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Web 2.0

The week in Tweets

  • @jenica26 And you know, @blakesterz, that if the webgoddess says it is so… Nice quick fix, though! Blake's on the ball!! #
  • @jasonfleming73 sent to your work email – let me know if you didn't get it or want more info! #
  • @jasonfleming73 LOL. It took me a second to read it correctly, I won't lie… 😉 #

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Web 2.0

Facebook’s changes

Sort of a round-up post today – Facebook has been making some changes (and some third parties are making some cool tools) that I wanted to discuss. First is the change to being able to surf Facebook *as* your organization. Now my library can “like” other libraries, comment on news stories as the library and pretty much do anything a personal account can do. This is accomplished by clicking on the link at the right side of your organization’s page that says “Use Facebook As Your Organization“. After you do that, you can find your favorite pages, like them, comment on them and generally interact with Facebook just like a real person. This is something I’d been wanting to do for a while, so it was a nice change for me!

The other very cool tool I wanted to mention was Pagemodo. This is a free (for one page with an advertising footer) service that helps you create customized landing pages for your organization’s page without coding. I haven’t actually tried it out yet – though I’m in the process of working on a customized tab for my library’s Art Gallery FB page. I’m looking forward to seeing what it will do and if I’ll be able to make quick changes without having to learn a whole new code.

Categories
Libraries

IT security in libraries

Just as a note – I’ve been quiet because I’ve been recovering from a fairly nasty fall down my basement steps that resulted in no broken bones (yeah!) but a fair number of bruises and 14 stitches on the top of my head (boo!). I’m back in the saddle, though…

One of the biggest drawbacks to providing public access computing in a library is the fact that the public has access to the computers. I was in a web demo the other day (for the new Centurion product – we were wowed…) and the salesman asked us if we had heard of USB wireless managers. Apparently the trend to use these started in IL (at least for Centurion hearing about it) with someone putting a wireless manager coupled with a keylogger that recorded every keystroke subsequent patrons made on the computer and wirelessly sent them to the bad guy via the wireless manager. Centurion has a setting that will disable those, which is why it came up. I’d never heard of people doing this – but within a week of that demo, I’ve seen 2 stories now on similar hacks to public library computers.

The story I linked to above talks about USB keyloggers, which have been around for a while and which we have given our computers a quick once-over for at least once a day, when we are starting up the machines in the lab. This, however, includes a wireless component that means that even if we take the USB stick and confiscate it, the bad guy still gets the data, since it was sent wirelessly. This means that keeping an eye on your network logs is doubly important – any strange activity or unknown networks accessing your computers should be checked out.

Inviting the public into your network and allowing them physical access to your machines means that you have to be both aware of current trends and vigilant about keeping an eye on the computers.  I remember when the major issue we had to look out for was teenagers stealing mouse balls to use as jewelry… Now we have to make sure that patron privacy and security are not compromised just because they are using our machines!

Categories
Web 2.0

The week in Tweets

  • @dullroar That is a private transaction – Amazon #
  • @dullroar Oops – sorry, hit enter too soon Amazon's TOS doesn't allow for public borrowing. Some loan out the device, but that's iffy. #
  • @dullroar Yep, I do believe there are lots of librarians asking about Kindle loaning – I think the ALA is lobbying for it too. Hopefully…. #
  • Ahhhh! Using Facebook as MRRL is excellent – the upgrade is *exactly* what I've been wanting for FB pages!! #
  • INBOX 0 HAS BEEN ACHIEVED!!! That's worth shouting about, yes? 😉 #
  • Also – for local tweeters who like art – my library has a new FB page dedicated to news about our art galleries – http://on.fb.me/equLqD #
  • @rmazar I am the master of my to-do list. My voicemail, not so much. I'm totally with you there. #

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Web 2.0

The week in Tweets

  • @hbraum We're getting blizzard warnings of 12-20 inches. Imma gonna go hide under my covers and whimper… #
  • CIMG0093 [pic] http://ff.im/xexYn #
  • CIMG0097 [pic] http://ff.im/xiL17 #
  • @dullroar as far as I know, Kindle books are not going to be checked out. Kindles themselves, maybe, but Amazon has no plans to make the … #
  • @dullroar sorry – that should end with "them (the books themselves) available to us. #

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Web 2.0

It’s my birthday!

