Scanaroo!

I love this concept and I really, really, really hope this will work with our MCLS library cards. Can someone out there who has an iPhone test this for me?

http://www.socialcustomer.com/2009/07/introducing-scanaroo.html

Thanks.

Patty

Readability!

I just found this fantastic little widget called Readability that lets you change the look of text on a website to make it more readable. Go to http://lab.arc90.com/experiments/readability/ and check it out. Unbelievably simple and surely useful for people who have a hard time reading small print, or reading on a computer. It doesn;t seem to handle multiple stories on a page, but does quite well with single stories — install it and see what it does at www.libraryweb.org, then go to one of the feature stories and try it there.

Patty

Cool Tools

I’m always coming across cool little tools for making digital life easier, but most often they are flashy and fun but not very useful. However, every once in awhile, something comes along that is really innovative and incredibly powerful and useful. My “cool tool” for 2008 was Book Burro, a Firefox add-on that pops up whenever you view a page with an ISBN or other recognizable book info on it, and allows you to search WorldCat for the closest library location that has the book. I read the Amazon feeds every day, and this makes placing holds in the MCLS catalog a snap. You can find out more about Book Burro here – http://www.bookburro.org/.

Today I came across what will probably be my favorite tool for 2009, although it’s early yet. Hyperwords is another Firefox add-on that essentially makes every word on a webpage a hyperlink. You can select any word or phrase on a page and have a menu pop up that lets you search the word/phrase in Wikipedia, Britannica, or other online sources, or lets you invoke a web search. I tested it in the MCLS catalog and the MCLS databases and it works like a charm. Take a look at Hyperwords here – http://www.hyperwords.net/

Do you have any favorite web or other computer tools you can’t live without? I bet you do, and I’m thinking that we can pull together a nifty Tech Camp around them. What are your favorites?

Patty

I’m Barcoded. You’re Barcoded. We’re ALL Barcoded!

This post on Tame the Web energized me this morning -

http://tametheweb.com/2008/11/23/an-answer-converged-devices-barcodes-the-future/

I’m trying to think of things the library could barcode out in the community that would lead people back to us. Maybe gas pumps or counters at AutoZone that would lead people to auto repair manuals at the library, or perhaps a barcoded sign with tax forms that provides information about free tax programs at the library, or a partnership with Wegmans that would let us place barcodes in the baby aisles with info about storytimes. Talk about adapting to mobile users! What else can you think of that could be barcoded by the library?

Patty

More than Microsoft Word and Google Docs

I don’t know if any of you are PUBLIBers (if your not count your blessings, if you are I say head for the hills) but hidden inbetween all the bickering and name calling (yes these are “professionals”) someone had asked if there was a program similar to word that could be edited by multiple people and yet not leave multiple copies. I immediately thought of Google Docs. Yes now I am getting to the point. :)

Another librarian pointed to a website called Mashable that looks like its a news site for all things social networking. The site looks pretty interesting. ANYWAY, there was an article about different online word processors available. There’s also an article about online spreadsheets available. Looks like people really want to give Microsoft a run for their money, and in a way that’s easily accessible to all levels of computer minded people (sorry Open Office).

Of course, even I have been getting burnt out with all these options. Yahoo, Google, Myspace, Facebook, Blogger, WordPress, Twitter… blah blah blah. I have used them all at some point. I won’t say that to the uninitiated of course, don’t want to scare them away. :) I have been pretty happy with Google Docs so far, although I’m sure that they will eventually suck my soul dry.

In a completely unrelated note, there was an article in the Atlantic called “Is Google Making us Stupid?” Basically (since I only skimmed the article) it was saying that due to the internet the way people are thinking has changed. People in this day and age have the attention span of a flea (my words, not theirs). Thanks to blogs, hyperlinks, texting and instant messenger, people aren’t in for the long haul.

