Thursday, December 11, 2008
Friday, November 21, 2008
Virtual Worlds
Some potential benefits to using SL would be an engaging program for library staff and patrons who are into gaming. It might be an interesting way to put together an educational program. It could be a way for staff to attend a lecture or meeting and have an opportunity to ask questions directly to the presenter. Although other programs like Elluminate have these capabilities.
As far as my personal interests, SL may have communities that I'm interested in that I don't have access to in my real community, but this is probably true of the internet in general. There are art and photo galleries on SL, but the artists may have their work on other websites on the internet that I can also access. One thing that I did find unique about SL is the ability to build objects yourself but also add animation to objects using Using the Linden Scripting Language .
Since I am interested in web development and programming this is one aspect of SL that I may get involved with in the future.
I found the experience with SL interesting, but initially I did have some technical difficulties. I could not use SL on my computer at home because I have an Intel Extreme graphics card on my computer which was not compatible with SL. Since I am a Student Assistant at IT services on campus I have administrative privileges and was able to check out a laptop and install the program. Had I not had admin privileges this would have been a lot trickier for me to access this program.
Some the places I visited on my own on SL were the Cleveland Public Library and the Rescue Park at Canis. The Cleveland Public Library had a really nice exhibit of photographs of ancient chess pieces. The graphics worked well here (perhaps because my avatar was the only one in the library). The Rescue Park at Canis was a dog rescue park where you had virtual dogs you could adopt and pet with your avatar. I found my experience on SL fun, but not particularly educational or informative.
I don't have any concerns using SL. If I had children I would have similar concerns that I would have with children using online sites such as online predators etc...
I think SL would be a program I would use in the future. I'm thinking about buying a MacBook so I would have a computer that would meet the system requirements. SL so far has seemed more like a game to me so it would be something I would consider to be entertainment rather than useful in my profession or hobbies.
Friday, November 7, 2008
Web 2.0 and Ecommerce
Technologies:
Searching for articles on Web 2.0 and ecommerce issues, I found some interesting ones on Jakob Nielsen's useit.com site that are critical of Web 2.0 technologies because they don't necessarily translate into profitability and can confuse web site users. He also says that the more profitable technologies are older and more simple. When I took an HTML class at UAS about a year and a half ago we had some Jakob Nielsen articles about web site useability as assigned reading.
The first article Web 2.0 Can Be Dangerous, states that Web 2.0 technologies are over-hyped and concentrating too much on developing these for your website can take the focus away from older technologies that matter much more to users. Ajax and Mashup sites can actually be confusing to users. Another article, 10 High-Profit Redesign Priorities, discusses technologies and parts of web site design like email newsletters and high-quality photography that actually will translate into higher profits. Also making your site more accessible to senior citizens will increase your profits because many senior citizens are wealthy.
Search Engine Optimization
Search Engine Optimization refers to methods web site developers can use to increase traffic to their websites through search engine results. One article I found, How to Herd Organic Search Traffic to Your Blog gives detailed instructions on how to put specific keywords on your site that will increase your rankings in search engines. Even though the article was written for blogs, you could use it for other types of websites as well. Free Keyword Suggestion Tool From Wordtracker is a site that will give you keyword suggestions based on keywords you enter relating to your site.
Marketing Magic
I think a company like Amazon is successful for a variety of reasons. In an interview with Jeff Bezos for Wired magazine, The Zen of Jeff Bezos, Amazon's early success was do to having such a large inventory of books that it spread through word of mouth that Amazon was a good site for hard-to-find titles. Amazon's search engine makes it very easy to find items you are looking for. I often will use the Amazon site at work at the library if a patron is looking for a book but doesn't know the exact title. Often a book will not show up on our online catalog unless you know the exact title or author. Amazon has innovative aspects to their site like the search inside a book function. According to the Wired article, sales of books with the search inside function increase by 9% over books without it.
How Web 2.0 Service Providers Make Money On The Web
28 Ways to Make Money with Your Website describes many ways to make money on the web, mostly through advertising such as Pay Per Click, Banner Ads but also monetization widgets and RSS feed ads. It also covers techniques like creating an email list or newsletter and selling a book.
To be an ecommerce company and be successful in the Web 2.0 environment you need to first create a site that uses technologies such as in the 10 High-Profit Redesign Priorities article that have been proven to increase profits. You should employ techniques to improve Search Engine Optimization through effective use of keywords on your site. You should also develop effective advertising on your website.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Privacy
What I'm curious about is how combining sources of data from the internet may affect your privacy in ways you may not be aware of. Here are some sites and articles I have found as examples.
