonnell thinks the blog-as-label has unrealized potential, though, and I agree. I also figure he’s right that Earvolution won’t be the blog to launch the first seriously competitive label. “I don’t think they have the type of traffic to their site to make a difference in terms of sales,” he says. I’m guessing that big success is waiting on a blog with a large, highly specific audience to nab the next Lily Allen or a cult MC who has a history of troubles with old-school labels.

“Of all the sites out there,” Bonnell says, “Stereogum is most likely to have success as a label.” That’s a good guess, given the blog’s huge popularity among indie rockers, but as one of the genre’s leading providers of free songs it’d be rowing against its own current by trying to sell anything. “The types of people who frequent Stereogum are typically looking for free music to add to their already gigantic iTunes libraries. So converting those fans of free music to paying customers would be a challenge.”

Davidson acknowledges that Earvolution hasn’t figured out the blog-as-label project, not even for itself. “If anything the blog is more of an experiment at this point and the label, which is really more of a new media marketing company than a traditional record label, may outlast the blog even if the label changes forms,” he says. “There are so many talented people in the music blogosphere I have no doubt people will come up with ways to improve upon the model.” R

The Top 3 Favorites!

Ladies and Gentlemen! John Daker, a baby laughing, and Steve Ballmer!

Gaming Night Extravaganza!!!

Thumbs up to our class’s Gaming night! The games of choice were, Tetris, DDR (Dance Dance Revolution), Guitar Hero, Brain Age on Nintento DS, and a few others that were on the internet. 

Out of all the games I played, “Brain Age” seemed to stand out for me. I love games where they can sharpen your mind because (my mind can be a bit rusty at times.) 

Although, I must admit that ‘Guitar Hero’ was a lot of fun too, it was difficult for me to follow along. I do believe that Guitar Hero would work very well in a library.  I’ve never witnessed a library do a game night where they use Guitar Hero, but I can see how children and teens would fall in love with it.

I remember doing summer camp as a counselor recently, and I would hear all this talk about ‘Guitar Hero’ and how they have become “pros” at it. It sounded like a lot of fun even though I had no idea what it was.

After experiencing it in our class. I would have to say that Brain Age would be an excellent idea in a library because in my opinion, that’s what a library is all about, knowledge.  Of course, the library is also about fun. So, having games like Guitar Hero makes the library in a child’s/teen’s eyes look very appealing and fun.

 I believe that there is definite room for something like this in a library.

Think about it! Both knowledge and excitement teaming together!

The Ning Community.

Although fun and interesting, right up to this point, my mind is filled with so many of these social networks. I’m adjusting to so many because I am so used to the usual ones that I use such as, “MySpace” and “Facebook.” 

Here is my LIS 768 Ning site: http://lis768.ning.com/profile/Bob

Here is my Library 2.0 Ning site: http://library20.ning.com/profile/Bob

 I played with both of these sites as much as I could and still am.  What I can say is, these sites are a lot of fun! I love social networking sites, period!

Overall, I really believe that using Ning is a very practical tool for this class.  Being able to reach students and discussing anything is amazing!

 What is even more practical is the fact that we can speak with the Professor of the class!

 To me this is a major break through in education.

A definite plus!

My opinions: The Bobosaurus Experience!

I looked up various libraries via MySpace and found that there was an overall enthusiasm in each of them.

The libraries that I searched were:

1. The FIU Library: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=98007464

2. The Garden City Library: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=122697027

3. The ADA Community Library: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=153864069

4. The Birmingham Public Library: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=70417454

The FIU Library which is located in Miami, Florida, had a MySpace site that didn’t seem to have much content as some of the other libraries I investigated.  For instance, the Garden City Library focused more on it’s library collections and what they had to offer using a ‘fun’ tone in their writing as opposed to the FIU, where they focused more on their Meebo and “ask a librarian” feature” and not much of an exciting tone.  However, there was still a lot of enthusiasm by its FIU patrons, especially when looking at the comments section of the site.

 The Garden City Library, located in Garden City, Idaho, included more detail and provided more information such as their library collections and events.

 The ADA Community Library located in Boise, Idaho was more interesting than the Garden City Library because they displayed some of their popular CD music collection in pic/thumbnail form, an excellent invitation to adults as well as the teen population. Also, ADA had more supportive comments by its patrons which was very exciting to see as well as read.  (Y’see, back when I was in highschool I didn’t know a lot of students who would support a library with such excitement.) Righteous!

 The Birmingham Public Library located in Birmingham, Alabama had similar ideas as to how to spread the word about their library much like the ADA and Garden City Library, only in this particular library MySpace site, they had many ‘fun’ YouTube videos. These videos are used to market their library.

They too, had many excited supporters in their comment section.

Overall, I am really beginning to see how a social network site can really bring many patrons and most importantly teens into libraries.

Spreading the word about your library is a great way to market what you have in it. What’s more important is, ENTHUSIASM!  I really believe that it’s the enthusiastic tone that brings these people inside!

If all of us as future librarians OR even now as students sound like we are having fun with how we view and feel about libraries (and truly, it is fun!) than why would someone else not want to find out what the ‘fun’ is all about?

I sure would want to!

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