Yeah, I’ve got nothing else – just wanted to put that out there. Y’all are lucky that I didn’t add my Amazon wish list link to this post, really… 😉

Categories
Web 2.0

Coworking at the library

The Shelf Check blog posed a question a couple of weeks ago about setting up a space in the library for coworking folks. For those of you who aren’t familiar with coworking, there is a good article (lots of ’em, actually) at ReadWriteWeb that explains the concept. Basically it’s a space where independent and self-employed folks can go to work for and by themselves, but with shared resources and companionship made available by the coworking space and their coworking coworkers (awkward, I know…)

I follow a listserv for my neighborhood, and folks are often looking for coworking spaces (to rent) and others to cowork with. Plenty of people already run their small businesses from or do their freelance work at the library, but entirely independently, without the quietly social, communal feeling that it seems those who are looking for coworking spaces crave. Could we fashion a “coworking area,” much the way we fashion teen and children’s areas, in the library? And aggressively, cleverly promote it as a “coworking space–but better,” because workers in the library will have access to on-site librarians who can help them with database searches, etc?

Emily Lloyd, the author of the Shelf Check blog, posed the question above and I have to admit it intrigues me. I like the idea a lot. My particular library has space challenges right now that are pretty much incompatible with the idea of creating that sort of space – but that won’t be true in the future (hopefully!). One of the benefits of coworking spaces is the shared resources – not only on-site librarians, but computers, wireless access, color printers, copy machines, scanners and other bits of office hardware that people may not need to buy on their own but that they might find useful occasionally – and those are just the things that libraries (my library at least) provide already!
Like I said, not something I can do with the resources at my library – but if you all know of a library that does it or are thinking of doing something similar, let me know!

Categories
Web 2.0

Revision and writing discipline

One of my major faults in writing (let’s not get into the major faults I have everywhere else, ok?) is the lack of discipline I have about revision and re-writing. I love to write. I hate to edit and revise. I’m pretty sure this is a common thing, I see others complaining about it quite frequently, so I’m not alone in this. The problem, of course, is that my work is frequently not quite as good as it could be if I would conquer the twin demons of procrastination and laziness and write my stuff *well* in advance of the due date. This is another non-resolution that I’m making this year (they sure are piling up, aren’t they?). With the exception of this blog (which is write once and publish – little editing is done to the text I produce here, with my apologies…), I’m going to try to give myself plenty of revision time when I start to plan out my attack on my next writing project. Editing and revising can only help my output – there is no reason to avoid doing it, besides laziness, and I’m going to definitely be working on that!

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Web 2.0

The week in Tweets

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Web 2.0

Time slips away

I overheard a comment the other day by a woman who paints, but does not sell her paintings (because she does it for the love of painting, not to create a market) about how she loses time while painting and how that was a sign of how much she loved it. This came a day after I started work on a new client’s website (Colossal Sounds) and completely lost 45 minutes of my life. I sat down to start tweaking his WordPress installation and the next time I looked up it was 45 minutes later and I’d have *sworn* it had only been 5.
Having a passion for your work (or your avocation, in the painter’s case) means that you can lose yourself in the process and get “in the zone” of working on something to the point where the passage of time is completely unnoticed. I’ve had those moments at my day job, too – times when I’ve sat down to do a “quick” fiddle with the site’s backend and discovered – an hour later – that I’ve completely lost track of time!
Have you ever done this? Have you ever been lucky enough to do it *while getting paid*? I’m a lucky girl – I need to remind myself of this sometimes.