Bruce Friedman, who blogs regularly about the use of computers in medicine, also has described how the Internet has altered his mental habits. “I now have almost totally lost the ability to read and absorb a longish article on the web or in print,” he wrote earlier this year. A pathologist who has long been on the faculty of the University of Michigan Medical School, Friedman elaborated on his comment in a telephone conversation with me. His thinking, he said, has taken on a “staccato” quality, reflecting the way he quickly scans short passages of text from many sources online. “I can’t read War and Peace anymore,” he admitted. “I’ve lost the ability to do that. Even a blog post of more than three or four paragraphs is too much to absorb. I skim it.”

I think this may be true with things written online. Its my opinion that due to the very design of Internet Explorer/Firefox, articles should be meant to be skimmed. That scrolly bar on the right is there for a purpose. Some things are just meant to be that way. The same thing goes for book reviews in SLJ, Library Journal or VOYA. If you don’t have time, you look at their rating and move on. The same goes for this post (although I hope not) :P

A book on the other hand is different. If I like it, I suck in every word with gusto, sometimes even rereading passages. I just read a 600 page book in a couple of days. And I read every word.

I think it completely depends on the context of what you’re reading. If you’re reading something for pleasure you’re going to suck in every word. If you’re reading something from a professional standpoint, you’re going to take in what you need and move on.

At least that’s what I hope. Of course on the other hand, staring at this screen looking at the Internet for hours could really be making me into a soul sucking zombie. I guess that would be pretty cool too.

Cathy

Email This!

Once again, I am reminded of how much I love Firefox.

Check out this cool little add-on that let’s you highlight text from your browser and email it. I often find little nuggets of information on a webpage that I want to share, and end up either sending the link along with a lengthy explanation of where to find the information I’m talking about, or copying and pasting into my email client, which can create all sorts of weird happenings with formatting. This makes it so much easier….

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/3102

Patty

BookLamp

Jen Barth recently turned us on to BookLamp, an online system for matching people with books based on writing styles and other reader preferences. Here’s what the site says about the product….

BookLamp.org is a system for matching readers to books through an analysis of writing styles, similar to the way that Pandora.com matches music lovers to new music. Do you like Stephen King’s It, but thought it was too long? The technology behind BookLamp allows you to find books that are written with a similar tone, tense, perspective, action level, description level, and dialog level, while at the same time allowing you to specify details like… half the length. It’s impervious to outside influences – like advertising – that impact socially driven recommendation systems, and isn’t reliant on a large user base to work.

Go to the BookLamp site and watch the video there to hear all about how the product works, then register to find out more. The service isn’t really functional yet and is still in beta development. By registering, you can show interest in the product and follow its development. The BookLamp folks are trying to attract interest from companies that already have large databases of scanned books, like Google, which will help them fully launch the service. And I expect that fully developed product will be tied to a service fee.

Does this process sound familiar? Can anyone say “reader’s advisory?” Do you think that services like BookLamp will eventually replace the role libraries play in recommending books? Share your thoughts….

Patty

Advice Sought

So Jen B and I are going to be doing some presenting at the next Tech Camp on web-based applications. Here are some of the sites I’ve used or heard of. Which ones do you think would be of interest? Or can you suggest others?

What do you think will be the most useful? Most fun?

Patty

There’s a Lesson Here….

USA Today has a very interesting article about Borders new venture into digital services. Read it and then come back and let’s talk.

I love the concept of digital download stations where people can download books, music (But not to iPods, interestingly enough. When the hell are Apple & Microsoft going to realize they ought to be sharing the sandbox?) and photos. And here’s the kicker — “with help from clerks who know how to do those sorts of things and won’t embarrass you if you don’t.”

I think we already have this market, and we’re building a core of staff who can do this easily.

What stands out for you in this article?

Patty

Useful Search Box

One of the things that seems to be a continual source of confusion in usability testing is the Search box on the mcls website. People type their search term into the box, but seem to not even notice the radio buttons where they can select Catalog, Visual Catalog, or This Site.

Milkwaukee Public Library has an interface that seems more usable:

http://www.mpl.org/

Enter a term then select where you want to search from a drop down. I brought this up at a web team meeting a while back, but taking a look at the link will give an idea of what I was thinking of better than my verbal explanation did. :)

Pat Rapp

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