Where is Your Username registered is a site I found on the popular bookmarks lists on delicious. It allows you to search for usernames on popular Web 2.0 sites like Myspace and Flickr with links to people's userpages. Before I took this class I wasn't really aware that so many of people's userpages were actually viewable by anyone on the internet. I never really thought about it or just mistakenly thought that you had to have an account with one of these sites to view other people's pages. Since people often use the same username for multiple sites it is easy to collect multiple sources of information on one user. You can view what a user has bookmarked on delicious, what music they listen to on Pandora, and what they are selling on Ebay, for instance.
Data Mining 101: Finding Subversives With Amazon Wishlists demonstrates how to find names and addresses of people who read "subversive" books using Amazon Wishlists and then find a satellite image of their house using Google Maps. It makes you wonder why the government would even need to get records from a library of books a person has checked out if this information is easily attainable over the internet.
I tend to be more private on the internet and not intentionally give out a lot of personal information. When I registered at Diigo, I was asked for a lot of personal information such as my gender, city and state, and industry I worked in. At first I didn't realize it was optional and I put it in. When you create a user profile it also gives you information on who has visited your profile. As soon as I registered my profile I started being visited by a user "Anonymous". This person did not have a photo and all of his/her bookmarks were private. Because I didn't know anything about this person and why they were visiting my profile and bookmarks I thought it was kind of weird. This person has visited my profile on many occasions since. I have since deleted most of the optional personal information on my Diigo account. I think I may also consider using different usernames for different Web 2.0 applications I use in the future.
As for children I think it should be more up to the parents to decide what kind of internet controls they should use to protect the privacy of their children. I'm not comfortable with the idea of using filters or blocking certain sites in a public setting like a library. I think these controls would be to restrictive to adult patrons. I also think that young children should not be unaccompanied in a public libraries for safety reasons.
Security
I did do some researching on my own and I found some interesting articles on security and specific Web 2.0 applications:
The article How to protect against Web 2.0 threats made a very important point:
Web 2.0 sites are, by definition, more open than traditional sites. The hundreds of thousands of users contributing content to Web 2.0 sites make it easy for malware authors to hide and insert malware on dynamically generated Web 2.0 pages.These articles finally convinced me to install the Web of Trust software that was suggested at the beginning of the class. However, these articles are still geared toward an IT professional and not an average user. Also the articles I found were all written in 2006. I'm not sure what to make of that. Was that because it was a hot topic at the time? Has there been a greater awareness of security dangers of Web 2.0 technology and has that technology improved on it's security since then?
Other than the Web of Trust software I don't have any specific advice beyond the conventional advice given for internet security - updated antivirus protection, avoiding phishing scams, etc..What to suggest for your average user is unclear to me.
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Mashups
Dumpr is a cool image editor/Flickr mashup combo. You create an account and can use photos on Flickr or photos you upload to the site and create new images with different "effects". I spent several hours just trying out the different effects on some photos I had taken:

This is a photo I took and modified with the Rubik's Cube effect.

This effect allows you to take an existing photo and show it like it is an image in an art gallery.

This is called the Brilliant Circle effect. It was from a photo I had taken of cow parsnip and fireweed.
Dumpr is very easy to use. You save your finished photos in your account. You also have the option of saving them to your computer, sending them as email or uploading the image to Flickr. There is also options to publish the photos on various blogs, social networking sites and news aggregators. I will continue to use Dumpr because it is a lot of fun!
Friday, October 10, 2008
Web Applications
I heard about Elf from work at the library, but I haven't tried it until now. Elf is a notification system that lets you know when library items are due or holds are available. We currently have an email notification system with the Juneau Public Library System, where we sent out notices a day before items are due. But it's limited, and we often get complaints that people aren't receiving our emails. Elf gives you many more options and customization features. With Elf, you can choose an email, RSS feed, or text messaging notification, or any combination thereof. You can also have an email notification ccd to one or more email addresses.
You can also select when you want notices sent out to you. You can choose a day of the week to send out notices, or how many days in advance you want the notice sent. You can also select to have notices sent out repeatedly. Currently Library Elf is only available in Alaska at the libraries in Juneau and Fairbanks but hopefully it will be available at other Alaskan libraries in the future. I set Elf up to get an email notification at two separate email addresses and also put a feed on Pageflakes. This is something I would recommend to some of our more computer/tech savvy patrons.
For my next web application I picked hakia Search Engine. I'm curious about alternative search engines to Google so I thought I would give it a try. Hakia is supposed to be a meaning based search engine where you can ask it questions and it looks at the meaning rather than the text keywords. I decided to do a search for the question "how contagious is whooping cough?" on both Google and Hakia. Google gave me results that were based on keywords in the search were as the results Hakia gave seemed to look at the question more as a whole. One useful thing about Hakia is that it will separate your results into all results and credible sites, which have been recommended by librarians. I would like to have Hakia as a firefox extension so I could have it on my firefox browser as a drop-down search engine selection, but that isn't an option now. I plan to use Hakia, particularly if I'm not not happy with the results I'm getting for a particular search on Google.
