Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Week 6 Thing 15

I enjoyed reading Dr. Wendy Schultz's article on Library 2.0. I liked the coffee analogy of progression from commodity to product to service to experience. She says, "from selling coffee beans to selling Maxwell House to serving coffee at Dunkin Donuts to providing an exotic Starbucks' coffee permutation in its chattering, WiFi, jazz cafe atmosphere." This idea is superimposed on the library. The fundamentals of Library 2.0 state "the need for libraries to adopt a strategy for constant change while promoting a participatory role for library users." In summary of Dr. Schultz's article, the libraries commodity are books. The next factor is the product. How do we package our commodity? Even as we evolve and our barriers are eliminated, people will still need help navigating their way. Examples of how our barriers are eliminated are providing digital downloads, tagging and reader contributions. Going beyond Library 2.0 to Library 3.0, books will enter the "virtual graphic world...where books themselves will have avatars and online personalities."

The Library 2.0 concept is very interesting. Technology is changing so rapidly and is affecting the way we do business in the library. Our library has adapted in many ways in the past few years with email notifications, a patron blog, rss feeds, ebooks and audio, streaming music, ask-a-librarian service (live, email or phone), wireless technology and twitter.

As the economy tanks, the library's sense of place is becoming more important once again. People are flocking to the libraries for help during this period of economic upheaval. So we have one eye to all the future advances but also provide a comforting, helpful destination. I'm sure there are ways we can improve, but it seems to me that we are balancing the needs of our community fairly well. We seem to have gone from just dealing in books to the more exotic downloads and various digital formats to providing pleasant places to visit. The nature of libraries is change and we must continue to adapt to stay viable in the community.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Week 6, Thing 14

Answers to Discovery Exercise:
1. Yes, there were different results for searching "Learning 2.0" in Blog posts, tags and in the Blog Directory. The blog had one post, there were none in tags and the directory had one post.
2. The "popular" section is unavailable but will return in the near future ... so I couldn't explore it.
Learning about Technorati seems vital since blogs have really taken off. This will help both professionally and personally. Two features that I particularly like are the popular videos and the annual review of the technology.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Week 6 Thing 13

This week I looked at Del.icio.us and Technorati. I can see where it would be useful to have your bookmarks available on whatever computer you are using. This would be handy as you move from one information desk to another. Also, I like tagging, because unlike folders, you can assign more than one descriptive term to your subject. And lastly, I like the sharing aspect; the fact that you can see what others have done and you can share what you have done.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Week 5 Thing 12 - Rollyo

I've created a roll with Library craft websites. I can see where this would be useful professionaly and at home.
http://www.rollyo.com/index.html

Week 5 Thing 11

I've discovered Library Thing. I would like to keep a running list of the titles I read so I can refer to them when I am doing reader's advisory. It seems to me, though, that I will have to pay the subscription fee because they don't allow you to catalog too many titles for free. I can see where this site will be very helpful.
http://www.librarything.com/home/nixdorf