Monday 28 October 2013

My blogging history

When I created a blog for 19 Things, I was amazed to discover that I had created blogs years ago, and my profile says that I have been a blogger since July 2003 - obviously not a very dedicated one since I had no recollection of doing so.

I am so glad that we have had such excellent instructions for the various tasks.  I shall save them all for future reference.

The most useful bit for me has been about Creative Commons - important to get that right.
Wordle was most fun, really easy to do,  and makes an impact if not over-used.

7 more things to go and then I guess it will be nearly Christmas!

Tuesday 22 October 2013

Just a thought about RSS feeds

Some of my favourite sites eg Current Archaeology do not have RSS feeds but invite me to keep in touch using social media - definitely more attractive.

Start Page

I really enjoyed the process of creating a start page, choosing what to put on it and especially what colour scheme to use, but, having done that, I did not give it another thought all week so when I came back to it, I had forgotten both the name and the password.  Adding the RSS feeds was fun and easy but realistically, I don't think I will use the page much in the future.

Tuesday 15 October 2013

Protopage

I just created a Protopage start page for myself with a few basic widgets like weather, news, clock and Protopuppy.  Choosing the colours was fun.
I did have a Google start page at home many years ago but I gave up with it because it took so long to load - I guess technology has moved on since then so I might try again with Protopage.
From a work point of view we use Netvibes for current awareness services.  The browser problem is a big one, if our customers cannot use the page from their work computer.
I looked at several of the start pages on Catherine Ebenezer's list.  Those I looked at seemed to me very cluttered and visually unappealing - not sure I would want to use them regularly.

Wednesday 9 October 2013

Images

Couldn't resist something furry. So here is a Japanese chin.  The first version is what I found on Google images then I opened it in Paint and added some text on the image.

Browsers

It was fun to try out different browsers and I learned how to do lots of things I had never tried before - not sure how useful they will be on a day to day basis but I enjoyed playing around. I really would like to understand why the NHS is so inflexible! I tend not to change browsers at home because Google Chrome does what I need it to and quickly eg logging into my gmail account, my drive and searching for stuff. I notice the latest version offers me links to recently used websites underneath the search box which is neat. I tend not to use favourites any more, though I used to have a great long list, but I worked out how the different browsers dealt with them. Yes, I regularly update my home computer and use Virgin Media Security which seems to do the biz whatever dodgy websites my son has visited.

Tuesday 1 October 2013

Getting started

Really enjoying 19 things, great it's so flexible and I can fit it in when I feel like it. Most of the instructions have been easy to follow and the only frustration was when Wordle did not work at work. At home, of course, I had access to lots of docs that were NOTHING to do with libraries and I chose an essay about Kamikase pilots which my daughter wrote years ago. That looked good in battleship grey and red...enabled me to be creative. I once saw Wordle used as an evaluation tool and that worked well - quick for the trainer to do as well! Great as long as you don't overuse it is my general view. QR codes were a breeze as I had used them before and my phone was 'QR ready' - good on publicity materials in the library and I do occasionally use them outside work to get to more frivolous websites..... Blogs - well now, I know some people who are great fans but I remain to be convinced. First I am not sure anyone would really want to read what I write and then for me, I simply forget about it unless something lands in my inbox. I suspect this attitude is not uncommon. There could be a place for blogs in our library service but we need to be very clear about the purpose and engagement is the key. I have seen them used to good effect for constucting an e-learning module for example. As for using a blog to organise my personal information - no way.