My next web application is TinyPaste. TinyPaste is a site where you can quickly enter text and save it as a webpage. I think this is useful if you have some information that is not on the web you can easily create a webpage and then save the link on your social bookmarking site. You can also create a page and then download it to your computer as a text document. I like to keep bookmarks of all my favorite recipes but I haven't found all of them on the internet. With TinyPaste I could type in the recipe, save it as a page and then link to it from my social bookmarking site. I am sure I will find many other uses for this application.
FaceYourManga is a fun site where you can create your own avatar. Its very easy to use and you create a cartoon likeness of yourself. You first select your gender and then you get a whole bunch of options for face shape, skin color, hair, eyes, mouth, clothes, glasses etc... I took a picture of myself and tried to create an avatar that looked as close to the picture as I could. When you are finished the image is sent to you by email. I used the image I created on this blog and also as my student picture for my classes.
The web applications I chose for my hobby were Tin Eye Image Search and Worth1000.com.
Tin Eye Image Search lets you upload an image or put in a URL to the image on the web and it will do a search of the internet and tell you where else the image appears on the web and if it has been modified. I thought this might be useful if you had a lot of photos on the web and wanted to see if people were using or altering your photos without permission. I tried searching with some web images that I thought would be very popular but I did not get very many results. Tin Eye is still a beta version so perhaps it will eventually become more powerful and useful.
Worth1000.com is a Photoshop site where you can create an account and enter and vote in Photoshop contests. There are many examples of excellent and hilarious photoshop pictures here.
Widgets/Gadgets
Google Search was a widget called a "flake" that you can add to your pageflake pages from the pageflake site. It's handy because it will give you result links within the widget without opening up into a new page. It will give you results for web, news, local (directions), blog, and video. I was dissapointed though that I could not use the google search widget for calculations or definitions, which is somthing you can do with the regular search engine. I added the Calculator widget from Pageflakes to do calculations.
The LabPixies Clock was another Pageflakes widget. It was fun because there were many different clock designs you could choose from. The design I chose also displays the date. I wanted it to display the date because sometimes at work at the library some of our computers don't display the date when you put the mouse cursor on the time on the lower right of the computer. "What is today's date?" seems to be a question I get asked a lot when I am working with the public.
I put the Sticky Note widget from Pageflakes on my pageflake main page so If I need to jot down some notes quickly that I can refer to later. Also the The Weather Channel widget from Pageflakes I use as well. Its like a RSS feed of the weather but it displays a graphic for each day to depict the weather forecast. Its good to get an instant glimpse of the weather forecast by visiting my pageflake homepage especially as the weather is getting colder and we get into the winter season.
The Epicurious Recipes Widget I found on a site called Widgetbox. I like the Widgetbox site because it made it very easy to add a widget to a blog like blogger or wordpress or to a news aggregator like pageflakes or igoogle. You just create an account, login, and click on a button. This Epicurious Widget displays new recipes from the Epicurious site. I liked the layout for this widget including the scroll bar button. One interesting thing is that you can get an RSS feed from Epicurious of new recipes to display on Pageflakes that will look similar to the widget but won't have a link to the Epicurious home page. One thing I've learned is that if you have a choice between a widget and a feed to try both because one may be more useful than the other.
I believe I will continue to use these particular widgets unless I can find another similar widget on another site that works better or has more features.
Adobe Air
So, when I was looking at an Adobe Air application to try, I looked for something that was more like a traditional desktop application. One application I decided to try was Shrink O'Matic. Shrink O' Matic is an automatic image re sizer and batch processor. Drag an image or multiple images into the program and it will automatically re size it for you. You select the size limits and the destination folder. You can also save it in different formats.
I was hoping this would be a like a free version of the batch processing option you have in Photoshop or Fireworks but it has some limitations. It appears that you cannot re size anything larger than 800 x 600 pixels. I was not able to re size any photo immediately after I've taken it with my digital camera because the size was too large. I had to find a smaller image that had already been re sized to try it out. Because there are no instructions in the program it took me a while to realize that I could not re size larger images. At first I thought the program wasn't working, but a user had left a comment about the sizing on the Adobe Air site, so I figured out that was the problem.
Shrink O' Matic does work very quickly so it may be useful for making batch thumbnail images from images that have already been resized and altered in an image editing program. I will have to see if this will be a useful program for me.
Friday, September 19, 2008
Social Networks
Our WebQuest: Social Network assignment says to participate in these sites for about one week before posting our responses to the blog so I will have a follow up post next week with more detailed information of my experience.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Home Page Syndication
One thing I don't like about Pageflakes is that there is a sponsored ad box that you can't move around or get rid of. That's something that Bloglines doesn't have. You can change the theme and layout in Pageflakes which is something you can't do in Bloglines.
When you first sign up with Pageflakes it asks you about your interests and gives you a main page with flakes of feeds based on your interests. You can go in and delete these flakes if you want. I added Yahoo! News: Top Stories and The Anchorage Daily News feeds to begin with. One thing I noticed is that there isn't a link to the main page of any blog or site in the flake, just to each individual post or story. There also isn't much of a contrast in color between posts in feeds you've read and haven't read. I'm going to have to play around with the settings to see if I can change this.
Social Bookmarking
The sign-up process was pretty straightforward; first name, last name, email, user name and password etc...One thing that I noticed that was different than Delicious is that Diigo asks for more personal information when you register such as your gender, city, zip code and the industry you work in. Although I just went back through the registration process and now realize that filling in that information is optional. Delicious gives you the option of creating a public profile if you want but it is separate from the registration process. My initial impression is that Diigo emphasizes the social part more and Delicious emphasizes the information.
Here are some of the bookmarks I've saved so far on Diigo. These are some things I've come across while doing research for the class. They are additional information on subjects we have covered in class that I want to look at later:
- Knol: a unit of knowledge (Google Wiki)
Searching for bookmarks on Diigo seems to be more complicated than Delicious. You can click on a link for "hot bookmarks" but many of these bookmarks have 5 or less people who have bookmarked the links so I am not sure what the criteria is for "hot bookmarks". Doing a search for a subject gives you a list of bookmarks which you can sort by recent or popular but it is unclear what is meant by "popular". You can also look through bookmark lists that people have created on various subjects. You can search these lists and also browse the lists, but the browsing categories are pretty broad. I will have to play around some more with this site to figure out what is the best way to find new information.
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Elluminate
Perhaps Elluminate or a program like Elluminate might be useful in the library because we have conference rooms that people can book for meetings. We have wireless access and laptops that people can check out and it we had this on our laptops people could have a way of conducting online meetings if they don't have Internet access at home or their own laptops.
Wiki
I talked to my supervisor about using Wikipedia as a reference and he said to look at the references cited and to make sure they are primary source material.
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The wiki that I joined from Wikia was the Recipes Wiki . I ended up editing a recipe for Easy Chocolate Mousse. It was a recently posted recipe that needed some formatting and grammatical corrections. It's difficult for me to post my edits because I didn't add any content to the wiki. Here is the link to the page showing it before and after my edits:
http://recipes.wikia.com/index.php?title=Easy_Chocolate_Mousse&diff=278542&oldid=278490
My edits are on the right hand side. What it doesn't show is that the list of ingredients was previously just written out in a paragraph. I formatted the list of ingredients into a bullet list so that it was more readable.
I don't know if I will continue to visit this wiki. I didn't find many recipes that were rated so I didn't have any idea if any of these recipes were any good. I also found the wiki difficult to navigate. There are a couple recipe sites that serve a similar purpose that I find more useful like FoodieView and Supercook .
Blogs
The NEKLS Technology Weblog is a blog from the Northeast Kansas Library System. It is a blog about technology in the Northeast Kansas Library System, but a lot of it would pertain to libraries in general. I choose this blog because it contained a lot of interesting and useful postings about how technology, in particular Internet technology, is impacting and shaping the services libraries provide. Some postings that attracted me were Reading Online vs. Reading Books: Is there a difference? discussing a New York Times article comparing online and book reading; Gaming and School Libraries, which has links to articles about the controversial topic of gaming in libraries; and Using RSS and Z39.50 to Find Books Your Library Doesn’t Have… Yet. which discusses and links to a blog post by a librarian that wrote a perl program that would search his online catalog and create an RSS feed of new items in the library so he could be one of the first people to get a hold on an item. Something like this might come in handy because the RSS feeds for new items on our online catalog at the Juneau Public Library don't really work yet.
The NEKLS Technology Weblog is helpful for my work at the Library because it is a way to keep informed of current issues and the latest technology. I definitely would continue to visit this blog because there are many interesting posts in the archives as well as current posts I would like to subscribe to with a RSS feed aggregator.
The blog I chose for personal interest was PSHERO . PSHERO is a blog consisting of photoshop tutorials. This is a very nicely designed website with some very good photoshop tutorials. The posts that caught my attention were creating text with stitches and creating complex repeating patterns . There are also posts reviewing photoshop books. I have bookmarked this site and would use it as a reference for future photoshop projects.